d0ctorzaius
d0ctorzaius t1_ja1gv2s wrote
Reply to comment by showMEthatBholePLZ in German chancellor visits India to boost India's relations with the west and possibly move India away from Russia. by CHTanwar
Well for a while the US had to be pro-Pakistan tin exchange for their help with the Taliban and in Afghanistan. Those things aren't relevant anymore, so the US can be pro-India if needed.
d0ctorzaius t1_j7l2uts wrote
Reply to comment by doughboi8 in [Bengals] Forever a Bengals great. Congratulations on retirement and one heck of a career, AJ Green. by BCLetsRide69
Ginger Joe Flacco
d0ctorzaius t1_j5rs80r wrote
Reply to comment by georgeBarkley12 in FDA wants to simplify the use and updating of Covid-19 vaccines by joshemerson
If I had to guess it's a mixture of fatigue, misinformation, as well as declining effectiveness. As an reference flu vaccine rates have fallen over time down to ~30% and that's only once a year vs every 6 months. The hope is either previous exposure to COVID or previous vaccination gives some level of lasting immunity so at least deaths/severe disease won't be as common, regardless of booster status.
d0ctorzaius t1_j5rijtg wrote
Reply to comment by georgeBarkley12 in FDA wants to simplify the use and updating of Covid-19 vaccines by joshemerson
So it was reported 4% at the end of September, 8.5% at the end of October. We don't have good data on the total number of people who have received two doses at present (many states aren't tracking how many boosters patients have received, just using no vax, original series, and original series+booster categories). Unless a ton of folks got a booster over the holidays, it's unlikely we're that much higher than 8.5% (maybe 15? 20 max?)
d0ctorzaius t1_j5qy2bs wrote
Reply to comment by georgeBarkley12 in FDA wants to simplify the use and updating of Covid-19 vaccines by joshemerson
Oh CDC keeps tabs on that, so I'd expect they have that data. From what I've read the number is super low. Most people who want to get boosted mostly did so back in October/November, so they're (myself included) already on the downslope of waning antibody titers. And the overall number of people who even got their second booster is 4% lol.
d0ctorzaius t1_j5qxh1r wrote
Reply to comment by VyrPlan in France protests: man lost testicle after clashes with police – lawyer | France by Bynoeson94
>We're like meh
Nope, a significant percentage of the population is saying "fuck yeah, take my social security!"
d0ctorzaius t1_j5qwxtw wrote
Reply to comment by georgeBarkley12 in FDA wants to simplify the use and updating of Covid-19 vaccines by joshemerson
For antibody data sure, just simple blood draws in patients within different vaccination backgrounds (never vaxxed, first dose, second dose, 1st booster, etc). A big confounding variable is COVID exposure outside of the vaccines which boosts antibody titers in all populations. The more important data is going to be protection from death, severe disease and infection. That data is harder as it requires well-controlled trials (and ideally challenge studies). Yet another variable is what version of COVID do you look at. Maybe boosters worked great against delta, but not so much against omicron. In that case you have to make a lot of assumptions in the data: "patient X was infected and had moderate disease in October when such and such strain was dominant." Real world data is pretty messy and is even messier now than in 2020. Hence most studies stick to antibody neutralization studies.
d0ctorzaius t1_j5qt2j7 wrote
Reply to comment by georgeBarkley12 in FDA wants to simplify the use and updating of Covid-19 vaccines by joshemerson
Answer for the last few boosters has been "wanes after 4 months, nearly gone by 6 months" but that's based on neutralizing antibody data. There's certainly some level of protection (against severe illness) even with low antibody titers. Super high titers really only serve to prevent you from catching it in the first place.
d0ctorzaius t1_j3wf17p wrote
Reply to comment by isthatmyex in NASA satellite discovers second Earth-sized planet in habitable zone by Tuna_Sushi
At or near light speed, time dilation becomes a factor, so it would take 100 years to an observer but to the people in the ship, it would seem like a lot less time.
d0ctorzaius t1_j3vevis wrote
Reply to comment by MrDangerMan in NASA satellite discovers second Earth-sized planet in habitable zone by Tuna_Sushi
But when we arrive we wouldn't have significantly aged at all.
d0ctorzaius t1_j0mzla9 wrote
Reply to comment by MalcolmLinair in Tennis great Boris Becker released from UK prison and has left for Germany after reports of deportation | CNN by Altruistic_Astronaut
They're pacing themselves
d0ctorzaius t1_ixxu25k wrote
Reply to comment by H2AK119ub in Brain cancer vaccine succeeds at prolonging survival in Phase 3 trial by Sorin61
Just as an aside, I work on H2BK120Ub so I appreciate your username.
d0ctorzaius t1_isqk71i wrote
Reply to comment by Danimalsyogurt88 in Hong Kong protester dragged into Manchester Chinese consulate grounds and beaten up by AlxIp
>it didn't lead to a diplomatic incident
Tends not to when your leader is financially compromised by the other country's leader.
d0ctorzaius t1_jdlpg5b wrote
Reply to comment by rice_not_wheat in Paul Rusesabagina, 'Hotel Rwanda' hero, will be released from prison by AudibleNod
TIL Paul Kagame is still president of Rwanda. He's been in power for 29 years.