They call it COVID 19

Leo

Well-known member
these are guidelines, not laws. some people have respected the guidelines over the past year, and some have not.
 

Leo

Well-known member
these are guidelines, not laws. everything is opening up, not sure what argument you're making.
 

Mr. Tea

Let's Talk About Ceps
A ref to one of Dr Biscuits' standard arguments, that recording all deaths within 28 days of a positive diagnosis might mean a vastly inflated covid-19 death toll because of people being diagnosed and then coincidentally getting hit by a bus.
 

polystyle

Well-known member
A ref to one of Dr Biscuits' standard arguments, that recording all deaths within 28 days of a positive diagnosis might mean a vastly inflated covid-19 death toll because of people being diagnosed and then coincidentally getting hit by a bus.
Aaaaha . Noise noise noise
 

Leo

Well-known member
From the former NY Times global health reporter who covered the pandemic much of the past year.

The End IS Near. No, Seriously.

A friend who works at the Times got sent the link, with this email cover note from the reporter:

Friends:

I've just published a new article on Medium. It's much shorter and easier to read than my Wuhan Lab Leak one. (And today's WSJ adds a bit more to that debate...).

My article argues that our epidemic in the U.S. is clearly ending, and we should fret less about herd immunity. But it won't end for all of us at the same time. Immunity levels vary enormously by peer group. More important, all pandemics end -- even the Black Death and Spanish Flu -- even though the pathogens that cause them never disappear. First they end as epidemics. That is, the virus' consequences slowly ebb until they reach the point where we just accept the risk (as we do now with flu and bubonic plague.)

And when that happens, we're back to "normal" again. Or normalish.
 

Mr. Tea

Let's Talk About Ceps
Cognitive defects are seen in covid patients with symptoms of all severity levels, with larger defects seen in patients with worse symptoms:


In those who were hospitalized, average cognitive harm was worse than that seen in stroke patients.
 
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wektor

Well-known member
Cognitive defects are seen in covid patients with symptoms of all severity levels, with larger defects seen in patients with worse symptoms:


In those who were hospitalized, average cognitive harm was worse than that seen in strike patients.
can confirm, even after three weeks or so my mind is still rather clouded (say, 1 toke tier) and my general awareness is definitely down.
similar case with the missus.
 

Mr. Tea

Let's Talk About Ceps
can confirm, even after three weeks or so my mind is still rather clouded (say, 1 toke tier) and my general awareness is definitely down.
similar case with the missus.
Oh shit man, sorry to hear that. Hope it clears up eventually.
 

wektor

Well-known member
Oh shit man, sorry to hear that. Hope it clears up eventually.
on the bright side, at least for now I'm saving on dumbing myself down with the local stick!
but I do hope I will become fully able intelectually again at some point (if I ever was)
 

WashYourHands

Cat Malogen
It’s a second opinion push, last March was one rough night and a raised temp, paracetamol and hydrated minging cough. face to face work resigned to infection risks, you can only cover so many bases, viral loads vary in different locations and client profiles we were flying blind for 4 months if not more

found this with screen time fatigue but exercise is ok, humans aren’t made for this attention/screen light exposure time. ironically there’s evidence methadone users had a higher % of non-Covid infections (Dublin, will check) than non opiate users. could be more robust immune systems from past exposure to immune system stresses but that’s a punt
 
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