The coronavirus
Comments
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Yeah it only really needs to stop critical illness
this song is meant to be called i got shit,itshould be called i got shit tickets-hartford 06 -0 -
what dreams said:oftenreading said:what dreams said:mcgruff10 said:I just found out that teachers in NJ will be getting the vaccine during phase 1b: Those frontline workers include some 30 million people, including first responders such as firefighters and police, educators, including teachers, support staff and daycare workers, those who work in food and agriculture, manufacturing, corrections workers, U.S. Postal Service workers, public transit workers and grocery workers.
So I am not antivaxx at all but for some reason am a little worried about getting a vaccine that was made so quickly. Any thoughts? Does everyone here plan to get the vaccine once it becomes available?
I should add I have never taken a flu vaccine in my life, and I've actually never developed flu. I know, I know -- it's not the fucking flu. I'm just not one to take medicines unless it's totally necessary. My mom with heart failure has been on a cocktail of heart medications (BP, high lipids) for 30+ years and when I looked at the literature for her heart medicine, heart failure is an effect of long-term use for several of them. Go figure. Her anti-depressant can cause arythmia over the long term, so now she's got an arythmia. So now she's taking a blood thinner to prevent stroke from the arythmia, and the safety literature on that blood thinner cautions that it can cause the stroke it's supposed to prevent. It's just fucked up, modern medicine, as far as I'm concerned.
I don't know what I'm going to do. Right now, I'm inclined to just keep washing my hands, wearing a mask, and staying away from people. It's not that hard to do and I will probably have the same amount of protection as the vaccine.
Rationalizations like these are going to keep the pandemic going.
Even with a vaccine, the CDC tells us that we still have to wash our hands, wear a mask, and practice social distancing. So what the F difference does it make? To me, not much. With a vaccine, I can still catch the virus, I may still be able to pass it on to someone else asymptomatically (we don't know yet), and I still have to practice pandemic social behaviors. Sounds like a real promising solution to "getting back to normal."
From the CDC website (we're all freaking guinea pigs):
"It’s important for everyone to continue using all the tools available to help stop this pandemic as we learn more about how COVID-19 vaccines work in real-world conditions. Cover your mouth and nose with a mask when around others, stay at least 6 feet away from others, avoid crowds, and wash your hands often."
Nothing's changed.Scio me nihil scire
There are no kings inside the gates of eden0 -
https://fox8.com/news/2000-stimulus-checks-blocked-by-house-republicans/
Not sure if this should be put here but read away.0 -
tempo_n_groove said:https://fox8.com/news/2000-stimulus-checks-blocked-by-house-republicans/
Not sure if this should be put here but read away.Scio me nihil scire
There are no kings inside the gates of eden0 -
static111 said:what dreams said:oftenreading said:what dreams said:mcgruff10 said:I just found out that teachers in NJ will be getting the vaccine during phase 1b: Those frontline workers include some 30 million people, including first responders such as firefighters and police, educators, including teachers, support staff and daycare workers, those who work in food and agriculture, manufacturing, corrections workers, U.S. Postal Service workers, public transit workers and grocery workers.
So I am not antivaxx at all but for some reason am a little worried about getting a vaccine that was made so quickly. Any thoughts? Does everyone here plan to get the vaccine once it becomes available?
I should add I have never taken a flu vaccine in my life, and I've actually never developed flu. I know, I know -- it's not the fucking flu. I'm just not one to take medicines unless it's totally necessary. My mom with heart failure has been on a cocktail of heart medications (BP, high lipids) for 30+ years and when I looked at the literature for her heart medicine, heart failure is an effect of long-term use for several of them. Go figure. Her anti-depressant can cause arythmia over the long term, so now she's got an arythmia. So now she's taking a blood thinner to prevent stroke from the arythmia, and the safety literature on that blood thinner cautions that it can cause the stroke it's supposed to prevent. It's just fucked up, modern medicine, as far as I'm concerned.
I don't know what I'm going to do. Right now, I'm inclined to just keep washing my hands, wearing a mask, and staying away from people. It's not that hard to do and I will probably have the same amount of protection as the vaccine.
Rationalizations like these are going to keep the pandemic going.
Even with a vaccine, the CDC tells us that we still have to wash our hands, wear a mask, and practice social distancing. So what the F difference does it make? To me, not much. With a vaccine, I can still catch the virus, I may still be able to pass it on to someone else asymptomatically (we don't know yet), and I still have to practice pandemic social behaviors. Sounds like a real promising solution to "getting back to normal."
From the CDC website (we're all freaking guinea pigs):
"It’s important for everyone to continue using all the tools available to help stop this pandemic as we learn more about how COVID-19 vaccines work in real-world conditions. Cover your mouth and nose with a mask when around others, stay at least 6 feet away from others, avoid crowds, and wash your hands often."
Nothing's changed.
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dignin said:static111 said:what dreams said:oftenreading said:what dreams said:mcgruff10 said:I just found out that teachers in NJ will be getting the vaccine during phase 1b: Those frontline workers include some 30 million people, including first responders such as firefighters and police, educators, including teachers, support staff and daycare workers, those who work in food and agriculture, manufacturing, corrections workers, U.S. Postal Service workers, public transit workers and grocery workers.
So I am not antivaxx at all but for some reason am a little worried about getting a vaccine that was made so quickly. Any thoughts? Does everyone here plan to get the vaccine once it becomes available?
I should add I have never taken a flu vaccine in my life, and I've actually never developed flu. I know, I know -- it's not the fucking flu. I'm just not one to take medicines unless it's totally necessary. My mom with heart failure has been on a cocktail of heart medications (BP, high lipids) for 30+ years and when I looked at the literature for her heart medicine, heart failure is an effect of long-term use for several of them. Go figure. Her anti-depressant can cause arythmia over the long term, so now she's got an arythmia. So now she's taking a blood thinner to prevent stroke from the arythmia, and the safety literature on that blood thinner cautions that it can cause the stroke it's supposed to prevent. It's just fucked up, modern medicine, as far as I'm concerned.
I don't know what I'm going to do. Right now, I'm inclined to just keep washing my hands, wearing a mask, and staying away from people. It's not that hard to do and I will probably have the same amount of protection as the vaccine.
Rationalizations like these are going to keep the pandemic going.
Even with a vaccine, the CDC tells us that we still have to wash our hands, wear a mask, and practice social distancing. So what the F difference does it make? To me, not much. With a vaccine, I can still catch the virus, I may still be able to pass it on to someone else asymptomatically (we don't know yet), and I still have to practice pandemic social behaviors. Sounds like a real promising solution to "getting back to normal."
From the CDC website (we're all freaking guinea pigs):
"It’s important for everyone to continue using all the tools available to help stop this pandemic as we learn more about how COVID-19 vaccines work in real-world conditions. Cover your mouth and nose with a mask when around others, stay at least 6 feet away from others, avoid crowds, and wash your hands often."
Nothing's changed.Scio me nihil scire
There are no kings inside the gates of eden0 -
Aren’t side effects typically present after any or most vaccines? Do you mean the severity?
I have so much to learn.0 -
hedonist said:Aren’t side effects typically present after any or most vaccines? Do you mean the severity?
I have so much to learn.Post edited by static111 onScio me nihil scire
There are no kings inside the gates of eden0 -
mace1229 said:oftenreading said:mace1229 said:oftenreading said:what dreams said:mcgruff10 said:I just found out that teachers in NJ will be getting the vaccine during phase 1b: Those frontline workers include some 30 million people, including first responders such as firefighters and police, educators, including teachers, support staff and daycare workers, those who work in food and agriculture, manufacturing, corrections workers, U.S. Postal Service workers, public transit workers and grocery workers.
So I am not antivaxx at all but for some reason am a little worried about getting a vaccine that was made so quickly. Any thoughts? Does everyone here plan to get the vaccine once it becomes available?
I should add I have never taken a flu vaccine in my life, and I've actually never developed flu. I know, I know -- it's not the fucking flu. I'm just not one to take medicines unless it's totally necessary. My mom with heart failure has been on a cocktail of heart medications (BP, high lipids) for 30+ years and when I looked at the literature for her heart medicine, heart failure is an effect of long-term use for several of them. Go figure. Her anti-depressant can cause arythmia over the long term, so now she's got an arythmia. So now she's taking a blood thinner to prevent stroke from the arythmia, and the safety literature on that blood thinner cautions that it can cause the stroke it's supposed to prevent. It's just fucked up, modern medicine, as far as I'm concerned.
I don't know what I'm going to do. Right now, I'm inclined to just keep washing my hands, wearing a mask, and staying away from people. It's not that hard to do and I will probably have the same amount of protection as the vaccine.
Rationalizations like these are going to keep the pandemic going.So it does seem different that this vaccine doesn’t help your body kill the virus, just mute the symptoms. But at the end of the day, that’s what I care about. I wouldn’t care about getting the flu, or HIV for that matter, if there weren’t any symptoms.Vaccines use a variety of different techniques to stimulate our immune systems to react to neutralize what seems to be a neutralizing infectious agent. Classic vaccines were usually live attenuated - in which the infectious agent is still alive but is modified to cause very mild or no disease - or killed - in which the infectious agent was dead but still presented the antigenic parts (there are a couple of other types but these were most common). When administered, they cause the immune system to respond in several different ways, which include releasing cells that directly gobble up the invaders (especially if they are bacteria or fungi), producing antibodies, which attack the antigens (proteins) on the invader, and lymphocytes, which destroy the host cells that have been infected. This process is essentially the same whether you get a natural infection or whether you are responding to an immunization.Sometimes vaccines can produce a stronger and more protective immune response than getting the disease, depended on how the vaccine is formulated.All vaccines work to produce an immune response that will destroy the infectious agents before they can replicate enough to cause disease - so, they do not just “mute the symptoms”, any more than an immune response to an infection just “mutes the symptoms”.
No one said it "masks" symptoms. The comment was that it "prevents symptoms from developing", which it does, by preventing significant illness. The immune system can only deal with what's in the body, which means it can't prevent viral particles from entering your body, it just prevents you from getting sick. This is the same for essentially any pathogen.
The issue of whether it prevents transmissibility is not yet known, but I don't see why that would be a factor in someone deciding whether to get vaccinated or not, since we already know that asymptomatic infected individuals can transmit the virus, so it's not like vaccination is making anything worse.my small self... like a book amongst the many on a shelf0 -
what dreams said:oftenreading said:what dreams said:oftenreading said:what dreams said:mcgruff10 said:I just found out that teachers in NJ will be getting the vaccine during phase 1b: Those frontline workers include some 30 million people, including first responders such as firefighters and police, educators, including teachers, support staff and daycare workers, those who work in food and agriculture, manufacturing, corrections workers, U.S. Postal Service workers, public transit workers and grocery workers.
So I am not antivaxx at all but for some reason am a little worried about getting a vaccine that was made so quickly. Any thoughts? Does everyone here plan to get the vaccine once it becomes available?
I should add I have never taken a flu vaccine in my life, and I've actually never developed flu. I know, I know -- it's not the fucking flu. I'm just not one to take medicines unless it's totally necessary. My mom with heart failure has been on a cocktail of heart medications (BP, high lipids) for 30+ years and when I looked at the literature for her heart medicine, heart failure is an effect of long-term use for several of them. Go figure. Her anti-depressant can cause arythmia over the long term, so now she's got an arythmia. So now she's taking a blood thinner to prevent stroke from the arythmia, and the safety literature on that blood thinner cautions that it can cause the stroke it's supposed to prevent. It's just fucked up, modern medicine, as far as I'm concerned.
I don't know what I'm going to do. Right now, I'm inclined to just keep washing my hands, wearing a mask, and staying away from people. It's not that hard to do and I will probably have the same amount of protection as the vaccine.
Rationalizations like these are going to keep the pandemic going.
Even with a vaccine, the CDC tells us that we still have to wash our hands, wear a mask, and practice social distancing. So what the F difference does it make? To me, not much. With a vaccine, I can still catch the virus, I may still be able to pass it on to someone else asymptomatically (we don't know yet), and I still have to practice pandemic social behaviors. Sounds like a real promising solution to "getting back to normal."
From the CDC website (we're all freaking guinea pigs):
"It’s important for everyone to continue using all the tools available to help stop this pandemic as we learn more about how COVID-19 vaccines work in real-world conditions. Cover your mouth and nose with a mask when around others, stay at least 6 feet away from others, avoid crowds, and wash your hands often."
Nothing's changed.
"Nothing's changed" in the short term of a few weeks to months is not equivalent to "nothing will change in the long term, whether I get vaccination or not".
And if you post your opinion on something, don't be surprised when you get comments.
I never even said I've ruled out taking it anyway. I said I was conflicted. And so were you, at one point. So take your self-righteous bullshit somewhere else, and take the vaccine if you want. You'll be protected when someone like me breathes on you -- won't you?
Goodness, what drama on this issue.
I guess we'll have to agree to disagree on the relevance of vaccine hesitancy on management of the pandemic.my small self... like a book amongst the many on a shelf0 -
Just to put this into perspective (and no I don’t take it lol):
I'll ride the wave where it takes me......0 -
mcgruff10 said:Just to put this into perspective (and no I don’t take it lol):
this song is meant to be called i got shit,itshould be called i got shit tickets-hartford 06 -0 -
mcgruff10 said:Just to put this into perspective (and no I don’t take it lol):0
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Pretty much anything has a side effect. LIFE has a side effect.
Gotta weigh the pros and cons for yourself...rationally.
0 -
oftenreading said:mace1229 said:oftenreading said:mace1229 said:oftenreading said:what dreams said:mcgruff10 said:I just found out that teachers in NJ will be getting the vaccine during phase 1b: Those frontline workers include some 30 million people, including first responders such as firefighters and police, educators, including teachers, support staff and daycare workers, those who work in food and agriculture, manufacturing, corrections workers, U.S. Postal Service workers, public transit workers and grocery workers.
So I am not antivaxx at all but for some reason am a little worried about getting a vaccine that was made so quickly. Any thoughts? Does everyone here plan to get the vaccine once it becomes available?
I should add I have never taken a flu vaccine in my life, and I've actually never developed flu. I know, I know -- it's not the fucking flu. I'm just not one to take medicines unless it's totally necessary. My mom with heart failure has been on a cocktail of heart medications (BP, high lipids) for 30+ years and when I looked at the literature for her heart medicine, heart failure is an effect of long-term use for several of them. Go figure. Her anti-depressant can cause arythmia over the long term, so now she's got an arythmia. So now she's taking a blood thinner to prevent stroke from the arythmia, and the safety literature on that blood thinner cautions that it can cause the stroke it's supposed to prevent. It's just fucked up, modern medicine, as far as I'm concerned.
I don't know what I'm going to do. Right now, I'm inclined to just keep washing my hands, wearing a mask, and staying away from people. It's not that hard to do and I will probably have the same amount of protection as the vaccine.
Rationalizations like these are going to keep the pandemic going.So it does seem different that this vaccine doesn’t help your body kill the virus, just mute the symptoms. But at the end of the day, that’s what I care about. I wouldn’t care about getting the flu, or HIV for that matter, if there weren’t any symptoms.Vaccines use a variety of different techniques to stimulate our immune systems to react to neutralize what seems to be a neutralizing infectious agent. Classic vaccines were usually live attenuated - in which the infectious agent is still alive but is modified to cause very mild or no disease - or killed - in which the infectious agent was dead but still presented the antigenic parts (there are a couple of other types but these were most common). When administered, they cause the immune system to respond in several different ways, which include releasing cells that directly gobble up the invaders (especially if they are bacteria or fungi), producing antibodies, which attack the antigens (proteins) on the invader, and lymphocytes, which destroy the host cells that have been infected. This process is essentially the same whether you get a natural infection or whether you are responding to an immunization.Sometimes vaccines can produce a stronger and more protective immune response than getting the disease, depended on how the vaccine is formulated.All vaccines work to produce an immune response that will destroy the infectious agents before they can replicate enough to cause disease - so, they do not just “mute the symptoms”, any more than an immune response to an infection just “mutes the symptoms”.
No one said it "masks" symptoms. The comment was that it "prevents symptoms from developing", which it does, by preventing significant illness. The immune system can only deal with what's in the body, which means it can't prevent viral particles from entering your body, it just prevents you from getting sick. This is the same for essentially any pathogen.
The issue of whether it prevents transmissibility is not yet known, but I don't see why that would be a factor in someone deciding whether to get vaccinated or not, since we already know that asymptomatic infected individuals can transmit the virus, so it's not like vaccination is making anything worse.
Either way, doesn’t really matter. My comment was about your response to WhatDreams calling it weird that you still might get covid and pass it on but not show symptoms. Call it masking the symptoms or not, I agree it’s weird if that is the case. Most vaccines you don’t still get the disease and pass it on, therefore I agree it’s weird.Post edited by mace1229 on0 -
Athens 2006. Dusseldorf 2007. Berlin 2009. Venice 2010. Amsterdam 1 2012. Amsterdam 1+2 2014. Buenos Aires 2015.
Prague Krakow Berlin 2018. Berlin 2022
EV, Taormina 1+2 2017.
I wish i was the souvenir you kept your house key on..0 -
My throat hurts a bit and I need to blow my nose a lot...
... but haven't really been outside of my moms apartment... only met her and my brother... so..."Mostly I think that people react sensitively because they know you’ve got a point"0 -
Spiritual_Chaos said:My throat hurts a bit and I need to blow my nose a lot...
... but haven't really been outside of my moms apartment... only met her and my brother... so...
We just had a transition from light jacket weather with humidity to well below freezing and the accompanying dry air, so everyone with sensitive sinuses (literally all the women in the family) is feeling symptoms that mimic a cold...fun!Monkey Driven, Call this Living?0 -
Spiritual_Chaos said:My throat hurts a bit and I need to blow my nose a lot...
... but haven't really been outside of my moms apartment... only met her and my brother... so...0 -
nicknyr15 said:Spiritual_Chaos said:My throat hurts a bit and I need to blow my nose a lot...
... but haven't really been outside of my moms apartment... only met her and my brother... so...
And my other brother is in family quarantine because his stepson has/had it.
And now a case of the UK strain has been discovered here."Mostly I think that people react sensitively because they know you’ve got a point"0
This discussion has been closed.
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