Omicron infections appear no less severe than Delta; Covid-19 lowers sperm count(reuters.com)
reuters.com
Omicron infections appear no less severe than Delta; Covid-19 lowers sperm count
https://www.reuters.com/business/healthcare-pharmaceuticals/omicron-infections-appear-no-less-severe-than-delta-covid-19-lowers-sperm-count-2021-12-20/
61 comments
The doses do not all set your immune system to the same state, despite being the same substance. The subsequent doses cause further evolution within the body to broaden the spectrum of its response.
This is why there were two doses in the first place, on a schedule, instead of one dose.
The sequence is more like a progressive immune system training program than a one-off health powerup like you'd get in a video game.
Omicron is close enough that the figures show a significant effect after the third dose compared with the second.
It was not something which could be assumed, because the response curve depends on details of the virus, so the recent data is good news. However the scientists had enough understanding of the details, and Omicron spreads so fast with unknown consequences at this time, that it was worth rolling out the booster soon after Omicron was detected.
It is a popular misconception that each vaccine sets a simple "immunity %" stat, and that the booster simply resets that stat after it wanes. It's an easy idea to explain, but the immune processes are more subtle than that.
Perhaps we need some of that subtlety to be better known now, so that people understand why the booster sequence is useful.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-59639973.amp
This is why there were two doses in the first place, on a schedule, instead of one dose.
The sequence is more like a progressive immune system training program than a one-off health powerup like you'd get in a video game.
Omicron is close enough that the figures show a significant effect after the third dose compared with the second.
It was not something which could be assumed, because the response curve depends on details of the virus, so the recent data is good news. However the scientists had enough understanding of the details, and Omicron spreads so fast with unknown consequences at this time, that it was worth rolling out the booster soon after Omicron was detected.
It is a popular misconception that each vaccine sets a simple "immunity %" stat, and that the booster simply resets that stat after it wanes. It's an easy idea to explain, but the immune processes are more subtle than that.
Perhaps we need some of that subtlety to be better known now, so that people understand why the booster sequence is useful.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-59639973.amp
At least in this test https://www.pfizer.com/news/press-release/press-release-deta... they did account for that, which does suggest that 3 doses are in fact better than 2 without the waning effect.
> The sera were collected from subjects 3 weeks after receiving the second dose or one month after receiving the third dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine.
> The sera were collected from subjects 3 weeks after receiving the second dose or one month after receiving the third dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine.
> The semen itself was not infectious, the researchers found. But among 35 men who provided samples within a month after recovery from symptomatic infection, reductions in sperm motility were evident in 60% and sperm counts were reduced in 37%.
looks like they didnt compare the same participants before and after, so this seems like a poor way to measure anything.
looks like they didnt compare the same participants before and after, so this seems like a poor way to measure anything.
Well, I don't know much about donating semen, but it doesn't seem outrageous that the semen quality of donors might be monitored, such that old data is available to be compared against new. Or do you actually know that this isn't the case?
Where does it state they were prior donors? I had the same thought - they must have a “before” to compare to.
Uhm… I think that's something I assumed when I saw that they cited sperm counts for only 35 men in a study with over two hundred thousand participants.
Thinking about it now: Even if there are only 100,000 men, it seems implausible that only 35 of 100,000 would be able and willing to wank for the progress of science and the benefit of mankind. So there must be some other condition, some strict other condition.
Thinking about it now: Even if there are only 100,000 men, it seems implausible that only 35 of 100,000 would be able and willing to wank for the progress of science and the benefit of mankind. So there must be some other condition, some strict other condition.
Who is telling the truth?
I’ve seen multiple youtube MDs bring up studies that claim the infections are typically milder than previous covid strains.
These publications are on public news outlets but I do not know how they are vetted for credibility nor do I know the credibility of the research they’re citing. In more than one recent example the CDC was described by Zdogg MD and Vinay Prasad, who are definitely competent and credible presenters of medical information, to be utilizing really crappy data and sometimes even flat out saying things that are wrong.
I really hate this information war environment surrounding covid. You actually cannot know the truth it seems.
I’ve seen multiple youtube MDs bring up studies that claim the infections are typically milder than previous covid strains.
These publications are on public news outlets but I do not know how they are vetted for credibility nor do I know the credibility of the research they’re citing. In more than one recent example the CDC was described by Zdogg MD and Vinay Prasad, who are definitely competent and credible presenters of medical information, to be utilizing really crappy data and sometimes even flat out saying things that are wrong.
I really hate this information war environment surrounding covid. You actually cannot know the truth it seems.
This occurs for the same reason the spike protein "spikes" in the ovaries: the epithelial receptors for ACE2 and in the ovaries and in placentas are also present in the testes.
BTW Nicki Manaj was correct about her cousin!
BTW Nicki Manaj was correct about her cousin!
South Africa had it first.
https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/country/south-afri...
And, as expected, it appears to be far less harmful than Delta, which was less harmful than the original novel cov2. This is how a virus evolves, it gets weaker, which allows it to spread faster. Dead people don't spread viruses. It looks from the data that we are finally at the end of this pandemic.
https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/country/south-afri...
And, as expected, it appears to be far less harmful than Delta, which was less harmful than the original novel cov2. This is how a virus evolves, it gets weaker, which allows it to spread faster. Dead people don't spread viruses. It looks from the data that we are finally at the end of this pandemic.
You said:
> And, as expected, it appears to be far less harmful than Delta
And the title said:
> Omicron infections appear no less severe than Delta
Hmm, somethings doesn't seem right? I assume you misread the title.
> This is how a virus evolves, it gets weaker, which allows it to spread faster. Dead people don't spread viruses.
Yes, viruses usually evolve to transmit better and the host and virus usually co-evolve to a less severe disease. But, this applies only to viruses that transmit after people get symptoms. If people spread the virus first for a few days and then get sick, there is no inherent evolutionary pressure to select for less severe virus variants. Even the original SarsCovII virus (let's say Wuhan variant) had already the capability to spread before symptom onset as well as after. So it is unclear, how this evolves further.
> And, as expected, it appears to be far less harmful than Delta
And the title said:
> Omicron infections appear no less severe than Delta
Hmm, somethings doesn't seem right? I assume you misread the title.
> This is how a virus evolves, it gets weaker, which allows it to spread faster. Dead people don't spread viruses.
Yes, viruses usually evolve to transmit better and the host and virus usually co-evolve to a less severe disease. But, this applies only to viruses that transmit after people get symptoms. If people spread the virus first for a few days and then get sick, there is no inherent evolutionary pressure to select for less severe virus variants. Even the original SarsCovII virus (let's say Wuhan variant) had already the capability to spread before symptom onset as well as after. So it is unclear, how this evolves further.
The title of the current article doesn't change the numbers from South Africa indicating that Omicron puts 80% less people in hospitals than Delta:
> Early data from the South African health ministry released last week found that only 1.7% of cases in the latest wave have resulted in hospitalizations so far, compared with 18% at the same point during the previous wave, which was dominated by the Delta variant. [0]
Their methodology also seems better than that used for the U.K. numbers in the article, which compared all past cases to current Omicron cases. I personally think that's a more complex comparison, with perhaps more room for confounding factors.
I assume the U.K. numbers are a week or two behind the numbers from South Africa. I assume more numbers will be forthcoming in another couple/few weeks, along with early numbers from more countries. Time will tell.
The post you replied to also mentioned that coronaviruses often evolve to be weaker because that helps them spread. I've seen experts say the same. You said:
> this applies only to viruses that transmit after people get symptoms
Are you saying that Covid-19 does not transmit after the onset of symptoms? Do you have a reference supporting that?
I found sources saying that Covid-19 may be transmissible starting two days before the onset of symptoms, but nothing saying that it stops when symptoms start. I found the CDC saying to isolate at least 10 days after symptom onset [1]. I would assume that those days of symptoms would be the optimal time to transmit a virus, such as when coughing, running, and sneezing. Are you saying that Covid-19 is only spread asymptomatically?
[0] https://www.yahoo.com/news/south-africas-drop-daily-covid-14...
[1] https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/hcp/duration-isola...
> Early data from the South African health ministry released last week found that only 1.7% of cases in the latest wave have resulted in hospitalizations so far, compared with 18% at the same point during the previous wave, which was dominated by the Delta variant. [0]
Their methodology also seems better than that used for the U.K. numbers in the article, which compared all past cases to current Omicron cases. I personally think that's a more complex comparison, with perhaps more room for confounding factors.
I assume the U.K. numbers are a week or two behind the numbers from South Africa. I assume more numbers will be forthcoming in another couple/few weeks, along with early numbers from more countries. Time will tell.
The post you replied to also mentioned that coronaviruses often evolve to be weaker because that helps them spread. I've seen experts say the same. You said:
> this applies only to viruses that transmit after people get symptoms
Are you saying that Covid-19 does not transmit after the onset of symptoms? Do you have a reference supporting that?
I found sources saying that Covid-19 may be transmissible starting two days before the onset of symptoms, but nothing saying that it stops when symptoms start. I found the CDC saying to isolate at least 10 days after symptom onset [1]. I would assume that those days of symptoms would be the optimal time to transmit a virus, such as when coughing, running, and sneezing. Are you saying that Covid-19 is only spread asymptomatically?
[0] https://www.yahoo.com/news/south-africas-drop-daily-covid-14...
[1] https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/hcp/duration-isola...
Thanks for highlighting the co-evolution aspect. I find it more likely that for viruses with a pre-symptomatic phase is the selective pressure caused by the virus on the host that ends up resulting in lower severity long term. By simply removing genes from the genepool that were particularly prone to complications.
With a pre-symptomatic phase the selective pressure on the virus is towards more infectivity and longer pre-symptomatic phase. Not necessarily towards milder outcomes.
With a pre-symptomatic phase the selective pressure on the virus is towards more infectivity and longer pre-symptomatic phase. Not necessarily towards milder outcomes.
A less harmful variant was hoped for, based on the initial data from South Africa for Omicron. However, the demographics and history of infections in South Africa are different from other countries, so this wasn't certain. Data and research on what is happening outside South Africa was needed.
Now Reuters is reporting on that research, and the results indicate that the initial hope was false. It doesn't make sense to then go back and point at South Africa to contradict the news. I guess you can disagree with the research conclusions, but then you need to critique the study methodology instead of just pointing at South Africa.
Now Reuters is reporting on that research, and the results indicate that the initial hope was false. It doesn't make sense to then go back and point at South Africa to contradict the news. I guess you can disagree with the research conclusions, but then you need to critique the study methodology instead of just pointing at South Africa.
What? Omicron aside, Delta was more harmful than the original wild type, not less. More severe, higher rate of hospitalization and mortality.
Do you have a source on that? My understanding is it was more transmissible, and suspected to be more severe but there was no hard data.
CDC's FAQ on the delta variant mentions it "might cause more severe illness than previous variants in unvaccinated people."
Also quoted from CDC's FAQ:
> "In two different studies from Canada and Scotland, patients infected with the Delta variant were more likely to be hospitalized than patients infected with Alpha or the original virus that causes COVID-19."
https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/variants/delta-var...
Also quoted from CDC's FAQ:
> "In two different studies from Canada and Scotland, patients infected with the Delta variant were more likely to be hospitalized than patients infected with Alpha or the original virus that causes COVID-19."
https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/variants/delta-var...
This summary from august points to a couple studies that support the general 2x hospitalization rate in unvaccinated delta patients.
Honestly I wasn’t aware that there was this much uncertainty at the time, I remember hearing that delta was affecting young people in India more strongly way back in early 2021
https://www.ucsf.edu/news/2021/08/421171/how-dangerous-delta...
Honestly I wasn’t aware that there was this much uncertainty at the time, I remember hearing that delta was affecting young people in India more strongly way back in early 2021
https://www.ucsf.edu/news/2021/08/421171/how-dangerous-delta...
Case Fatality Rate = ~0.3% Delta vs ~1.9% Original
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SARS-CoV-2_Delta_variant
Ok. That wiki page cites this report from the UK on those stats (which seem to be derived from raw values in the tables maybe?) [0].
The thing is, it’s not straightforward to answer the question “was delta more severe/virulent than alpha or wild type” from directly comparing these raw statistics. The Delta wave in the UK (and US) was post vaccine rollout, so you can’t say from the raw numbers whether it’s the virus that changed, the demographics of people with infections, or vaccine rollout.
Analyses considering these confounding factors point to delta being more virulent, and towards the (thankfully!) lower fatality rate being mediated by vaccine efficacy and demographics.
This is the same situation we seem to possibly be in with omicron, but we still lack good data on how hard it hits the immunologically naive relative to previous variants
0: https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/...
The thing is, it’s not straightforward to answer the question “was delta more severe/virulent than alpha or wild type” from directly comparing these raw statistics. The Delta wave in the UK (and US) was post vaccine rollout, so you can’t say from the raw numbers whether it’s the virus that changed, the demographics of people with infections, or vaccine rollout.
Analyses considering these confounding factors point to delta being more virulent, and towards the (thankfully!) lower fatality rate being mediated by vaccine efficacy and demographics.
This is the same situation we seem to possibly be in with omicron, but we still lack good data on how hard it hits the immunologically naive relative to previous variants
0: https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/...
It doesn't work like that. Delta and original existed at different times. Testing was way more advanced this year than last. So you would expect a larger denominator.
I don't think that is true for England. Or do you have a link to more info?
> And, as expected, it appears to be far less harmful than Delta, which was less harmful than the original novel cov2. This is how a virus evolves, it gets weaker, which allows it to spread faster. Dead people don't spread viruses. It looks from the data that we are finally at the end of this pandemic.
Yeah, no. https://www.reuters.com/business/healthcare-pharmaceuticals/...
Yeah, no. https://www.reuters.com/business/healthcare-pharmaceuticals/...
Check declining rate of hospitalization vs. Cases in Denmark, US, UK and Canada.
It's not just south Africa anymore.
Eg. https://www.sst.dk/en/english/corona-eng/status-of-the-epide....
I'm aware of today's deaths = 13. But this could still be the result of delta or an anomaly ( will follow up tomorrow and the rest of the week)
Fyi, Reuters COVID tracker is really nice!
Unfortunately it tracks deaths and not hospitalisations, but that seems to be declining too: https://graphics.reuters.com/world-coronavirus-tracker-and-m...
It's not just south Africa anymore.
Eg. https://www.sst.dk/en/english/corona-eng/status-of-the-epide....
I'm aware of today's deaths = 13. But this could still be the result of delta or an anomaly ( will follow up tomorrow and the rest of the week)
Fyi, Reuters COVID tracker is really nice!
Unfortunately it tracks deaths and not hospitalisations, but that seems to be declining too: https://graphics.reuters.com/world-coronavirus-tracker-and-m...
Reported death rate is currently increasing in the UK, and so are hospitalisations.
The reported ratio of detected cases to deaths is reducing, but this what you would expect during the rapid spreading phase, because of the long time lag between detected cases and eventual death.
We have to wait a few more weeks to find out what the true ratio is in the UK. It will emerge into statistical significance gradually, because some people die sooner than others, so expect a trickle of stories with varying shades of speculation.
Unfortunately data on Long Covid is harder to come by, and this is just as concerning due to the high case numbers, and the way it severely affects people while tending to be under-reported and undiagnosed.
The reported ratio of detected cases to deaths is reducing, but this what you would expect during the rapid spreading phase, because of the long time lag between detected cases and eventual death.
We have to wait a few more weeks to find out what the true ratio is in the UK. It will emerge into statistical significance gradually, because some people die sooner than others, so expect a trickle of stories with varying shades of speculation.
Unfortunately data on Long Covid is harder to come by, and this is just as concerning due to the high case numbers, and the way it severely affects people while tending to be under-reported and undiagnosed.
So, how is that declining rate of hospitalization going?
Today Change in 24 hours
Hospitalised 579 +57"Just one-fifth of new Covid hospital patients are true cases"
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2021/12/28/covid-hospital-d...
> Read the article and that "one fifth" claim is from a tiny snap shot of 250 cases. The rest of the data in the article shows the vast majority of the 8,000 plus hospital cases are full on Covid
> The Telegraph is engaged in outright propaganda
> Disgusting. Disgusting to spread it
> The Telegraph is engaged in outright propaganda
> Disgusting. Disgusting to spread it
Nonsense.
Read for yourself https://archive.is/tybj9
Yes, the one-fifth is of the increase. But read the rest..
"Overall, nearly 30 per cent of people currently in hospital with Covid are “incidental” cases - 1,813 out of 6,245 - the highest it has been since the NHS started releasing the figures in the summer.
The number of incidental Covid cases has been rising in recent weeks because omicron is far more infectious than delta, meaning that many people will be entering hospital unknowingly infected. In the previous week, December 7 to December 14 - when the vast majority of hospitalisations were still delta - some 59 per cent of the 289 weekly rise was primarily Covid.
Experts said it was important to treat the current hospital data with caution, while Sir John Bell, regius professor of medicine at Oxford University, said: “This is not the same disease we were seeing a year ago. “The horrific scenes that we saw a year ago – intensive care units being full, lots of people dying prematurely – that is now history in my view and I think…that’s likely to continue.""
"Overall, nearly 30 per cent of people currently in hospital with Covid are “incidental” cases - 1,813 out of 6,245 - the highest it has been since the NHS started releasing the figures in the summer.
The number of incidental Covid cases has been rising in recent weeks because omicron is far more infectious than delta, meaning that many people will be entering hospital unknowingly infected. In the previous week, December 7 to December 14 - when the vast majority of hospitalisations were still delta - some 59 per cent of the 289 weekly rise was primarily Covid.
Experts said it was important to treat the current hospital data with caution, while Sir John Bell, regius professor of medicine at Oxford University, said: “This is not the same disease we were seeing a year ago. “The horrific scenes that we saw a year ago – intensive care units being full, lots of people dying prematurely – that is now history in my view and I think…that’s likely to continue.""
im optimistic about this as well but it hasnt been long enough to tell for sure. Theres a lag in contracting the virus and death occurring, south africa is at its case peak right now so we need to wait a couple weeks and see if deaths follow. That and we need to see if Omicron truly outcompetes other variants, in the UK they have both delta and omicron for now.
That said, I believe we would be seeing higher rate of hospitalizations if this were as dangerous as the other variants.
That said, I believe we would be seeing higher rate of hospitalizations if this were as dangerous as the other variants.
You rightly noted that deaths occur a few weeks after contraction of the virus, and hospitalization usually somewhere between those two dates. So the hospitalization curve also follows the infection curve with a delay. Therefore, hospitalization might still go up.
The following argument is often completely ignored, even if Omicron hospitalizes only half as many percent of infected people as Delta, it will reach the same absolute number of hospital patients one doubling period later, which is around two to three days later for most countries. I.e. it doesn't matter for the question whether public health systems collapse if you don't stop the wave of infections.
The following argument is often completely ignored, even if Omicron hospitalizes only half as many percent of infected people as Delta, it will reach the same absolute number of hospital patients one doubling period later, which is around two to three days later for most countries. I.e. it doesn't matter for the question whether public health systems collapse if you don't stop the wave of infections.
Almost as if natural immunity was the answer all along..
At the cost of millions of lives. People tend to forget that and skip over what they're proposing is the death of millions.
I don't take sides in this crazy divisive topic but please don't ignore that no small amount of people died almost immediately after getting the vaccine as well.
Some smaller countries (or districts) also reported higher deaths of the vaccines themselves compared to Covid -- which isn't solid data to go by but it's still quite an interesting data point.
Your argument should go both ways for it to be objective.
---
EDIT: And of course I immediately regret posting in a Covid thread. Even just trying to say there are shades of gray and I get immediately labelled and flagged.
Enjoy your echo chamber, guys. What an extremist age we are living in. :(
This was my last ever time I will be posting in any such thread (not only on HN). You won. Do sleep soundly knowing that there won't be any critical thinking process involved. Hope that "scientific" approach makes you happy.
Some smaller countries (or districts) also reported higher deaths of the vaccines themselves compared to Covid -- which isn't solid data to go by but it's still quite an interesting data point.
Your argument should go both ways for it to be objective.
---
EDIT: And of course I immediately regret posting in a Covid thread. Even just trying to say there are shades of gray and I get immediately labelled and flagged.
Enjoy your echo chamber, guys. What an extremist age we are living in. :(
This was my last ever time I will be posting in any such thread (not only on HN). You won. Do sleep soundly knowing that there won't be any critical thinking process involved. Hope that "scientific" approach makes you happy.
> I don't take sides in this crazy divisive topic but please don't ignore that no small amount of people died almost immediately after getting the vaccine as well.
That’s crazy talk. European countries have virtually vaccinated their whole adult population with a number of deaths linked to the vaccine so low it’s negligible.
That’s crazy talk. European countries have virtually vaccinated their whole adult population with a number of deaths linked to the vaccine so low it’s negligible.
> That’s crazy talk. European countries have virtually vaccinated their whole adult population with a number of deaths linked to the vaccine so low it’s negligible.
Yes, it's quite low. But so is the number of covid fatalities for young people, which is why many healthy young adults aren't enthusiastic about being forced to vaccinate themselves and their kids.
It would not surprise me to learn, once final, honest numbers are tallied up, that the vaccination caused as many negative outcomes as covid itself in the under 30 crowd.
That being said, neither number is probably significant.
Yes, it's quite low. But so is the number of covid fatalities for young people, which is why many healthy young adults aren't enthusiastic about being forced to vaccinate themselves and their kids.
It would not surprise me to learn, once final, honest numbers are tallied up, that the vaccination caused as many negative outcomes as covid itself in the under 30 crowd.
That being said, neither number is probably significant.
They reported lower deaths from COVID vs. vaccines because they didn't have rampant COVID but also had high vaccination rates, it really was that simple, and it is damaging (and strictly incorrect) to discuss this 'data point' without the appropriate context. Because of this, the vaccine looks like an 'unnecessary risk' until you start getting major outbreaks.
And calling this a 'divisive topic' lends too much credence to anti-vax dogma
And calling this a 'divisive topic' lends too much credence to anti-vax dogma
This is a very strong claim to make without supporting evidence that the vaccines directly caused or contributed to the cause of these deaths.
Same as claiming that Covid caused a lot of deaths when doctors in my country have been caught writing off car crash victims as Covid deaths, en masse, several times in a row over the course of months? ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
I try to keep an open mind and observe objectively. Both "camps" have their pretty wild claims and at this point in time it's more of a religious war than anything else.
That's what an average guy like me is seeing. But feel free to keep citing the need for supporting evidence in an age where there are strong financial incentives to take one of the sides in this debate.
I try to keep an open mind and observe objectively. Both "camps" have their pretty wild claims and at this point in time it's more of a religious war than anything else.
That's what an average guy like me is seeing. But feel free to keep citing the need for supporting evidence in an age where there are strong financial incentives to take one of the sides in this debate.
> Same as claiming that Covid caused a lot of deaths when doctors in my country have been caught writing off car crash victims as Covid deaths
> But feel free to keep citing the need for supporting evidence in an age where there are strong financial incentives to take one of the sides in this debate
I can't speak to anything about your country or your experiences, but you've used an absolutely non-falsifiable (+ ludicrously non-scalable) anecdote as your "counter-argument" or whatever, while simultaneously denigrating the validity of any real supporting evidence that anyone might show. You call this a "debate" - what room have you left? Can I provide stats on the highly-monitored vaccine distribution in the US regarding death? Yes, sure (.0022%).
But to what end? When you also claim:
> No small amount of people died immediately after getting the vaccine."
What is "not a small amount", I guess? Percentage-wise, 0.0022% sure seems small. Hell, maybe it's 50x worse than that in reality, which would still be just around 1/10th of a single percent! But, again, how can we have a conversation when you yourself refuse to provide any evidence for your beliefs, and pre-dismiss all other evidence due to financial incentives? None, as far as I can tell.
> But feel free to keep citing the need for supporting evidence in an age where there are strong financial incentives to take one of the sides in this debate
I can't speak to anything about your country or your experiences, but you've used an absolutely non-falsifiable (+ ludicrously non-scalable) anecdote as your "counter-argument" or whatever, while simultaneously denigrating the validity of any real supporting evidence that anyone might show. You call this a "debate" - what room have you left? Can I provide stats on the highly-monitored vaccine distribution in the US regarding death? Yes, sure (.0022%).
But to what end? When you also claim:
> No small amount of people died immediately after getting the vaccine."
What is "not a small amount", I guess? Percentage-wise, 0.0022% sure seems small. Hell, maybe it's 50x worse than that in reality, which would still be just around 1/10th of a single percent! But, again, how can we have a conversation when you yourself refuse to provide any evidence for your beliefs, and pre-dismiss all other evidence due to financial incentives? None, as far as I can tell.
Sadly both sides dismiss evidence on all sorts of grounds and I already regret posting here because yes, REALLY, I take no side no matter what various posters started claiming. I am just not happy with how one-sided the reporting on this whole thing has been. And it still is. There is nuance and it's immediately screamed out of existence.
Anecdotal evidences also shouldn't be swept under the rug either. It's not good science in the objective sense because "statistical significance" is a rather random construct (and several months ago there was even a good article about it posted here on HN with a pretty interesting discussion with mathematicians and statisticians).
I am out though. Seems even if somebody tries to argue in a less extremist way they are immediately labeled as loonies because they don't belong to the currently strongly believed state of things. Enjoy your echo chamber where posters saying "hey but this doesn't seem as clear and cut as you make it out to be" are labeled as conspiracy theorists or monsters.
What a sad, sad age has this become. :|
We'll see in another 5 or 10 years though. I am keeping my mind open. Do you?
Anecdotal evidences also shouldn't be swept under the rug either. It's not good science in the objective sense because "statistical significance" is a rather random construct (and several months ago there was even a good article about it posted here on HN with a pretty interesting discussion with mathematicians and statisticians).
I am out though. Seems even if somebody tries to argue in a less extremist way they are immediately labeled as loonies because they don't belong to the currently strongly believed state of things. Enjoy your echo chamber where posters saying "hey but this doesn't seem as clear and cut as you make it out to be" are labeled as conspiracy theorists or monsters.
What a sad, sad age has this become. :|
We'll see in another 5 or 10 years though. I am keeping my mind open. Do you?
> REALLY, I take no side no matter what various posters started claiming.
You claimed "not small" amounts of deaths as a direct result of vaccine administration, then balked at being asked to provide any evidence to support this claim while seeming to pre-dismiss contrary evidence. That does not make it seem like you are keeping an open mind or acting in good faith.
> There is nuance and it's immediately screamed out of existence.
There is nuance, but not on the population-level efficacy and safety of the vaccines relative to the risk of COVID infection.
> Seems even if somebody tries to argue in a less extremist way they are immediately labeled as loonies
You're arguing in a more extremist way (i.e., making counter-factual and unsubstantiated claims, reacting with offense when asked to support them; strongly doubting verifiable evidence but amplifying the value of anecdotes). I don't think you're a loonie, or a monster. But you are wrong.
You claimed "not small" amounts of deaths as a direct result of vaccine administration, then balked at being asked to provide any evidence to support this claim while seeming to pre-dismiss contrary evidence. That does not make it seem like you are keeping an open mind or acting in good faith.
> There is nuance and it's immediately screamed out of existence.
There is nuance, but not on the population-level efficacy and safety of the vaccines relative to the risk of COVID infection.
> Seems even if somebody tries to argue in a less extremist way they are immediately labeled as loonies
You're arguing in a more extremist way (i.e., making counter-factual and unsubstantiated claims, reacting with offense when asked to support them; strongly doubting verifiable evidence but amplifying the value of anecdotes). I don't think you're a loonie, or a monster. But you are wrong.
Never would I have thought I'd see the day when a relatively cut-and-dry question of epidemiology and public health would get so thoroughly contaminated by paranoia, hucksterism, and opportunistic politics that it would routinely be treated with shameless false what-aboutism on HN, of all places. We all live in Russia now.
Same here, although your comment can be taken both ways, you realize that right?
The virus and its symptoms are cut and dried alright. The experimental vaccines, not so much. But think what you will. I am giving up.
The virus and its symptoms are cut and dried alright. The experimental vaccines, not so much. But think what you will. I am giving up.
> The experimental vaccines, not so much.
If hundreds of millions of administered doses under highly-observed and reported on outcomes from the world's most-respected (not perfect) public health agencies won't convince you, what will? It's been a year, and I believe there's only one vaccine ever to have emergent side effects after that time, and even then the median time to symptoms was <50 days (https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11910-018-0851-5). Yet we have seen COVID definitely has side effects, and they have a much higher likelihood of persisting.
And if your response is "we won't know until it's been 5, 10, etc. number of years" then OK, fine, but the same then must hold for COVID itself. If I'm betting on the long-term effects to my health, does it not follow to choose the highly-researched vaccine with quantified minimal side effects vs. the highly-researched infection with worse side effects?
Now it's my turn to give up.
If hundreds of millions of administered doses under highly-observed and reported on outcomes from the world's most-respected (not perfect) public health agencies won't convince you, what will? It's been a year, and I believe there's only one vaccine ever to have emergent side effects after that time, and even then the median time to symptoms was <50 days (https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11910-018-0851-5). Yet we have seen COVID definitely has side effects, and they have a much higher likelihood of persisting.
And if your response is "we won't know until it's been 5, 10, etc. number of years" then OK, fine, but the same then must hold for COVID itself. If I'm betting on the long-term effects to my health, does it not follow to choose the highly-researched vaccine with quantified minimal side effects vs. the highly-researched infection with worse side effects?
Now it's my turn to give up.
Not the original poster but genuinely curious here and I do agree with your long term covid statement. We do not know. But I strongly disagree with you calling the health agencies "most-respected (not-perfect)".
Didn't these same health agencies approve opioids saying they weren't dangerous or addictive? Then spend a decade trying to cover it up with the pharma companies? Then they got hired by the same company's whose drugs they approved? Today fentanyl overdoses are the number one cause of deaths for my age group (18-45 https://www.google.com/search?q=fentanyl+overdoses+number+on...) in the US. That is a direct result of these pharma companies and health agencies. All it took was a little bit of money and our lives became meaningless.
How can I trust any agency that was willing to kill me for a couple bucks?
If you are unsure what I am talking about (https://www.google.com/search?q=opioid%20epidemic%20document...). IMO HBO's Crime of the century does a good job of laying out just how ridiculous the whole thing is.
Didn't these same health agencies approve opioids saying they weren't dangerous or addictive? Then spend a decade trying to cover it up with the pharma companies? Then they got hired by the same company's whose drugs they approved? Today fentanyl overdoses are the number one cause of deaths for my age group (18-45 https://www.google.com/search?q=fentanyl+overdoses+number+on...) in the US. That is a direct result of these pharma companies and health agencies. All it took was a little bit of money and our lives became meaningless.
How can I trust any agency that was willing to kill me for a couple bucks?
If you are unsure what I am talking about (https://www.google.com/search?q=opioid%20epidemic%20document...). IMO HBO's Crime of the century does a good job of laying out just how ridiculous the whole thing is.
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I was hoping for new information, but the points on severity in this article just summarize the recent imperial college preprint, which has been discussed quite a bit.
In contrast to just about all the headlines I’ve seen based on that article, what the data actually show is that it was still too early to infer anything about severity of omicron at the time of analysis (over a week ago now)
In contrast to just about all the headlines I’ve seen based on that article, what the data actually show is that it was still too early to infer anything about severity of omicron at the time of analysis (over a week ago now)
> lowers sperm count
Alas!
We can probably have an interesting conversation about evolution, adaptation, and fitness for survival.
Besides the obvious potential for lower population growth, how does a lower sperm count of any entire set of generations impact the future species, and society?
Alas!
We can probably have an interesting conversation about evolution, adaptation, and fitness for survival.
Besides the obvious potential for lower population growth, how does a lower sperm count of any entire set of generations impact the future species, and society?
The fact that multiple countries that had removed most restrictions seem to desperately be putting them back in place makes me think they’ve seen data that is making them very worried. This seems to fit the bill.
As on other HN threads, transmissibility (Omicron is almost certainly more transmissible) has an exponential effect on healthcare demand and severity is linear (1). Plus if you're wrong about it being less deadly, no do-overs. Though, arguably, it's already way too late to do anything but look like you're doing something.
(1) Pseudo-linear? It's more like shifting the peak of a bell curve.
(1) Pseudo-linear? It's more like shifting the peak of a bell curve.
Enough to close everything in the dead of winter and during celebration season
I hope that’s the only case but Canada is saying “this will be the worst wave so far”. They are closing schools and most restaurants and bars and gyms.
Far faster and more restrictive than ever before.
The UK, Netherlands, Germany are all imposing new restrictions when a few months ago they had removed most.
For whatever reason they think Omicron could be a huge problem.
Far faster and more restrictive than ever before.
The UK, Netherlands, Germany are all imposing new restrictions when a few months ago they had removed most.
For whatever reason they think Omicron could be a huge problem.
Considering the previous extraordinary claim that it may be less severe, I would’ve like a breakdown of the reported population, and numbers for the hospitalization rate even if it’s similar to delta.
Does the lower count imply lowered fertility? If so, there should be an affect on births. Is there data to indicate this (after two years of covid)?
There is, some countries are reaching dangerous low fertility rates. But, then again, a lot of people in reproductive ages would consciously try to avoid getting pregnant in the middle of a pandemic. I guess we’ll only really know decades later.
Strange to imagine Nature evolving viruses as a defense mechanism against the environmental destruction wrought by human overpopulation...
Nature's not under threat, just biodiversity. We could not destroy all life on Earth if we wanted to. What we're doing is ripping leaves and branches off the tree of life. It's sad beyond belief, but it's not a threat to life itself.
It's fun to imagine, but we have as of yet no reason to believe life in its totality per se is agentic. Ultimately this problem, the motivation to solve it, and any solution to it must come from humanity. Nothing else cares.
It's fun to imagine, but we have as of yet no reason to believe life in its totality per se is agentic. Ultimately this problem, the motivation to solve it, and any solution to it must come from humanity. Nothing else cares.
how does this make any sense? a booster is the same as the original vaccine, the only reason i can see this making any sense is if the vaccine effectiveness was waning over time and everyone who they tested had been 6+ months since their 2 doses
edit: it appears they measure antibody titers as a means of determining whether youll get symptoms or not. I find it strange that the goalpost is now avoiding "symptomatic infection" instead of "severe desease". Cold symptoms are symptoms but they arent anything to worry about typically?