Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I work in an ER and this wasn’t hysteria, it was true! Wait times were over 24 hours for patients. It only lasted a few weeks but it was horrific. Not necessarily in terms of deaths (thankfully) but in terms of sheer numbers of patients.
Sorry PP, with people's urge to treat the whole 2 years of the pandemic as a nothingburger, just based on the mildness of Omicron (friends have had Delta, and you would not have wanted that one) any medical professional that wants to talk about the actual patient loads in the hospitals is going to get "canceled."
Thanks for your work.
Come on. The Twitter thread was full hysteria that simply didn’t happen. Here is what else she said, among other things:
When we go to grocery stores & find shelves empty, to pharmacies & find them closed because every single employee is out sick themselves or tending to a loved one. Please get what you need to look after your household. Fill prescriptions, get over the counter meds & staples…
And on and on. And that simply didn’t happen.
This level of hysterical ranting does nobody good.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I work in an ER and this wasn’t hysteria, it was true! Wait times were over 24 hours for patients. It only lasted a few weeks but it was horrific. Not necessarily in terms of deaths (thankfully) but in terms of sheer numbers of patients.
How many of those people really need to go to the ER though?
Did they show up to get tested thinking they had covid?
How many had been so scared by media coverage over the past few years that even if they were vaccinated and had few symptoms they literally had anxiety attacks convincing them whatever symptom they had was much worse and went to the ER>
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I work in an ER and this wasn’t hysteria, it was true! Wait times were over 24 hours for patients. It only lasted a few weeks but it was horrific. Not necessarily in terms of deaths (thankfully) but in terms of sheer numbers of patients.
Sorry PP, with people's urge to treat the whole 2 years of the pandemic as a nothingburger, just based on the mildness of Omicron (friends have had Delta, and you would not have wanted that one) any medical professional that wants to talk about the actual patient loads in the hospitals is going to get "canceled."
Thanks for your work.
Come on. The Twitter thread was full hysteria that simply didn’t happen. Here is what else she said, among other things:
When we go to grocery stores & find shelves empty, to pharmacies & find them closed because every single employee is out sick themselves or tending to a loved one. Please get what you need to look after your household. Fill prescriptions, get over the counter meds & staples…
And on and on. And that simply didn’t happen.
This level of hysterical ranting does nobody good.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ll need too dead bodies in the bread aisle of Giant before I go back to wearing a mask. Omicron wasn’t sht when I caught it.
+1
Don’t care at all about new variants. This is life now. Not wearing a mask ever again.
Cool. Enjoy not flying.
I flew this week. It was the first time in nearly six months that I wore a mask. It was more awful than I remembered.
Grow up.
Nope. It was awful. Hot and stuffy. I can’t believe my kids were only recently unshackled from this nonsense.
With all of the actual suffering in the world, and plenty of it fairly visible to anyone following news at all, I have a really hard time understanding how a rational adult can believe wearing a mask rates at all. My conclusion is that you must not be a rational adult.
So if you get a headache do you not take advil because eyour suffering does not rate against all that in the world?
If you are hungry do you not eat because it does not rate against all the hunger in the world?
If your leg itches do you not scratch it because there are bigger problems to be solved?
I agree there are bigger problems than masks but it’s still fine to try to avoid unnecessary discomfort/annoyance in your daily life.
Those are terrible analogies.
This isn't the suffering olympics either. This country values freedom, and there are trade offs with that. IMO mask mandates are too restrictive in a time of vaccines.
Anonymous wrote:
I work in an ER and this wasn’t hysteria, it was true! Wait times were over 24 hours for patients. It only lasted a few weeks but it was horrific. Not necessarily in terms of deaths (thankfully) but in terms of sheer numbers of patients.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I work in an ER and this wasn’t hysteria, it was true! Wait times were over 24 hours for patients. It only lasted a few weeks but it was horrific. Not necessarily in terms of deaths (thankfully) but in terms of sheer numbers of patients.
Sorry PP, with people's urge to treat the whole 2 years of the pandemic as a nothingburger, just based on the mildness of Omicron (friends have had Delta, and you would not have wanted that one) any medical professional that wants to talk about the actual patient loads in the hospitals is going to get "canceled."
Thanks for your work.
Come on. The Twitter thread was full hysteria that simply didn’t happen. Here is what else she said, among other things:
When we go to grocery stores & find shelves empty, to pharmacies & find them closed because every single employee is out sick themselves or tending to a loved one. Please get what you need to look after your household. Fill prescriptions, get over the counter meds & staples…
And on and on. And that simply didn’t happen.
This level of hysterical ranting does nobody good.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The worst part is those people never return to their old predictions, never hold themselves accountable, just go on posting about the State of the Union and the war in Ukraine like they weren’t sensationally stoking fear just weeks earlier.
THIS! It drives me crazy.
Not so much when a random twitter doc does it, but very much so when the media does it. We see these crazy headlines and stories on CNN or in the Washington Post stoking fear all the time and people read it as the inevitable truth.
How does one hold someone "accountable" for their opinions on Twitter?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I work in an ER and this wasn’t hysteria, it was true! Wait times were over 24 hours for patients. It only lasted a few weeks but it was horrific. Not necessarily in terms of deaths (thankfully) but in terms of sheer numbers of patients.
Sorry PP, with people's urge to treat the whole 2 years of the pandemic as a nothingburger, just based on the mildness of Omicron (friends have had Delta, and you would not have wanted that one) any medical professional that wants to talk about the actual patient loads in the hospitals is going to get "canceled."
Thanks for your work.
When we go to grocery stores & find shelves empty, to pharmacies & find them closed because every single employee is out sick themselves or tending to a loved one. Please get what you need to look after your household. Fill prescriptions, get over the counter meds & staples…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ll need too dead bodies in the bread aisle of Giant before I go back to wearing a mask. Omicron wasn’t sht when I caught it.
+1
Don’t care at all about new variants. This is life now. Not wearing a mask ever again.
Cool. Enjoy not flying.
I flew this week. It was the first time in nearly six months that I wore a mask. It was more awful than I remembered.
Grow up.
Nope. It was awful. Hot and stuffy. I can’t believe my kids were only recently unshackled from this nonsense.
With all of the actual suffering in the world, and plenty of it fairly visible to anyone following news at all, I have a really hard time understanding how a rational adult can believe wearing a mask rates at all. My conclusion is that you must not be a rational adult.
So if you get a headache do you not take advil because eyour suffering does not rate against all that in the world?
If you are hungry do you not eat because it does not rate against all the hunger in the world?
If your leg itches do you not scratch it because there are bigger problems to be solved?
I agree there are bigger problems than masks but it’s still fine to try to avoid unnecessary discomfort/annoyance in your daily life.
Anonymous wrote:Most people wear cloth masks or flimsy “medical’ masks from China (that I’m pretty sure are full of chemicals as evidenced by the breakouts and odd smell). Are they really protecting anyone?
I rarely see high quality masks properly worn by people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ll need too dead bodies in the bread aisle of Giant before I go back to wearing a mask. Omicron wasn’t sht when I caught it.
+1
Don’t care at all about new variants. This is life now. Not wearing a mask ever again.
Cool. Enjoy not flying.
I flew this week. It was the first time in nearly six months that I wore a mask. It was more awful than I remembered.
Grow up.
Nope. It was awful. Hot and stuffy. I can’t believe my kids were only recently unshackled from this nonsense.
With all of the actual suffering in the world, and plenty of it fairly visible to anyone following news at all, I have a really hard time understanding how a rational adult can believe wearing a mask rates at all. My conclusion is that you must not be a rational adult.
So if you get a headache do you not take advil because eyour suffering does not rate against all that in the world?
If you are hungry do you not eat because it does not rate against all the hunger in the world?
If your leg itches do you not scratch it because there are bigger problems to be solved?
I agree there are bigger problems than masks but it’s still fine to try to avoid unnecessary discomfort/annoyance in your daily life.
Those are terrible analogies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I work in an ER and this wasn’t hysteria, it was true! Wait times were over 24 hours for patients. It only lasted a few weeks but it was horrific. Not necessarily in terms of deaths (thankfully) but in terms of sheer numbers of patients.
Lol. Life was not "unrecognizable" for most Americans.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I work in an ER and this wasn’t hysteria, it was true! Wait times were over 24 hours for patients. It only lasted a few weeks but it was horrific. Not necessarily in terms of deaths (thankfully) but in terms of sheer numbers of patients.
Lol. Life was not "unrecognizable" for most Americans.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it will come to US, and I hope that it is a mild new variant. Well, now all kids schools are mask optional, so indoor mandates are removed in most dmv area. I hope that no more school closing in person, and I am fine that they bring back the rules that kids are required to mask to keep it open.
We were vaccinated and had 2 weeks of covid. It was worse than a bad cold, but I survived. DH said if we were not boosted on top go fully vaccinated, probably I might ended up going to ER.
How old are you? Do you have other medical conditions? Are you obese?
If you were under the age of 50, otherwise healthy, the data shows that you would likely NOT have ended up in the ER. Especially if you were vaccinated. There is little data to show that a booster makes a difference for healthy people under the age of 50x.
Sorry, but your DH might have been wrong about this.
My overweight 50 year old friend only had one J&J shot and got covid nearly a year later. She was sick for ten days. Never needed the ER.
Anonymous wrote:
I work in an ER and this wasn’t hysteria, it was true! Wait times were over 24 hours for patients. It only lasted a few weeks but it was horrific. Not necessarily in terms of deaths (thankfully) but in terms of sheer numbers of patients.