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Coronavirus

CarltonTheBear said:
https://twitter.com/CityCynthia/status/1377624402368544770

From the modelling presentation, this is the vaccination completion by age and nerightbourhood risk:

0Fqr4aI.png
 
One thing to keep in mind for those that say "but my county isn't bad"....yeah but the beds in the ICU are finite. When I have a critically ill patient in the ER I call a Provincial service called "Criticall".  They find me the closest available ICU bed.  If there is 1 ICU bed in the province and it's 6 hours away from where I am located, that's the ICU I talk to for that patient.

So if there are no ICU beds in Toronto it means GTA patients are being transferred elsewhere.  If there are no ICU beds in London they go to Stratford and Chatham and then Windsor and Hamilton. 

A lack of ICU beds is a province wide issue.
 
https://twitter.com/l_stone/status/1377687927266947080

I feel like the solution to this is just open the vaccine rollout to everyone - allow people to register for the vaccine, and then assign them a date/time to do it based on their priority category/age.

As someone who is under 40 and relatively healthy, even if I'm told my first shot won't be until July 23rd at 3:31 a.m., at least I have my date when I can get it and will be there.  And that way, you're going through people who want the shot faster and surpassing people who don't.  I realize this is dependent on the supply targets being met, but you can always air on the conservative side if need be.
 
Bullfrog said:
Agreed busta. Based on what I've read, there is almost no difference in the rates of clotting with those who took the vaccine. And while I certainly don't mean to be cavalier about health risks, even if there was increased risk, it totally outweighs the public harm of not getting vaccinated.

My preference would be to get the Pfizer or Moderna ones, but I'll take literally anything that's available as soon as it's available. I'm not particularly healthy or unhealthy, but I get bad (and long-lasting) bronchitis when I get certain viruses, so I'm just assuming COVID will be horrible for me.
As a person with asthma my health risk is literally not being vaccinated. I get bronchitis like you, and I've had other respiratory issues lately which kind of bothers me that this isn't really being considered under any health criteria.
 
louisstamos said:
https://twitter.com/l_stone/status/1377687927266947080

I feel like the solution to this is just open the vaccine rollout to everyone - allow people to register for the vaccine, and then assign them a date/time to do it based on their priority category/age.

As someone who is under 40 and relatively healthy, even if I'm told my first shot won't be until July 23rd at 3:31 a.m., at least I have my date when I can get it and will be there.  And that way, you're going through people who want the shot faster and surpassing people who don't.  I realize this is dependent on the supply targets being met, but you can always air on the conservative side if need be.
I don't understand this door knocking shit. Some of this hokey small town talk needs to stop. They need a massive old fashioned ad campaign. Blitz everywhere and target eligible persons and really persuade people. This isn't rocket science, but apparently for this government everything is.
 
Got my dad booked for a Pfizer shot at the International Centre on Sunday. Remember to get your folks (or yourselves) signed up at the mass immunization website if they or you're eligible.

https://www.toronto.ca/home/covid-19/covid-19-protect-yourself-others/covid-19-vaccines/covid-19-how-to-get-vaccinated/covid-19-future-city-operated-immunization-clinics/#location=&lat=&lng=
 
Yeah, after fits and starts and postponements my mother will be getting hers through UHN so that's good. I still think the big mistake they made was in opening things up in 10 year chunks instead of more gradually. I woke up early to book the appointment the first day 60-69 year olds could do it and it took me an hour on hold with the province. I imagine some people in a similar boat would have gotten frustrated and put it off.
 
Nik said:
Yeah, after fits and starts and postponements my mother will be getting hers through UHN so that's good. I still think the big mistake they made was in opening things up in 10 year chunks instead of more gradually. I woke up early to book the appointment the first day 60-69 year olds could do it and it took me an hour on hold with the province. I imagine some people in a similar boat would have gotten frustrated and put it off.
I think at this point there is a debate to be had as to whether we should be prioritizing people who are not able to distance due to being essential workers as well. The P.1 variant going through the Canucks right now is scary.
 
https://twitter.com/ColinDMello/status/1379486246234361861

Ford's entire schtick during this pandemic has basically been "how dare you do those things that I said you can do".
 
I have a dilemma. I ripped the crotch in my favourite jeans. None of my other pants fit well. I can't sew.

I'm thinking it's essential I get new jeans.
 
CarltonTheBear said:
Ford's entire schtick during this pandemic has basically been "how dare you do those things that I said you can do".

"It is imperative that businesses stay open so that the economy doesn't grind to a halt. Also, don't go to those businesses you stupid Millennials."
 
https://twitter.com/dfriend/status/1379520877646209025
I think I want to be a chyron writer when I grow up
 
Nik said:
CarltonTheBear said:
Ford's entire schtick during this pandemic has basically been "how dare you do those things that I said you can do".

"It is imperative that businesses stay open so that the economy doesn't grind to a halt. Also, don't go to those businesses you stupid Millennials."

The most frustrating thing in all this is people who understand logic realized that nipping this in the bud as hard and as fast as possible meant we could have some semblance of normalcy and with normalcy comes a better economy. It really isn't rocket science.

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/04/26/opinion/coronavirus-economy-reopen.html

The timestamp on this is April 2020! We had our chances and we chose not to deal with things until we let them spiral out of control and this is the third time now. Third! And once again we close schools (as a sidebar can any teachers tell me why teaching outside is not feasible?) and we've let Yorkdale stay open for people who probably want to hit two or three shops and spend the rest of the day window shopping.

Regarding economy & covid, we now have proof that dealing with the virus vs. endless mockdown is better for the economy: https://www.institutmolinari.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/17/2021/03/etude-zero-covid2021_en.pdf

And we also have a test case of what the virus can do with little to no public health measures: https://www.ft.com/content/55713895-2423-4259-a222-f778f9587490

I mean, honestly, it's a no brainer. Once you get things under control you can send people for quarantine with a lot more precision and snuff out problems. I would much rather be in Melbourne right now than here.

Anyway, I'm done my rant. I just can't believe after a year of this our overall approach/philosophy has not been optimized in any way.
 
Bender said:
(as a sidebar can any teachers tell me why teaching outside is not feasible?)

Because we live in Canada with high amounts of precipitation and the fact for most of the 10 months school is in session, winter can return at any time

 
OldTimeHockey said:
Bender said:
(as a sidebar can any teachers tell me why teaching outside is not feasible?)

Because we live in Canada with high amounts of precipitation and the fact for most of the 10 months school is in session, winter can return at any time
Even allowing for the impossibility of perfect weather year-round, imagine literally many hundreds of students and teachers spaced around a field with no chalkboards, whiteboards, or PowerPoint screens to teach with. With no sound reflection off of walls, you wouldn't be able hear and understand anybody talking more than 8 feet away unless they're yelling. So you'd have hundreds of people scattered around a field with literally no workable means of audio or visual communication between groups of people.

But, yeah, the weather: snow, rain, wind, cold, heat, sunburn, etc.
 
The timestamp on this is April 2020! We had our chances and we chose not to deal with things until we let them spiral out of control and this is the third time now. Third! And once again we close schools (as a sidebar can any teachers tell me why teaching outside is not feasible?) and we've let Yorkdale stay open for people who probably want to hit two or three shops and spend the rest of the day window shopping.

Social distancing measures wouldn't allow for feasible outdoor teaching.  We don't have amphitheatres to teach classes in.  So much of teaching today relies on technology to demonstrate examples and we don't have the wireless infrastructure to support purely outdoor learning.

On top of that we don't have ways to then deal with weather.  It's spring. It's going to rain 80% of the next two months.  Where I live we frequently have 40-60km/hr winds.  Kind of hard to keep pen and paper still to take notes in that kind of setting.

But yes, your argument about the malls is 100% accurate.  The COVID rainbow program is stupid because it leaves large gaps and is inconsistent so our lockdowns have been mismanaged half-measures.
 

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