I don’t know what to make of these revisions, but regardless, it is rather strange to me that policies generally don’t work on some kind of automatic snapback basis based on real-world conditions. Does it work that way anywhere in the country? I guess the lack of regular and widespread testing will hamper something like that, but it seems like none of the state regulators have been thinking about it along such lines to begin with, and just respond to public pressure piecemeal, muddling through...
boo, my county is still high. I'd like to say it's time lag, but I don't know that.Woo-hoo. My county is finally "low". But I still double mask even though the state receded the statewide mask order last week.
I'm curious how the CDC is determining the prevalence levels given the surge in availability of at-home tests. My guess is that a lot of people are not following up on reporting positive or negative, especially since omicron seems to be less severe than the common cold (to a lot of people who are getting over it in 4 days with mild symptoms vs the typical 7-9 day cold).
I would too. Who knows what other diseases they carry.They removed some of the mask requirements here in my area. I can guarantee you the ones who ripped off their masks immediately are also the same people who never socially distanced and continued to be social with large groups, tried to get away with no mask wearing when it was required and are likely not vaccinated. I'd like to stay as far from these people as possible for a few more weeks, until a more long term trend comes out of the numbers.
Count me in the "quite annoyed that I had to Google and come to the comments to find the actual data" camp.
Based on what I've seen, living in a nearly mask-free county still shaded red and with high infection/hospitalization/death rates based on the CDC graphs, it seems like the CDC has resigned themselves to just saying "I told you so" when the inevitable comes to pass.
I would too. Who knows what other diseases they carry.They removed some of the mask requirements here in my area. I can guarantee you the ones who ripped off their masks immediately are also the same people who never socially distanced and continued to be social with large groups, tried to get away with no mask wearing when it was required and are likely not vaccinated. I'd like to stay as far from these people as possible for a few more weeks, until a more long term trend comes out of the numbers.
...
That only matters if they were ever good at determining prevalence in the first place. I recall Fauci saying the vast majority of infections around late 2020 were due to asymptomatic carriers.
The upshot is we've probably undercounted infections (prevalence) to a large degree since the onset if most of them have been asymptomatic.
I don’t know what to make of these revisions, but regardless, it is rather strange to me that policies generally don’t work on some kind of automatic snapback basis based on real-world conditions. Does it work that way anywhere in the country? I guess the lack of regular and widespread testing will hamper something like that, but it seems like none of the state regulators have been thinking about it along such lines to begin with, and just respond to public pressure piecemeal, muddling through...
Originally it was based on the number of cases. But the threshold was such that 97% of the country was still considered "high" levels, even though the number of hospitalizations and deaths had fallen somewhat. (I mean, we're still averaging about 1700 deaths per day, but it's trending down and its a lagging indicator.)
So we could have stuck it out waiting for cases to drop to the levels that we originally thought were ok, but the reality is that the country would not have gone along with that -- whether you think they should or not, it just wasn't going to happen.
...
That only matters if they were ever good at determining prevalence in the first place. I recall Fauci saying the vast majority of infections around late 2020 were due to asymptomatic carriers.
Don't remember that but he probably meant pre-symptomatic instead of asymptomatic.
Since people can be contagious 1-3 days before they start showing symptoms, that's probably the most common scenario for transmission. Since once a person starts showing symptoms, they're more likely to get tested, self-isolate, etc.
The upshot is we've probably undercounted infections (prevalence) to a large degree since the onset if most of them have been asymptomatic.
I think a few studies showed that 10-30% of cases were asymptomatic in 2020, i.e., before vaccines.
Not trivial, but also not the 90% (or whatever) that some proponents of naturally-acquired herd immunity were claiming.
Now that so many people are vaccinated, I suspect the number of asymptomatic cases is enormous. I know several people who have had asymptomatic cases.
Or minimally symptomatic. With my post-booster infection, I had a cough for two days and felt fairly poopy for one. I went and got tested because it was the civic thing to do, but presented with that fact pattern in 2018, I would not have interpreted it as personally finally falling victim to a globe-shaking pandemic. I certainly wouldn't have bothered interfacing with the health care system at any level.Now that so many people are vaccinated, I suspect the number of asymptomatic cases is enormous. I know several people who have had asymptomatic cases.
Good to hear that things are improving.
I'm sticking with a mask, social distancing, and wfh nonetheless. None of it is particularly bothersome, and all do some good.
I don't mind wearing a mask around indoor crowds and when flying. The thing that needs to change though, is the requirement for a negative COVID test to return to the US from another country, yet allow people to fly anywhere domestically without testing. That policy hasn't made any sense after the pandemic became a worldwide phenomenon, with the infection rate in the US among the worst.
Meanwhile Iceland's Ministry of Health issued this remarkable directive:
"Widespread societal resistance to COVID-19 is the main route out of the epidemic. To achieve this, as many people as possible need to be infected with the virus as the vaccines are not enough…"
I'm not sure what to make of it.
I have to say I'm skeptical of this. Supposedly its "getting better" but over the last ~3 weeks I've had on average 1-2 people I was supposed to be interacting with in person (either coming to me or going to them) cancelling due to getting COVID, and most of the time only finding out a few hours in advance. Until January I had only had 1 case where I was going to be meeting with someone and they tested positive.
Then we have stuff like at work being told that people may have to go back to 90% in person, but some facilities may now require still hard to find N95 masks instead of cloth and re-usable ones. So somehow simultaneously this pandemic is now so benign that we can go back to normal in public without masks, go back to work, but have to have *EVEN HIGHER QUALITY* disposable-only masks for office jobs?
This smells like its a "big boss man" greed driven return to normal, not a "health safety scientific" driven return.
That's simply not true. The 7-day deaths have dropped by a third since they peaked three weeks ago, and the 7-day new hospitalizations have dropped by more than seventy percent since the peak 5 weeks ago. The absolute levels of hospitalizations and deaths are still too high to lift restrictions in many parts of the country in my (and CDC's) opinion, but they have dropped significantly, and continue to drop quickly.The 7-day average deaths are only decreasing slightly. And this continues to be a pandemic of the unvaccinated.Good to hear that things are improving.
I'm sticking with a mask, social distancing, and wfh nonetheless. None of it is particularly bothersome, and all do some good.
It would have been nice to think that one of the positives to come out of COVID was a more Asia-esque appreciation for the benefits of wearing a mask in public when you're not feeling well, and not somehow get twisted into a political tool.
But I'm a hopeless optimist, and used to disappointment.
Community Level:
Low
% of counties - 23.0
% of population - 29.5
High
% of counties - 37.3
% of population - 28.2
Not too surprising, but ironic that the areas least dense in population have the most transmission.
Here is an interesting memo that was released yesterday by Impact Research, a Democratic Party polling firm:
https://twitter.com/hamill_law/status/1 ... 4790872065
“ Twice as many voters are now more concerned about COVID’s effect on the economy (49%) than about someone in their family or someone they know becoming infected with the coronavirus (24%)”
“Six in ten Americans describe themselves as ‘worn out’ by the pandemic. The more we talk about the threat of COVID and onerously restrict people’s lives because of it, the more we turn them against us and show them we’re out of touch with their daily realities.”
“Science” indeed.
We may have very different framings of the question, and I'm sure the answer will vary based on where you live, but I have been stunned that my local peeps have essentially put up with whatever the county declared for essentially two years.Or who would have guessed in 2019 that something as minor as putting on a mask to limit the spread of a major disease would have been such a major point of conflict?
There's some extremely important science that is happening, and I think those polls help us get there even if their stated purpose isn't to advance science. Maybe I'm just too much in the department of looking for silver linings, but I feel like the CDC is actually doing a decent job of starting to figure out what kind of protective measures people are willing to take and for how long.
We may have very different framings of the question, and I'm sure the answer will vary based on where you live, but I have been stunned that my local peeps have essentially put up with whatever the county declared for essentially two years.Or who would have guessed in 2019 that something as minor as putting on a mask to limit the spread of a major disease would have been such a major point of conflict?
There's some extremely important science that is happening, and I think those polls help us get there even if their stated purpose isn't to advance science. Maybe I'm just too much in the department of looking for silver linings, but I feel like the CDC is actually doing a decent job of starting to figure out what kind of protective measures people are willing to take and for how long.
Please spare me the mask-hurt-facey nonsense--all of this has been at least annoying, and yet in many communities and regions, it's been accepted.
Here is an interesting memo that was released yesterday by Impact Research, a Democratic Party polling firm:
https://twitter.com/hamill_law/status/1 ... 4790872065
“ Twice as many voters are now more concerned about COVID’s effect on the economy (49%) than about someone in their family or someone they know becoming infected with the coronavirus (24%)”
“Six in ten Americans describe themselves as ‘worn out’ by the pandemic. The more we talk about the threat of COVID and onerously restrict people’s lives because of it, the more we turn them against us and show them we’re out of touch with their daily realities.”
“Science” indeed.
I know you're not viewing this as science, but I think the data about people's willingness to follow protective measures is extremely important science. How many of us could have guessed in 2019 that 25% of the country would refuse a vaccine that greatly mitigates a deadly, fast-spreading disease? (A number that could be higher if mandates didn't exist.) I would have guessed somewhere in the range of 5-10%.
Or who would have guessed in 2019 that something as minor as putting on a mask to limit the spread of a major disease would have been such a major point of conflict?
There's some extremely important science that is happening, and I think those polls help us get there even if their stated purpose isn't to advance science. Maybe I'm just too much in the department of looking for silver linings, but I feel like the CDC is actually doing a decent job of starting to figure out what kind of protective measures people are willing to take and for how long.
I'm happy that in NM (where I am) the rolling 7 day average of cases has now fallen to where it was at the beginning of August 2021 (about 570 new cases per week), as opposed to the omicron peak of 7600 cases per week at this same time in January. And seems to be still trending down.
We dropped mask mandates last week, but we're still in this weird phase where people don't know what they are meant to be doing. Eg I was in my local bike shop on Monday and Thursday. On Monday I walked in without a mask, but the people behind the counter were all wearing masks. So Ok I thought, they're still wearing masks. So when I went back on Thursday I wore a mask out of politeness. Annnnnd the people behind the counter weren't wearing masks.
boo, my county is still high. I'd like to say it's time lag, but I don't know that.Woo-hoo. My county is finally "low". But I still double mask even though the state receded the statewide mask order last week.
I don’t know what to make of these revisions, but regardless, it is rather strange to me that policies generally don’t work on some kind of automatic snapback basis based on real-world conditions. Does it work that way anywhere in the country? I guess the lack of regular and widespread testing will hamper something like that, but it seems like none of the state regulators have been thinking about it along such lines to begin with, and just respond to public pressure piecemeal, muddling through...
Originally it was based on the number of cases. But the threshold was such that 97% of the country was still considered "high" levels, even though the number of hospitalizations and deaths had fallen somewhat. (I mean, we're still averaging about 1700 deaths per day, but it's trending down and its a lagging indicator.)
So we could have stuck it out waiting for cases to drop to the levels that we originally thought were ok, but the reality is that the country would not have gone along with that -- whether you think they should or not, it just wasn't going to happen.
Certainly the decreasing severity of cases, due in large part to acquired immunity through vaccination and/or infection, should play a significant role in how we view the risk from covid. And ability to withstand the huge case rates during Omicron without the health care system collapsing also should have given us confidence that we can handle covid in the future.
The pitfalls of public health orders have been revealed by COVID when the authorities are no longer responsible, or trusted, depending on which side of the political aisle you are.I don’t know what to make of these revisions, but regardless, it is rather strange to me that policies generally don’t work on some kind of automatic snapback basis based on real-world conditions. Does it work that way anywhere in the country? I guess the lack of regular and widespread testing will hamper something like that, but it seems like none of the state regulators have been thinking about it along such lines to begin with, and just respond to public pressure piecemeal, muddling through...
I got covid. You'll likely get it. Kind of a bummer. But there's not much reason to think that this little bugger will kill a shit-ton more people now that nearly everyone is vaccinated, exposed, or both.While far from my personal preference, I expect that everyone will get COVID at some point, and that it will continue to circulate in the population. We will probably kill a million more Americans over the length of this pandemic - even as it transitions to endemic status. Vaccination rates will increase as those who don't have immunity repeatedly get it (and I've seen that happen in very short order to family members who still refuse to get vaccinated), and those who get it will acquire some levels of temporary immunity that MAY at some point several years from now finally achieve herd immunity.
Of course, that will be long after the rest of the world with sane leaders and mostly responsible citizens have basically returned to normal, and are banning Americans (and those from other countries with the same shitty compliance issues) from entering their countries each time an outbreak happens.
There is not going to be a happy ending here. We'll just realize some day that we're living with it not because we have to, but because not enough people here want to prevent it.
Here is an interesting memo that was released yesterday by Impact Research, a Democratic Party polling firm:
https://twitter.com/hamill_law/status/1 ... 4790872065
“ Twice as many voters are now more concerned about COVID’s effect on the economy (49%) than about someone in their family or someone they know becoming infected with the coronavirus (24%)”
“Six in ten Americans describe themselves as ‘worn out’ by the pandemic. The more we talk about the threat of COVID and onerously restrict people’s lives because of it, the more we turn them against us and show them we’re out of touch with their daily realities.”
“Science” indeed.
I know you're not viewing this as science, but I think the data about people's willingness to follow protective measures is extremely important science. How many of us could have guessed in 2019 that 25% of the country would refuse a vaccine that greatly mitigates a deadly, fast-spreading disease? (A number that could be higher if mandates didn't exist.) I would have guessed somewhere in the range of 5-10%.
Or who would have guessed in 2019 that something as minor as putting on a mask to limit the spread of a major disease would have been such a major point of conflict?
There's some extremely important science that is happening, and I think those polls help us get there even if their stated purpose isn't to advance science. Maybe I'm just too much in the department of looking for silver linings, but I feel like the CDC is actually doing a decent job of starting to figure out what kind of protective measures people are willing to take and for how long.
The CDC's decision was probably a mix of science and politics.
From a scientific viewpoint, more people have immunity (vaccine-based or natural) than ever before; Omicron produces milder symptoms in most people; and the case rate has plunged since the Omicron surge, so it makes sense to end the mask mandate in areas of the country where the hospitals aren't being overwhelmed.
From a political viewpoint, as the report in Apparition's post indicates, the Democrats are starting to realize how badly their reaction to COVID is harming them among voters, even in blue states.
For months now, it has seemed to me that the most COVID-cautious progressives have underestimated the proportion of fully-vaccinated blue state Democrats who are tired of wearing masks (especially if that means wearing them 8 hours a day at work) and thinking about COVID all the time. That doesn't mean that they're going to turn into Trumpian Republicans, but it may mean that they don't bother to show up to vote in November.
Both the Biden adminstration and the blue state governors are starting to realize this, and the rollback of mask mandates is clearly an attempt to keep expected losses in November within the normal range of midterm losses for the party in power, as opposed to a GOP tsunami.