Wear a n95 and pleas talk your Dr. about vaccines |
Covid is the most. |
Seems like gift cards are popular. Georgia is giving away $100 Walmart gift cards if people get the new vaccine. Kansas City is giving $25 Walmart gift cards for the same purpose, with funding provided through HHS grants. https://www.msn.com/en-us/health/other/kansas-city-health-providers-see-little-to-no-interest-in-latest-covid-vaccine/ar-AA1lk7hG "People who are 65 or older or have a disability can qualify for two $25 Walmart gift cards — one for each shot they receive [flu and covid]. In addition to getting the vaccines, participants have to fill out a survey to receive the gift cards, which are funded by the Center for Popular Democracy through a grant from the Department of Health and Human Services." As of 2021, CDC funded programs can give as much as a $100 gift card per person as an incentive to take a covid vaccine. https://www.cdc.gov/orr/readiness/00_docs/using_federal_funds_to_support_covid-19_response_incentives_update_august_12_final.pdf |
This is fantastic. Are there any programs like this in Washington DC, Maryland, or Virginia? |
Once people have lived to 80 and are still up and about, with it, and doing things like traveling, writing, working, running the country, most of them have a good decade ahead of them. They don't want to get COVID and have that cut short. |
+1 Exactly. |
PP just had it, why do they need a mask? |
PP's doctor told her to wait to get the new vaccine. The masking will help possibly protecte her in the meantime. |
PP already has immunity to a more recent covid strain than what is in the booster. |
I think there might be multiple strains circulating at the same time. (Check out the CDC for more info) |
Yes, there are. But the booster strain (XBB.1.5) is not one of them. It was prevalent in the spring/early summer but is now virtually gone, accounting for only 0.1% of current covid cases. https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/#variant-proportions The rapid evolution of covid is one reason Cornell did not mandate the new booster this fall. "analysis by the Cornell COVID-19 modeling team found that mandating vaccination for the fall 2023 semester would not result in a substantial reduction in the spread of infection. This is due to factors such as existing vaccination rates, recovery from previous infection, and rapidly evolving variants." https://covid.cornell.edu/updates/20230428-vaccine-updates.cfm |
Are you saying to refer to Cornell's guidelines over the CDCs when decision making about vaccines??? |
NP. Got a flu shot but will not get another Covid vaccine. This is consistent with most people I know. I also know people who have said they’re getting one to appease the crazies in their life, but in reality have no intention of doing so. |
Multiple infections increase the risk of "long Covid" symptoms
Data from Canada https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/pub/75-006-x/2023001/article/00015-eng.htm Data from the US (using VA health records) https://www.nature.com/articles/s41591-022-02051-3 |
Cornell advises staying up-to-date as per CDC to reduce an individual's risk of severe disease. However, they don't think the booster will meaningfully reduce community spread which is why they did not mandate it. |