Aug 16, 2021

COVID-19 Update

38 States and 66 countries posted no numbers for yesterday, so we have no fucking idea where we stand right now here in USAmerica, Inc - or the world for that matter.

I'll switch up a little as of today, and start using the 7-day rolling averages, and skip the percent increase.

World
New Cases:   621,871
New Deaths:      9,464

USA
New Cases:   110,812
New Deaths:         514

USA Vaccination Scorecard
Total Vaccinations: 198.1 million (59.7%)
Fully Vaccinated:    168.4 million (50.7%)




And "the news" about the pandemic has been reduced to updates on human interest stories, and the unbelievably stoopid fight over vaccinations and masks.


The pandemic is showing us which friendships are worth keeping

Before the pandemic, Sherilyn Carlton’s family was so accustomed to her friends popping by the house that her youngest child used to ask: “Mommy, who’s coming over today?”

So Carlton, a 47-year-old corporate coach in Battle Ground, Wash., is the kind of person you might expect to have a tough time with social distancing. In the Before Times, Carlton would flit from a run with a friend to lunch or coffee with another pal; ferry her kids to and from basketball practice; and in the evening might host a writing group at her home.

In some ways, keeping a tighter circle during the pandemic has been difficult, she admits. But she went into the lockdown in March feeling socially hung over — and overall her quieter life has felt restorative. “I detoxed from all the social connecting I was doing,” Carlton said recently. “I’ve gotten to crave that time to myself, and I’m so much more aware of when I need it.”

Beyond her immediate family, Carlton sees two friends regularly — for outdoor exercise and coffee dates — and for the most part, that’s enough. “There’s a group of families that used to get together regularly. … I miss that,” she says. “But not much else.”

Carlton feels blessed to have an abundance of friends. Now that life has started to speed up again, she wants to continue focusing mostly on her besties rather than stretching to see everyone in her circle. Her pod just might outlive the pandemic.

Carlton is not the only one finding solace in a pared-down social life. Just as working from home has revealed that commuting to an office five days a week isn’t necessary for every worker, some who once tried to maintain dozens of friendships are realizing they’re more fulfilled while keeping up with just their nearest and dearest. After over a year of living through an extended state of emergency, it’s clear who’s in your ride-or-die crew, who you can call if you need a walk, a talk or some help. For many, those inner circles are tighter than ever.

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‘I feel defeated’: Mask and vaccine mandates cause new divides as officials try to head off virus surge

Cities and counties say protections are necessary as coronavirus cases explode again


At hospitals, mandatory deadlines for staffers to get coronavirus shots are arriving. At big corporations such as United Airlines and Google, workers are being told to roll up their sleeves. Even unions that once balked at vaccine mandates are signaling support.

And it’s not just shots: In dozens of cities and counties, indoor mask mandates are back, with city leaders and public health officials arguing the requirements are necessary to save lives and preserve the economic recovery. In some corners of the nation, the government mandates extend to vaccination.

“This is to protect kids [and] protect those who can’t get vaccinated,” San Francisco Mayor London N. Breed said Thursday as she announced the city would require a variety of businesses to demand proof of vaccination — a move that came 10 days after reinstating an indoor mask mandate. “To make sure that I never have to get up in front of you and say, ‘I’m sorry, I know we just reopened and now the city is closed again because we are seeing too many people die.’”

The summer of 2021 is a season of mandates, with rules requiring masks and vaccines reemerging as the pandemic’s latest cultural and political flash point. In many parts of the country — including states hit hardest by a resurgence of the virus — the mandates are pitting blue cities against red governors, sparking protests and placing new burdens on already harried workers.

- more -

Today's Pix

click a pic





































Aug 15, 2021

Today's Reddit

Sure - try this at home.

Afghanistan

  1. We keep forgetting that we can't kill our way out of our problems. And unfortunately, it seems we can't remember "No more Vietnams" either
  2. There are US troopers fighting in Afghanistan who weren't even born when this SNAFU started
  3. You're not going to beat a homegrown opponent who's willing to use bear skins and stone knives fighting against the most amazing military the world has ever known
It's going to get a lot worse for the Afghan people, and I'm sick about this whole fuckin' mess.


There's no reason for anyone to be surprised at how quickly and easily the Taliban were able to sweep up once the withdrawal of NATO forces was nearing completion.



Today's Beau

Stop expecting the US military to do things it's not designed to do.

Justin King - Beau Of The Fifth Column

COVID-19 Update

Yesterday, August 14th, 2021
8,718 people were killed by COVID-19
99.98 % of them were not fully vaccinated

World
New Cases:   568,108 (⬆︎ .27%)
New Deaths:      8,718 (⬆︎ .20%)

USA
New Cases:   71,135 (⬆︎ .19%)
New Deaths:       258 (⬆︎ .04%)

USA Vaccination Scorecard
Total Vaccinations: 197.7 million (59.5%)
Fully Vaccinated:    168.1 million (50.6%)




Not much news on the COVID front - I guess all the other shit that's going wrong in the world is kinda shoving the pandemic to the side.

Be well.



Today's Today


Woodstock, Aug 15-18, 1969

Max Yasgur owned the site of the event, and he spoke of how nearly half a million people spent the three days with music and peace on their minds. He stated, "If we join them, we can turn those adversities that are the problems of America today into a hope for a brighter and more peaceful future."

Aug 14, 2021

COVID-19 Update

Yesterday, August 13th, 2021
10,156 people were killed by COVID-19
99.996 % of them were not fully vaccinated

World
New Cases:   721,304 (⬆︎ .35%)
New Deaths:    10,156 (⬆︎ .23%)

USA
New Cases:   155,297 (⬆︎ .42%)
New Deaths:         769 (⬆︎ .12%)

USA Vaccination Scorecard
Total Vaccinations: 197.1 million (59.4%)
Fully Vaccinated:    167.7 million (50.5%)




I can't help but think, "Yeah, I shot 4 torpedoes into your cruise ship, but I've got life boats for sale right over here."

I want to see Governor Bloodstain's portfolio. If it turns out that prick is invested in either the maker of Regeneron or the big staffing agencies currently trying to fill nursing positions, he needs to be butt raped on live TV by several of the biggest baddest inmates at whatever prison he ends up in.

And if it's a scheme to put money in 45*'s pocket, people better come out of the woodwork to tear that jerk limb from limb.


DeSantis, faced with covid surge, urges Floridians to use Regeneron antibody treatment given to Trump

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) is vowing to begin dispensing Regeneron monoclonal antibodies — the treatment given to President Donald Trump when he had the coronavirus — through mobile clinics amid a record-breaking stretch of new cases and hospitalizations that have ravaged the state.

DeSantis said at a news conference in Jacksonville on Thursday that while coronavirus vaccines have been effective at preventing illness and death, more was needed to help curb the spread of the virus in a state that has become the U.S. hotbed of the latest surge of infections. The governor championed Regeneron’s monoclonal antibody cocktail for those who have already gotten sick, saying it is “the most effective treatment that we’ve yet encountered for people who are actually infected with covid-19.”

“Covid’s not going to go away,” DeSantis said. “So the question is how are we going to approach it. You can approach it on the front end by protecting yourself, but of course, if you end up in a situation where you are infected and at high risk, getting in here early, this is the best shot we’ve got right now to keep people out of the hospital and keep them safe.”

The antibody treatment, a cocktail of the monoclonal antibodies casirivimab and imdevimab that is made by Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, is designed to prevent infected people from developing severe illness. DeSantis’s promotion of Regeneron, which imitates the body’s natural defenses, is the governor’s latest response to a pandemic in which he has rejected mask mandates and restrictions.


While doctors have noted the treatment’s promise and effectiveness in clinical trials, others have stressed that taking the vaccine remains the most crucial defense to fight the spread of the virus. One physician noted that there is only a small supply, making the Regeneron antibodies “an extremely effective treatment for a limited number of people.”

DeSantis told reporters that the mobile units, which are already operating in parts of the state hit hard by the delta variant, will be expanded throughout Florida. The Trump administration last year initially bought 300,000 doses of Regeneron’s monoclonal antibody treatment, which cost about $1,500 per dose at the time.

A Regeneron spokesperson said in a statement to The Washington Post on Friday that the government has now bought up to 1.5 million doses of the treatment and that it is being made available free to patients. DeSantis did not specify how many Floridians would have access to the shots.

The Food and Drug Administration granted emergency authorization to Regeneron in November, saying that the treatment may be effective in treating mild to moderate covid in adults and children 12 or older, and is recommended for those at high risk of developing severe illness. The FDA expanded Regeneron’s emergency authorized use last month, enabling the treatment for people exposed to someone who has been infected or for those at high risk of exposure in settings such as prisons or nursing homes.

DeSantis urged people at high risk to get the treatment at the first sign of symptoms, suggesting that Floridians “won’t even necessarily need a prescription from a doctor” to obtain Regeneron. Doctors and health professionals have indicated that people who are severely ill from the coronavirus are less likely to see benefits from monoclonal antibodies.

“I do think this is probably the best thing we can do to reduce the number of people that require hospitalization,” DeSantis said.

The state reported 24,730 new cases on Thursday, bringing its seven-day average to more than 18,000 cases a day, according to data compiled by The Post. With 15,796 people hospitalized for the virus, Florida now accounts for 1 out of every 5 covid hospitalizations in the nation. More than 3,200 people are currently occupying beds in intensive care units, an increase of 17 percent from last week.

DeSantis has opposed implementing pandemic restrictions during the fourth wave of the pandemic. The Republican is in a back-and-forth with school districts that are pushing for mask mandates for children returning to school. That debate is expected to intensify after four educators in Broward County died of the virus within 24 hours, CBS Miami reported.

The Regeneron cocktail is best known as the antibody treatment given to Trump when it was still an investigational drug after he contracted the virus last October. Other high-profile Republicans, such as Rudolph W. Giuliani and Ben Carson, also acknowledged receiving the Regeneron drug.

After he was released from the hospital, Trump inaccurately described the Regeneron cocktail as a “cure” and pressed the FDA to quickly clear the medication. While demand was expected to surge when Trump made a laudatory video in which he promised to make the antibody treatments free to patients needing them, officials acknowledged that many patients and doctors did not know much about the medicine and were not asking for it.

Still, Regeneron announced this week in its quarterly earnings report that it had $2.59 billion in sales for its antibody drug, an increase of 163 percent compared to this time last year.

DeSantis on Thursday promoted Regeneron as achieving a “70 percent reduction in hospitalization and death for covid patients” in clinical trials, referencing an announcement by the company in the spring. But Dushyantha Jayaweera, a clinical professor at the University of Miami Medical School, told WPLG that the decrease in hospitalizations was more like a “relative risk reduction.”

“So he’s kind of giving the more optimistic, more flowery view,” Jayaweera said. “But the reality is that it is much less.”

Kami Kim, director of the division of infectious-disease and international medicine with the University of South Florida Health Morsani College of Medicine, told the Orlando Sentinel that while Regeneron could help those who have been infected, other options remain easier for helping to address the Sunshine State’s surge.

“The number one strategy is probably going back to social distancing again and wearing masks,” Kim said. “And obviously, Governor DeSantis has his view on that, which most public health people would not entirely agree with.”

Those who choose to get the Regeneron treatment at the Jacksonville site will be given the option of either getting four shots in the stomach, or two in the stomach and two in the arm, according to WTLV. Those patients will then be observed for an hour inside an air-conditioned tent.

In announcing the treatment, DeSantis claimed that the Regeneron treatment should “become part of the standard of care” for Floridians moving forward.

“This is going to be with us for a long time,” he said.