boooooooooo_cowboys
boooooooooo_cowboys t1_jdnskdf wrote
Reply to comment by throwawaitnine in Mayoral candidates stand in support of drag community - Philadelphia Gay News by diatriose
The one in Tennessee, but multiple other states are considering banning drag
boooooooooo_cowboys t1_j9uqop3 wrote
Reply to comment by DiceMaster in Does the common flu vaccine offer any buffer against H5N1 (Bird Flu)? by Esc_ape_artist
I don’t know that there is much solid data to address that question. Typically flu vaccines are tailored to whatever strains are circulating in a given season, so they’re just thrown away at the before the next flu season.
boooooooooo_cowboys t1_j8daqsj wrote
sad bird noises
boooooooooo_cowboys t1_j5vq767 wrote
It’s largely based on whether or not your own immune system is able to clear the virus or not.
Catch measles? Your immune system will kill it and remember it well enough to protect you forever. All you need to do to make a great vaccine is to use killed virus.
If you’re talking herpes or HIV, your immune system can’t root that out and kill it once it’s in there. The only hope of vaccinating is to prevent every last viral particle you encounter from ever being able to enter any of your cells. That’s a much more difficult prospect.
boooooooooo_cowboys t1_j505s4p wrote
Reply to comment by seanmorris in Is there any difference in efficacy when a vaccine is administered somewhere other than the upper arm (e.g. on the foot)? by MercurioLeCher
You’re not trying to get your vaccine into the muscle cells themselves. All the action happens in the draining lymph nodes.
boooooooooo_cowboys t1_j26wrg7 wrote
Reply to comment by oboshoe in Higher COVID-19 vaccination rates are associated with lower COVID-19 mortality. A 10-percentage-point increase in vaccination was associated with an 18.1% decrease in mortality after 6 months and a 16.8% decrease after 12 months. High-income countries had higher vaccine coverage. by glawgii
It’s not an overall 18% drop in mortality. A 10 percentage point increase in vaccination leads to an 18% drop in mortality.
boooooooooo_cowboys t1_j0m6bib wrote
Reply to comment by teridon in Researchers find that the free-ranging white-tailed deer of New York City may be a potential reservoir species for SARS-CoV-2 by glawgii
Probably, but there’s no chance in hell that you’ll actually be able to vaccinate all those wild animals
boooooooooo_cowboys t1_its9ya3 wrote
Reply to Can someone explain the ethics of testing potentially life saving medication? by beatleboy07
>At this point, I feel like there's an ethical issue because are we not knowingly taking individuals with a life threatening illness and deliberately giving them a non treatment?
They wouldn’t be given no medical treatment at all. The control group typically gets whatever the standard treatment is for that condition, while the experimental group gets the new treatment (sometimes on top of the treatment that the control group is getting).
The question being asked by a clinical trial is rarely “does this drug work” it’s “is this drug better than the standard of care”. That’s kind of why the the staunchest defenders of Ivermectin for Covid treatment are wasting their time. It doesn’t really matter if technically there is some slight biological impact on the virus. If it isn’t better than current treatments (which are quite a bit better than they were in Spring 2020) than we have no use for it.
boooooooooo_cowboys t1_isjwb8i wrote
Reply to comment by ApertureUnknown in [Image] "Self-discipline" by Butterflies_Books
I don’t agree. There are just so many little things in life. You absolutely can accomplish big things in life by focusing on the little things that matter and letting the less important ones slide.
boooooooooo_cowboys t1_jdycwfd wrote
Reply to comment by iamfondofpigs in Linguistic analysis of 177,296 Reddit comments sheds light on negative attitudes toward science by HeinieKaboobler
>"Misleading": Always good to point out when an author makes a claim that is not supported by their own data.
Be honest…how often do you see redditors actually engaging with the original article and giving valid critiques of the authors interpretations vs spitting out their knee jerk reaction to the headline? I’ve seen an awful lot of “poor communication” and “misleading” complaints that could have been cleared up by actually reading the article.