It never ended, tbh.
3rd leading cause of death in the US last year, behind heart disease and cancer, but honestly, the ongoung wave of COVID-related disabilty is more disruptive and costly.
Are ye showin' up tomorrow evening, fart-face?
It never ended, tbh.
3rd leading cause of death in the US last year, behind heart disease and cancer, but honestly, the ongoung wave of COVID-related disabilty is more disruptive and costly.
Biden's response to COVID has been democidal, head in the sand dog .
And after placing his hand on the Good Book and swearing to "Shut it down." Biden killed over 3/4 of a million Americans and we're still counting.
Trump: 400k killed.
Biden: 3/4 of a million killed...and counting.
tis a mystery
linkCognitive disability emerged as the most prevalent disability in the United States in 2022, affecting 13.9% of adults. This is according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s annual update to the Disability and Health Data System (DHDS) released last week.
On a broader level, more than 1 in 4 adults in the United States, totaling more than 70 million people, reported having a disability in 2022, DHDS said.
And it serves Joe right to suffer "Cognitive disability" due to COVID after swearing on that Good Book that he'd shut it down.
As our Effy states categorically... Around///Find Out.
Joe is standing there a quitter in front of President Trump who came within less than a quarter inch of Kingdom Come because the SS stood down in PA..
American Democracy, ha!!!
https://x.com/JeromeAdamsMD/status/1817174232025231808
Who gives a good , Winester? It's all crooked lines to get in there, men posing as women, country sabotaging country, cheating, doping,
GIGO.
COVID summer surge 2024: Symptoms and treatment tips | Fortune Well
In the U.S., infections, emergency room visits, and deaths are all on the rise. Test positivity was projected to exceed 16% the week ended July 27, per the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). That’s higher than any other summer surge since the pandemic began in 2020.
slipping to #10 projected, this year
mandatory vaccination in South Korea
linkJust four months after fully shifting to an endemic approach to COVID-19, the government is now resuming its vaccination program to help contain the virus amid a resurgence in cases.
According to health authorities on Sunday, the number of patients hospitalized for the new COVID variant, KP.3, has increased sharply in many parts of Korea over the past several weeks, prompting officials to take necessary measures to minimize damage.
Data released by the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency (KDCA) shows the number of people admitted to 220 hospitals nationwide for COVID-19 jumped to 861 in the first week of August from 148 in the second week of July.
The total number of cases is unknown. But the agency said the results of its sampling showed that 39.2 percent of respiratory virus pathogens were COVID-19, up from 13.6 percent during that period, with the particular variant accounting for nearly half of all cases.
I would humbly ask for a roll call for this thread.
1. Who on this board used ivermectin in place of a vaccine or as a symptom reducer for covid?
2. And also names of posters who most likely used ivermectin as judged by responses from those posters. This is where other posters can add names of the peeps they think probably did use Ivermectin based on responses.
So two lists. I would just like a survey of sorts.
Im asking for the second list as I dont think posters are honest enough to come forward on the first list.
On your own time.
I will start
2. Dr. Darrin
Who cares what others have used and if they did, or didn't, use IM and are still alive today what's that make you prick boy other than a scared little sheep lining up for you shots?
I've never gotten the CHINA VIRUS and don't intend to ever use IM. Maybe, I'm just one of the lucky ones.
How many Fauci ouchies have you gotten PG? What's your booster count up to now sheep boy?
Has any other "disease" been deemed with "long" version months after its inception? What's "long" exactly? I mean we're only 3+yrs out from the vax so...
joey just angry because we all lived.
The risk of cognitive decline and dementia in older adults diagnosed with COVID-19: A systematic review and meta-analysis. - ScienceDirect
This study indicates that cognitive impairment may be an important sequela of COVID-19. Further research with adequate sample sizes is warranted regarding COVID-19’s association with new-onset dementia and dementia progression, and the effect of repeat infections. There is a need for development of diagnostic and management protocols for COVID-19 patients with cognitive impairment.
must be pretty bad if they're recommending masks
https://x.com/CAPublicHealth/status/1824113936465023131
Looks like it's making its rounds again. My client yesterday told me his brother was down and out rn with Covid. I heard the same from a few others a week ago. Be careful out there!
Tennessee and Alabama have also seen schools close due to COVID
San Perlita ISD cancels classes due to COVID-19 cases | KVEO-TV (valleycentral.com)
The San Perlita Independent School District is cancelling classes for the rest of the week due to students and staff testing positive for COVID-19, the district announced.
“We have taken this measure to minimize continued exposure,” the district posted on it’s Facebook.
Due to “numerous” individuals testing positive for COVID-19, all after school and extracurricular activities are also canceled through this weekend.
the cost of pretending it isn't there is steep
New data shows long Covid is keeping as many as 4 million people out of work (brookings.edu)
This June, the Census Bureau finally added four questions about long Covid to its Household Pulse Survey (HPS), giving researchers a better understanding of the condition’s prevalence. This report uses the new data to assess the labor market impact and economic burden of long Covid, and finds that:
- Around 16 million working-age Americans (those aged 18 to 65) have long Covid today.
- Of those, 2 to 4 million are out of work due to long Covid.
- The annual cost of those lost wages alone is around $170 billion a year (and potentially as high as $230 billion).
Meh it's endemic; we're stuck with it until the end of humanity. Asking every building in the world to put in expensive air filtration systems in unrealistic and wouldn't kill the virus anyways. At this point I ignore it other than getting yearly boosters and not going out in public when I'm sick because there is nothing else that can be done with it. Like Osterholm said, trying to stop this virus would be like trying to stop the wind.
Air filtration mitigates disease, all that's lacking right now is the political will, engineering solutions are there to sanitize indoor air.
It's a good thing we didn't think the same thing about cholera. It was for sure expensive and complicated to run clean running water nearly everywhere, but in the end, worth it.
You can't seriously be comparing high end air filtration systems for every building in the world to having public water and sewage utilities.
Nice to see you return to reality bb. Has Osterholm done the same? I quit listening to him when he changed his tune and went along with the phony narrative.
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