• Omicron Is Spreading. Resistance Is Futile

    From David P.@21:1/5 to All on Wed Jan 26 22:55:32 2022
    Omicron Is Spreading. Resistance Is Futile
    By Daniel Halperin, 1/24/22, Wall St. Journal

    As the Omicron wave crests, there’s bad news and good news. The
    bad news is that the main strategies for slowing its spread—
    repeated testing, masks and vaccine boosters—are largely futile
    for that purpose. The good news is that while protecting the
    vulnerable remains vital, slowing the spread of the virus needn’t
    be the priority. The biggest danger from Omicron is probably acute
    hospital staffing shortages, in part because of asymptomatic
    employees who stay home from work after testing positive.

    Although Covid testing can be useful, it also has important
    limitations. The “gold standard” PCR tests are frequently too
    sensitive; research has shown that in many cases people who test
    positive are no longer contagious. The increasingly used rapid
    antigen tests have the opposite problem, often failing to detect
    infections during the earlier part of the 5-day isolation period
    of presumed contagiousness.

    This coronavirus, especially the Omicron variant, is so fast-moving
    that mass testing and contact tracing, and probably even isolation
    & quarantine, can’t slow it down significantly. The U.K. & other
    countries, unlike the U.S., already had widespread rapid-testing
    capacity during their recent surges, yet they experienced the
    same meteoric rise in cases. As with other interventions such as
    booster shots, testing is most useful for those at high risk of
    serious complications, who might benefit from early treatment.

    As for masking, the CDC recently acknowledged that cloth masks
    do relatively little to prevent spread. Some experts on corona-
    viruses, including epidemiologist Michael Osterholm, for nearly
    two years have questioned the efficacy of masks. A recent rigorous
    review by his University of Minnesota research group concludes:
    “We are well past the emergency phase of this pandemic, and it
    should be well-known by now that wearing cloth face coverings or
    surgical masks, universal or otherwise, has a very minor role to
    play.... It's time to stop overselling their efficacy & unrealistic expectations about their ability to end the pandemic.”

    The first large randomized community-level study, published last
    month in Science, found that while generic surgical masks provided
    a modest (about 10%) reduction in the risk of infection from Delta,
    cloth masks didn’t significantly reduce risk. Masks may be even
    less protective against an extremely contagious variant like Omicron.

    That has led to calls for mandatory N95-type masks, which are
    more effective but harder to use. Some schools have even mandated
    them for kids. Yet two years is a long time for anyone’s face to
    be covered for many hours a day, and it’s an interminably long
    time for youngsters, possibly leading to lasting psycho-social &
    other harms. Like Delta and earlier variants, Omicron doesn’t
    seriously threaten the vast majority of kids; preliminary evidence
    suggests much less risk for youth than from Delta. An increasing
    number of public-health experts, including infectious-disease
    specialist Monica Gandhi, have called for ending school mask
    mandates soon.

    And while vaccines & boosters continue to offer strong protection
    against serious illness & death—& are therefore vitally important
    to those at high risk—they’re less effective at preventing infection, especially with the Omicron variant. While a new CDC study finds
    that boosters substantially reduce risk of infection as well as hospitalization from Omicron, countries like the U.K. and Israel
    that had widespread booster coverage before Omicron struck have
    also seen unprecedented surges in cases.

    In any case, even if you get a booster now, the current surge
    probably will have subsided by the time immunity kicks in. It’s
    possible that future variants will arise against which currently
    administered boosters would still be useful, although by then
    immunity may have waned significantly. The European Medicines
    Agency recently cautioned that repeated boosters may weaken the
    immune system over time.

    Which brings us to the good news: Because the new variant is
    relatively mild and so many people already have some immunity
    from vaccines, prior infection or both, Omicron’s explosive spread
    is much less threatening than previous waves. A recent Southern
    California study looked at over 50,000 patients infected with the
    new variant. Not one required mechanical ventilation and only one
    died, compared with 14 deaths and 11 ventilations out of some
    17,000 infected by the Delta variant during the same period.
    Consistent with evidence from other countries, hospitalizations
    were considerably lower and average hospital stays much shorter
    among Omicron than Delta patients.

    Although reported numbers of “Covid hospitalizations” are up
    nationally, these figures include patients admitted for other
    reasons who incidentally test positive. Based on data from several
    states & the U.K., it appears that roughly half these admissions
    likely aren’t caused mainly by the virus. HHS Dept data indicate
    the total number of patients in U.S hospitals has hardly budged
    over the past six months.

    Because the new variant primarily targets the upper airways
    instead of the lungs, doctors report that few patients are
    requiring ventilation or even supplemental oxygen. Christopher
    Murray of the Institute for Health Metrics & Evaluation estimates
    in the Lancet that the number of Omicron deaths “seems to be
    similar in most countries to the level of a bad influenza season
    in northern hemisphere countries.” In 2017-18, the flu caused some
    52,000 deaths in the U.S., probably peaking at over 1,500 a day.

    Public-health authorities are beginning to come to terms with the
    passing of the Covid emergency. Six experts who advised the Biden
    transition, including Osterholm, earlier this month called for a
    pivot toward accepting Covid as an endemic disease, following the
    example of several European countries. As Fauci has acknowledged,
    “just about everybody” will eventually become infected. Some
    scientists have even suggested that Omicron may end up providing
    a kind of global “superimmunity” against serious illness from
    future variants.

    It’s past time to shift focus from trying to stamp out all new
    infections to protecting the most vulnerable from severe disease
    directly thru vaccination and other evidence-based measures &
    alleviating hospital staffing shortages. Ending mask mandates,
    de-emphasizing isolation and encouraging vaccination ought to be
    a compromise most of us can live with.

    Mr. Halperin is an adjunct professor at the Gillings School of
    Global Public Health at UNC Chapel Hill & author of “Facing
    Covid Without Panic.”

    https://www.wsj.com/articles/omicron-is-spreading-resistance-is-futile-masking-mandate-n95-vaccine-requirement-boosters-covid-11643064353

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From David P.@21:1/5 to All on Fri Jan 28 00:34:49 2022
    Omicron Is Spreading. Resistance Is Futile
    By Daniel Halperin, 1/24/22, Wall St. Journal

    As the Omicron wave crests, there’s bad news and good news. The
    bad news is that the main strategies for slowing its spread—
    repeated testing, masks and vaccine boosters—are largely futile
    for that purpose. The good news is that while protecting the
    vulnerable remains vital, slowing the spread of the virus needn’t
    be the priority. The biggest danger from Omicron is probably acute
    hospital staffing shortages, in part because of asymptomatic
    employees who stay home from work after testing positive.

    Although Covid testing can be useful, it also has important
    limitations. The “gold standard” PCR tests are frequently too
    sensitive; research has shown that in many cases people who test
    positive are no longer contagious. The increasingly used rapid
    antigen tests have the opposite problem, often failing to detect
    infections during the earlier part of the 5-day isolation period
    of presumed contagiousness.

    This coronavirus, especially the Omicron variant, is so fast-moving
    that mass testing and contact tracing, and probably even isolation
    & quarantine, can’t slow it down significantly. The U.K. & other
    countries, unlike the U.S., already had widespread rapid-testing
    capacity during their recent surges, yet they experienced the
    same meteoric rise in cases. As with other interventions such as
    booster shots, testing is most useful for those at high risk of
    serious complications, who might benefit from early treatment.

    As for masking, the CDC recently acknowledged that cloth masks
    do relatively little to prevent spread. Some experts on corona-
    viruses, including epidemiologist Michael Osterholm, for nearly
    two years have questioned the efficacy of masks. A recent rigorous
    review by his University of Minnesota research group concludes:
    “We are well past the emergency phase of this pandemic, and it
    should be well-known by now that wearing cloth face coverings or
    surgical masks, universal or otherwise, has a very minor role to
    play.... It's time to stop overselling their efficacy & unrealistic expectations about their ability to end the pandemic.”

    The first large randomized community-level study, published last
    month in Science, found that while generic surgical masks provided
    a modest (about 10%) reduction in the risk of infection from Delta,
    cloth masks didn’t significantly reduce risk. Masks may be even
    less protective against an extremely contagious variant like Omicron.

    That has led to calls for mandatory N95-type masks, which are
    more effective but harder to use. Some schools have even mandated
    them for kids. Yet two years is a long time for anyone’s face to
    be covered for many hours a day, and it’s an interminably long
    time for youngsters, possibly leading to lasting psycho-social &
    other harms. Like Delta and earlier variants, Omicron doesn’t
    seriously threaten the vast majority of kids; preliminary evidence
    suggests much less risk for youth than from Delta. An increasing
    number of public-health experts, including infectious-disease
    specialist Monica Gandhi, have called for ending school mask
    mandates soon.

    And while vaccines & boosters continue to offer strong protection
    against serious illness & death—& are therefore vitally important
    to those at high risk—they’re less effective at preventing infection, especially with the Omicron variant. While a new CDC study finds
    that boosters substantially reduce risk of infection as well as hospitalization from Omicron, countries like the U.K. and Israel
    that had widespread booster coverage before Omicron struck have
    also seen unprecedented surges in cases.

    In any case, even if you get a booster now, the current surge
    probably will have subsided by the time immunity kicks in. It’s
    possible that future variants will arise against which currently
    administered boosters would still be useful, although by then
    immunity may have waned significantly. The European Medicines
    Agency recently cautioned that repeated boosters may weaken the
    immune system over time.

    Which brings us to the good news: Because the new variant is
    relatively mild and so many people already have some immunity
    from vaccines, prior infection or both, Omicron’s explosive spread
    is much less threatening than previous waves. A recent Southern

    California study looked at over 50,000 patients infected with the
    new variant. Not one required mechanical ventilation and only one
    died, compared with 14 deaths and 11 ventilations out of some
    17,000 infected by the Delta variant during the same period.
    Consistent with evidence from other countries, hospitalizations
    were considerably lower and average hospital stays much shorter
    among Omicron than Delta patients.

    Although reported numbers of “Covid hospitalizations” are up
    nationally, these figures include patients admitted for other
    reasons who incidentally test positive. Based on data from several
    states & the U.K., it appears that roughly half these admissions
    likely aren’t caused mainly by the virus. HHS Dept data indicate
    the total number of patients in U.S hospitals has hardly budged
    over the past six months.

    Because the new variant primarily targets the upper airways
    instead of the lungs, doctors report that few patients are
    requiring ventilation or even supplemental oxygen. Christopher
    Murray of the Institute for Health Metrics & Evaluation estimates
    in the Lancet that the number of Omicron deaths “seems to be
    similar in most countries to the level of a bad influenza season
    in northern hemisphere countries.” In 2017-18, the flu caused some
    52,000 deaths in the U.S., probably peaking at over 1,500 a day.

    Public-health authorities are beginning to come to terms with the
    passing of the Covid emergency. Six experts who advised the Biden
    transition, including Osterholm, earlier this month called for a
    pivot toward accepting Covid as an endemic disease, following the
    example of several European countries. As Fauci has acknowledged,
    “just about everybody” will eventually become infected. Some
    scientists have even suggested that Omicron may end up providing
    a kind of global “superimmunity” against serious illness from
    future variants.

    It’s past time to shift focus from trying to stamp out all new
    infections to protecting the most vulnerable from severe disease
    directly thru vaccination and other evidence-based measures &
    alleviating hospital staffing shortages. Ending mask mandates,
    de-emphasizing isolation and encouraging vaccination ought to be
    a compromise most of us can live with.

    Mr. Halperin is an adjunct professor at the Gillings School of
    Global Public Health at UNC Chapel Hill & author of “Facing
    Covid Without Panic.”

    https://www.wsj.com/articles/omicron-is-spreading-resistance-is-futile-masking-mandate-n95-vaccine-requirement-boosters-covid-11643064353

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From He@21:1/5 to All on Sat Jan 29 04:12:02 2022
    David P. kirjutas Reede, 28. jaanuar 2022 kl 10:34:50 UTC+2:
    Omicron Is Spreading. Resistance Is Futile
    By Daniel Halperin, 1/24/22, Wall St. Journal

    As the Omicron wave crests, there’s bad news and good news. The
    bad news is that the main strategies for slowing its spread—
    repeated testing, masks and vaccine boosters—are largely futile
    for that purpose. The good news is that while protecting the
    vulnerable remains vital, slowing the spread of the virus needn’t
    be the priority. The biggest danger from Omicron is probably acute
    hospital staffing shortages, in part because of asymptomatic
    employees who stay home from work after testing positive.

    Although Covid testing can be useful, it also has important
    limitations. The “gold standard” PCR tests are frequently too
    sensitive; research has shown that in many cases people who test
    positive are no longer contagious. The increasingly used rapid
    antigen tests have the opposite problem, often failing to detect
    infections during the earlier part of the 5-day isolation period
    of presumed contagiousness.

    This coronavirus, especially the Omicron variant, is so fast-moving
    that mass testing and contact tracing, and probably even isolation
    & quarantine, can’t slow it down significantly. The U.K. & other countries, unlike the U.S., already had widespread rapid-testing
    capacity during their recent surges, yet they experienced the
    same meteoric rise in cases. As with other interventions such as
    booster shots, testing is most useful for those at high risk of
    serious complications, who might benefit from early treatment.

    As for masking, the CDC recently acknowledged that cloth masks
    do relatively little to prevent spread. Some experts on corona-
    viruses, including epidemiologist Michael Osterholm, for nearly
    two years have questioned the efficacy of masks. A recent rigorous
    review by his University of Minnesota research group concludes:
    “We are well past the emergency phase of this pandemic, and it
    should be well-known by now that wearing cloth face coverings or
    surgical masks, universal or otherwise, has a very minor role to
    play.... It's time to stop overselling their efficacy & unrealistic expectations about their ability to end the pandemic.”

    The first large randomized community-level study, published last
    month in Science, found that while generic surgical masks provided
    a modest (about 10%) reduction in the risk of infection from Delta,
    cloth masks didn’t significantly reduce risk. Masks may be even
    less protective against an extremely contagious variant like Omicron.

    That has led to calls for mandatory N95-type masks, which are
    more effective but harder to use. Some schools have even mandated
    them for kids. Yet two years is a long time for anyone’s face to
    be covered for many hours a day, and it’s an interminably long
    time for youngsters, possibly leading to lasting psycho-social &
    other harms. Like Delta and earlier variants, Omicron doesn’t
    seriously threaten the vast majority of kids; preliminary evidence
    suggests much less risk for youth than from Delta. An increasing
    number of public-health experts, including infectious-disease
    specialist Monica Gandhi, have called for ending school mask
    mandates soon.

    And while vaccines & boosters continue to offer strong protection
    against serious illness & death—& are therefore vitally important
    to those at high risk—they’re less effective at preventing infection, especially with the Omicron variant. While a new CDC study finds
    that boosters substantially reduce risk of infection as well as hospitalization from Omicron, countries like the U.K. and Israel
    that had widespread booster coverage before Omicron struck have
    also seen unprecedented surges in cases.

    In any case, even if you get a booster now, the current surge
    probably will have subsided by the time immunity kicks in. It’s
    possible that future variants will arise against which currently administered boosters would still be useful, although by then
    immunity may have waned significantly. The European Medicines
    Agency recently cautioned that repeated boosters may weaken the
    immune system over time.

    Which brings us to the good news: Because the new variant is
    relatively mild and so many people already have some immunity
    from vaccines, prior infection or both, Omicron’s explosive spread
    is much less threatening than previous waves. A recent Southern

    California study looked at over 50,000 patients infected with the
    new variant. Not one required mechanical ventilation and only one
    died, compared with 14 deaths and 11 ventilations out of some
    17,000 infected by the Delta variant during the same period.
    Consistent with evidence from other countries, hospitalizations
    were considerably lower and average hospital stays much shorter
    among Omicron than Delta patients.

    Although reported numbers of “Covid hospitalizations” are up
    nationally, these figures include patients admitted for other
    reasons who incidentally test positive. Based on data from several
    states & the U.K., it appears that roughly half these admissions
    likely aren’t caused mainly by the virus. HHS Dept data indicate
    the total number of patients in U.S hospitals has hardly budged
    over the past six months.

    Because the new variant primarily targets the upper airways
    instead of the lungs, doctors report that few patients are
    requiring ventilation or even supplemental oxygen. Christopher
    Murray of the Institute for Health Metrics & Evaluation estimates
    in the Lancet that the number of Omicron deaths “seems to be
    similar in most countries to the level of a bad influenza season
    in northern hemisphere countries.” In 2017-18, the flu caused some
    52,000 deaths in the U.S., probably peaking at over 1,500 a day.

    Public-health authorities are beginning to come to terms with the
    passing of the Covid emergency. Six experts who advised the Biden transition, including Osterholm, earlier this month called for a
    pivot toward accepting Covid as an endemic disease, following the
    example of several European countries. As Fauci has acknowledged,
    “just about everybody” will eventually become infected. Some
    scientists have even suggested that Omicron may end up providing
    a kind of global “superimmunity” against serious illness from
    future variants.

    It’s past time to shift focus from trying to stamp out all new
    infections to protecting the most vulnerable from severe disease
    directly thru vaccination and other evidence-based measures &
    alleviating hospital staffing shortages. Ending mask mandates, de-emphasizing isolation and encouraging vaccination ought to be
    a compromise most of us can live with.

    Mr. Halperin is an adjunct professor at the Gillings School of
    Global Public Health at UNC Chapel Hill & author of “Facing
    Covid Without Panic.”

    https://www.wsj.com/articles/omicron-is-spreading-resistance-is-futile-masking-mandate-n95-vaccine-requirement-boosters-covid-11643064353

    Hey. Are you rich ? Would you help me out with a little bit of money (maybe at least 2100 dollars)...... I have no job, no wife momentarily...........

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)