Anonymous wrote:My middle school kid and all friends are positive. They do not have symptoms.
I think this just needs to blow through everyone.
My husband and I got it too and we have the symptoms of a bad cold. Woke up feeling much better today (day #3).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In the face of everybody in the world, it seems, doing everything they can to keep the schools open, it’s not enough for you. You still have to come on here and complain. So many of you are so damned selfish, thinking only of how the pandemic affects you and your family and no one else. It’s really sad.
+1000
There is a big risk to kids and adults why have underlying issues. Letting Covid spread unmitigated is a disaster even if it is fine for your family. Health care workers are burned out and hospitals are in crisis mode. Same for schools and teachers.
+ 1 million
It’s disheartening how little you care about kids like my daughter, with a rare disease the compromises her immune system. She has these big beautiful eyes that light up the sky. Letting a pandemic rip through schools that her brother could bring home could kill her. Does she deserve to die because you can’t be bothered? Think about what happens to a community when there are no guardrails.
Keep kids in school but do it safely.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In the face of everybody in the world, it seems, doing everything they can to keep the schools open, it’s not enough for you. You still have to come on here and complain. So many of you are so damned selfish, thinking only of how the pandemic affects you and your family and no one else. It’s really sad.
+1000
There is a big risk to kids and adults why have underlying issues. Letting Covid spread unmitigated is a disaster even if it is fine for your family. Health care workers are burned out and hospitals are in crisis mode. Same for schools and teachers.
+ 1 million
It’s disheartening how little you care about kids like my daughter, with a rare disease the compromises her immune system. She has these big beautiful eyes that light up the sky. Letting a pandemic rip through schools that her brother could bring home could kill her. Does she deserve to die because you can’t be bothered? Think about what happens to a community when there are no guardrails.
Keep kids in school but do it safely.
Anonymous wrote:omicron cases are plunging in south africa and risk of hospitalization is proving far, far lower than with delta.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In the face of everybody in the world, it seems, doing everything they can to keep the schools open, it’s not enough for you. You still have to come on here and complain. So many of you are so damned selfish, thinking only of how the pandemic affects you and your family and no one else. It’s really sad.
+1000
There is a big risk to kids and adults why have underlying issues. Letting Covid spread unmitigated is a disaster even if it is fine for your family. Health care workers are burned out and hospitals are in crisis mode. Same for schools and teachers.
+ 1 million
It’s disheartening how little you care about kids like my daughter, with a rare disease the compromises her immune system. She has these big beautiful eyes that light up the sky. Letting a pandemic rip through schools that her brother could bring home could kill her. Does she deserve to die because you can’t be bothered? Think about what happens to a community when there are no guardrails.
Keep kids in school but do it safely.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:omicron cases are plunging in south africa and risk of hospitalization is proving far, far lower than with delta.
Lot of speculation that they’re plunging because people have stopped getting tested due to cost.
The way people just refuse to take any optimism…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:omicron cases are plunging in south africa and risk of hospitalization is proving far, far lower than with delta.
From today's Wall Street Journal:
"...South African researchers said they estimate the risk of hospitalization with Omicron is around 70% to 80% lower than with the earlier Delta strain, a promising sign that immunity from prior infection or vaccination offers substantial protection against severe illness.
The findings, published online in a paper that has yet to be peer reviewed, offer further tentative evidence that Omicron infections tend to be milder in populations with high levels of immunity.
Waasila Jassat, a public-health specialist at the National Institute of Communicable Diseases, said there had been no significant increases in admissions to critical-care wards recorded over the past four weeks when Omicron has driven case numbers in the country sharply higher.
“Mortality has been very low in this wave, with the case-fatality ratio lower than at any other point in the pandemic,” said Dr. Jassat."
Also, the scientists and doctors in South Africa have been saying this all along, but no one wants to listen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In the face of everybody in the world, it seems, doing everything they can to keep the schools open, it’s not enough for you. You still have to come on here and complain. So many of you are so damned selfish, thinking only of how the pandemic affects you and your family and no one else. It’s really sad.
+1000
There is a big risk to kids and adults why have underlying issues. Letting Covid spread unmitigated is a disaster even if it is fine for your family. Health care workers are burned out and hospitals are in crisis mode. Same for schools and teachers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:omicron cases are plunging in south africa and risk of hospitalization is proving far, far lower than with delta.
From today's Wall Street Journal:
"...South African researchers said they estimate the risk of hospitalization with Omicron is around 70% to 80% lower than with the earlier Delta strain, a promising sign that immunity from prior infection or vaccination offers substantial protection against severe illness.
The findings, published online in a paper that has yet to be peer reviewed, offer further tentative evidence that Omicron infections tend to be milder in populations with high levels of immunity.
Waasila Jassat, a public-health specialist at the National Institute of Communicable Diseases, said there had been no significant increases in admissions to critical-care wards recorded over the past four weeks when Omicron has driven case numbers in the country sharply higher.
“Mortality has been very low in this wave, with the case-fatality ratio lower than at any other point in the pandemic,” said Dr. Jassat."
Anonymous wrote:omicron cases are plunging in south africa and risk of hospitalization is proving far, far lower than with delta.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:omicron cases are plunging in south africa and risk of hospitalization is proving far, far lower than with delta.
Lot of speculation that they’re plunging because people have stopped getting tested due to cost.
Anonymous wrote:omicron cases are plunging in south africa and risk of hospitalization is proving far, far lower than with delta.