Covid 19

Discussion in 'Discussion Group' started by Wayne Stollings, Mar 19, 2021.

  1. lawnboy

    lawnboy Well-Known Member

    Boy oh boy. They're always quoting the Bible, or "god."

    Looks like God didn't help her with her obesity, her intellect, and he certainly didn't protect her, from either COVID, or the Great Dictator "Bideen." Or, maybe she just skipped those passages in the Bible.

    Stupid is as stupid does. I have zero sympathy for her or idiots like her. If "god" created you, then he also gave you the ability to learn, reason, and educate yourself. When someone of lower intelligence does not have the ability to understand science, or feels it's out of their power, they go into denial and "leave it up to god." How'd that work out for you, Crystal?

     
  2. Wayne Stollings

    Wayne Stollings Well-Known Member

  3. Wayne Stollings

    Wayne Stollings Well-Known Member

    https://www.politico.com/states/flo...-who-condemned-vaccines-dies-of-covid-1390555

    3rd conservative radio host who condemned vaccines dies of Covid
    Marc Bernier was a mainstay on talk radio in Daytona.


    By DAVID KIHARA


    08/29/2021 02:33 PM EDT

    Share on Facebook Share on Twitter
    A conservative Florida radio host who spoke out against Covid-19 vaccines died after a weekslong fight with the virus, marking the third radio personality to die from coronavirus who publicly rejected vaccines.

    The death of Marc Bernier, 65, who was a mainstay on talk radio in Daytona Beach, was announced Saturday night by WNDB, the radio station he was affiliated with for three decades.

    “It’s with great sadness that WNDB and Southern Stone Communications announce the passing of Marc Bernier, who informed and entertained listeners on WNDB for over 30 years. We kindly ask that privacy is given to Marc’s family during this time of grief,” WNDB stated on Twitter.

    Bernier was known for inviting differing viewpoints on his show, including Democrats, but had publicly railed against vaccines. The Daytona Beach News-Journal reported that Bernier had been hospitalized since Aug. 7.

    When Florida’s Democratic Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried in July urged people to get vaccines on Twitter by saying the “greatest generation had to defeat the Nazis to preserve our way of life, you’re only being asked to get a shot. So be a patriot,” Bernier replied on the platform: “Should say, ‘Now the US Government is acting like Nazi's. Get the shot!’”

    Fried, who is challenging Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis in 2022, on Sunday said in a statement that “My heart goes out to his family and friends.”

    On Aug. 4, another Florida conservative radio host who had criticized the coronavirus vaccine, Dick Farrel, died from Covid-19 complications. Farrel, whose given name was Farrel Austin Levitt, had worked at several radio stations in Florida, including WIOD in Miami and WPBR in Palm Beach, and had served as a fill-in anchor on Newsmax.

    He had strongly condemned the coronavirus vaccine, posting on Facebook on July 3, “why take a vax promoted by people who lied 2u all along about masks, where the virus came from and the death toll?” He also criticized Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top infection disease doctor, calling him a “power tripping lying freak,” according to The Washington Post, which reported on his death.

    But the Post also reports that Farrel had changed his stance on vaccines after he became infected with Covid-19. He had reportedly urged a longtime friend to get the vaccine and regretted not getting it himself.

    Florida has become one of the nation’s hot spots for the virus amid the Delta variant surge. Last week, the state had more than 151,000 new infections and over 170 deaths. There are more than 16,000 people hospitalized in Florida due to the virus.

    DeSantis has also maintained a hands-off approach to the virus, fighting against any attempts to require students to wear masks or businesses to require proof of vaccinations, though the governor has urged people to get the vaccine.

    Last week, Phil Valentine, a 62-year-old conservative radio host in Nashville, Tenn., who had questioned the necessity of vaccines, also died from the virus. Valentine, the son of former six-term Rep. Tim Valentine (D-N.C.), had a nationally syndicated show.

    “The people who instinctively believe that the government is the solution to everything are already talking vaccination mandates. This should be a personal choice,” he wrote on his blog in December. “I’m not an anti-vaxxer. I’m just using common sense.”

    But like Farrel, he had reportedly changed his position on vaccines after contracting Covid-19. The radio station he was affiliated with, 99.7 WTN, posted a statement on July 23 that Valentine had been hospitalized and “regrets not being more vehemently ‘Pro-Vaccine.’”
     
  4. Wayne Stollings

    Wayne Stollings Well-Known Member

    https://www.ajc.com/politics/politi...te-health-workers/KJBPDZ5NCBHSHPSBUI5IYMNR6U/

    The Jolt: Anti-vaxxers shut down vaccination event, harass state health workers


    POLITICAL INSIDER
    By Patricia Murphy - The Atlanta Journal-ConstitutionGreg Bluestein - The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
    Aug 31, 2021

    The headlines out of Gov. Brian Kemp’s latest press conference focused on the thousands of Georgia National Guard troops he’s preparing to deploy to help hospitals fight the pandemic.

    But it was Dr. Kathleen Toomey who stopped us in our tracks when she revealed that anti-vaxxer protesters had disrupted several vaccination drives -- and forced one to shut down.

    We asked aides to Toomey, the state’s top health official, to elaborate. Her office promptly detailed how public health staff “have been harassed, yelled at, threatened and demeaned by some of the very members of the public they were trying to help.”

    In one south Georgia county, the anti-vaxxers tracked down public health employees through social media and harangued them with messages of hostility and misinformation about vaccines.

    And the event that was canceled was a north Georgia mobile vaccination event, where an organized group of people showed up to harass and name-call public health workers.

    “Aside from feeling threatened themselves, staff realized no one would want to come to that location for a vaccination under those circumstances, so they packed up and left,” said Nancy Nydam, Toomey’s spokesman.

    “It comes with the territory to someone in my position,” Toomey said of the threats. “But it shouldn’t be happening to those nurses who are working to try to keep this state safe.”
     
  5. Wayne Stollings

    Wayne Stollings Well-Known Member

    Logical approach to masks.

    If the experts are wrong on the efficacy of wearing masks, what is the worst thing that happens? People are maybe inconvenienced by wearing a mask, sorry.

    If the non-experts are wrong on the efficacy of wearing masks, what is the worse thing that happens? People die.... sorry.

    Which outcome is the logical choice if you do not know the efficacy of wearing a mask? Inconvenience or death?
     
    Last edited: Sep 6, 2021
    lawnboy and Hught like this.
  6. Hught

    Hught Well-Known Member

  7. Wayne Stollings

    Wayne Stollings Well-Known Member

  8. Wayne Stollings

    Wayne Stollings Well-Known Member

    Idaho hospitals begin rationing health care amid COVID surge
    [​IMG]
    REBECCA BOONE
    September 7, 2021, 2:25 PM
    BOISE, Idaho (AP) — Idaho public health leaders announced Tuesday that they activated “crisis standards of care” allowing health care rationing for the state's northern hospitals because there are more coronavirus patients than the institutions can handle.

    The Idaho Department of Health and Welfare quietly enacted the move Monday and publicly announced it in a statement Tuesday morning — warning residents that they may not get the care they would normally expect if they need to be hospitalized.

    The move came as the state's confirmed coronavirus cases skyrocketed in recent weeks. Idaho has one of the lowest vaccination rates in the U.S.

    The state health agency cited “a severe shortage of staffing and available beds in the northern area of the state caused by a massive increase in patients with COVID-19 who require hospitalization.”

    The designation includes 10 hospitals and healthcare systems in the Idaho panhandle and in north-central Idaho. The agency said its goal is to extend care to as many patients as possible and to save as many lives as possible.

    The move allows hospitals to allot scarce resources like intensive care unit rooms to patients most likely to survive.

    Other patients will still receive care, but they may be placed in hospital classrooms or conference rooms rather than traditional hospital rooms or go without some life-saving medical equipment.

    Other states are preparing to take similar measures if needed. Hawaii Gov. David Ige quietly signed an order last week releasing hospitals and health care workers from liability if they have to ration health care.

    Idaho Department of Health and Welfare Director Dave Jeppesen made the decision to enact the crisis standards about 5 p.m. Monday after the state's Crisis Standards of Care Activation Advisory Committee determined that all other measures taken to help relieve staffing and bed shortages had been exhausted.

    The department waited until Tuesday morning to make the public announcement "out of respect to the hospitals,” department spokeswoman Niki Forbing-Orr said in an email. She did not elaborate or immediately respond to questions seeking more details.

    The unfolding crush of patients to Idaho hospitals has been anticipated with dread by the state's heath care providers. Medical experts have said that Idaho could have as many as 30,000 new coronavirus cases a week by mid-September if the current rate of infections lasts.

    “Crisis standards of care is a last resort. It means we have exhausted our resources to the point that our healthcare systems are unable to provide the treatment and care we expect,” Idaho Department of Health and Welfare Director Dave Jeppesen said in a statement.

    He added: “This is a decision I was fervently hoping to avoid. The best tools we have to turn this around is for more people to get vaccinated and to wear masks indoors and in outdoor crowded public places. Please choose to get vaccinated as soon as possible – it is your very best protection against being hospitalized from COVID-19.”

    The designation will remain in effect until there are enough resources — including staffing, hospital beds and equipment or a drop in the number of patients — to provide normal levels of treatment to all.

    More than 500 people were hospitalized statewide with COVID-19 on Sept. 1 — the most recent data available on the Department of Health and Welfare's website — and more than a third of them were in intensive care unit beds.

    Idaho's hospitals have struggled to fill empty nursing, housekeeping and other health care positions, in part because some staffers have left because they are burned out by the strain of the pandemic and because others have been quarantined because they were exposed to COVID-19.

    Idaho Gov. Brad Little called the move to limit care “an unprecedented and unwanted point in the history of our state” and urged residents to get vaccinated against coronavirus.

    Data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows that full vaccination with any of the currently available coronavirus vaccines dramatically reduces the risk of requiring hospitalization for a coronavirus infection.

    “More Idahoans need to choose to receive the vaccine so we can minimize the spread of the disease and reduce the number of COVID-19 hospitalizations, many of which involve younger Idahoans and are preventable with safe and effective vaccines,” said Little, who is a Republican.

    When the pandemic first came to Idaho at the start of 2020, Little ordered a partial shutdown of the state — ordering some businesses to temporarily close or shift to take-out style services, banning some large gatherings and asking residents to stay home as much as possible.

    The move was aimed at ensuring that hospitals wouldn't become overwhelmed by patients. Idaho was on the verge of enacting crisis standards of care during a major coronavirus surge last winter, but narrowly avoided doing so — making this the first time the state has taken the drastic measure.

    Little reopened the state in stages over a period of several months and has not reimposed restrictions limiting gatherings. Businesses are mostly operating as normal.

    The state's crisis guidelines are complex, and give hospitals a legal and ethical template to use while rationing care.

    Under the guidelines, patients are given priority scores based on a number of factors that impact their likelihood of surviving a health crisis.

    Those deemed in most in need of care and most likely to benefit from it are put on priority lists for scarce resources like ICU beds.

    Others in dire need but with lower chances of surviving will be given “comfort care” to help keep them pain-free whether they succumb to their illnesses or recover.

    Other patients with serious but not life-threatening medical problems will face delays in receiving care until resources are available.
     
  9. Hught

    Hught Well-Known Member

    In Sampson County our hospital in Clinton is at 150% capacity. :(
     
  10. Wayne Stollings

    Wayne Stollings Well-Known Member

    So sad.
     
    Sherry A. likes this.
  11. DWK

    DWK Well-Known Member

  12. Wayne Stollings

    Wayne Stollings Well-Known Member

  13. Wayne Stollings

    Wayne Stollings Well-Known Member

    CDC finds unvaccinated 11 times more likely to die of COVID
    [​IMG]
    LAURAN NEERGAARD
    September 10, 2021, 7:25 PM

    New U.S. studies released Friday show the COVID-19 vaccines remain highly effective against hospitalizations and death even as the extra-contagious delta variant swept the country.

    One study tracked over 600,000 COVID-19 cases in 13 states from April through mid-July. As delta surged in early summer, those who were unvaccinated were 4.5 times more likely than the fully vaccinated to get infected, over 10 times more likely to be hospitalized and 11 times more likely to die, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    “Vaccination works,” Dr. Rochelle Walensky, CDC’s director, told a White House briefing Friday. “The bottom line is this: We have the scientific tools we need to turn the corner on this pandemic.”

    But as earlier data has shown, protection against coronavirus infection is slipping some: It was 91% in the spring but 78% in June and July, the study found.

    So-called "breakthrough” cases in the fully vaccinated accounted for 14% of hospitalizations and 16% of deaths in June and July, about twice the percentage as earlier in the year.

    An increase in those percentages isn’t surprising: No one ever said the vaccines were perfect and health experts have warned that as more Americans get vaccinated, they naturally will account for a greater fraction of the cases.

    Walensky said Friday that well over 90% of people in U.S. hospitals with COVID-19 are unvaccinated.

    CDC released two other studies Friday that signaled hints of waning protection for older adults. One examined COVID-19 hospitalizations in nine states over the summer and found protection for those 75 and older was 76% compared to 89% for all other adults. And in five Veterans Affairs Medical Centers, protection against COVID-19 hospitalizations was 95% among 18- to 64-year-olds compared to 80% among those 65 and older.

    It isn't clear if the changes seen over time are because immunity is waning in people first vaccinated many months ago, that the vaccine isn’t quite as strong against delta — or that much of the country abandoned masks and other precautions just as delta started spreading.

    But U.S. health authorities will consider this latest real-world data as they decide if at least some Americans need a booster, and how soon after their last dose. Next week, advisers to the Food and Drug Administration will publicly debate Pfizer’s application to offer a third shot.
     
  14. Wayne Stollings

    Wayne Stollings Well-Known Member

  15. Sherry A.

    Sherry A. Well-Known Member

    I am so glad I have all the vaccines and my booster
     
    lawnboy, Wayne Stollings and DWK like this.
  16. lawnboy

    lawnboy Well-Known Member

  17. jesse82nc

    jesse82nc Well-Known Member

    https://www.cbsnews.com/news/new-york-hospital-staff-resignation-vaccine-mandate-maternity-pause/

    Hospital maternity ward to be temporarily shut down after staff resigns over vax mandates

    An upstate New York hospital will stop delivering babies later this month, in part because employees have quit over a requirement they be vaccinated against COVID-19.

    Six maternity staff members resigned from Lewis County General Hospital last week, worsening an existing staff shortage, the Watertown Daily Times reported. The department has seven other unvaccinated employees who also could decide to leave, hospital officials said.
     
  18. jesse82nc

    jesse82nc Well-Known Member

  19. DWK

    DWK Well-Known Member

    Sure hope the screen door hits them where the Good Lord split them on their way out! We would have been OVER this pandemic already without these idiots dragging us down with their “FaceBook crack science”.
     
    lawnboy likes this.
  20. jesse82nc

    jesse82nc Well-Known Member

Share This Page