Finally, if a hospital is ever faced with a triage situation they ought to boot unvaccinated Covid patients out of the IC regardless of other considerations like age, likelihood of survival, etc. Some consequences ought to be felt. — Benkei
To emphasize, the MP did not deny the existence of the cost-benefit analysis that was made - he just claimed to never have seen it. — Tzeentch
The document can be found here, when the link to "2 MKBA versie 1 en 2.pdf" is followed, but it is not in English. — Tzeentch
the question is whether if you were vaccinated, caught covid and survived you would still gain natural immunity as you would if unvaccinated. — Janus
if I've understood this correctly, if you catch it and survive, you will have less chance of catching it again than those who are vaccinated have if getting it at all? — Banno
A while back my government had a cost-benefit analysis done weighing the benefits of the Covid-19 measures versus the indirect consequences. — Tzeentch
the MP (predictably) denied ever having seen the analysis. — Tzeentch
No data on those who were fully vaccinated. Not much use. — Banno
We conducted a retrospective observational study comparing three groups: (1)SARS-CoV-2-naïve individuals who received a two-dose regimen of the BioNTech/Pfizer mRNA BNT162b2 vaccine, (2)previously infected individuals who have not been vaccinated, and (3)previously infected and single dose vaccinated individuals.
Not very interesting outside of the realm of cognitive science though perhaps... — Isaac
Could be. But local data says that unvaccinated vented patients have a 20% mortality rate. Vaccinated and vented have 0.02% mortality. — frank
I've been focusing on all the long-haul I see developing. It's rough — frank
Have you seen the analysis from Austin I've used on this - must've spoken of it in your presence? — Banno
"Real " and "exists" get their worth form the things wiht which they are contrasted - it's real, not a forgery. It's real, not a mirage; it exists, it's not fiction. — Banno
Ok. You'll most likely be infected with the delta variant between now and October. As you say, most likely you'll be fine. — frank
This study demonstrated that natural immunity confers longer lasting and stronger protection against infection, symptomatic disease and hospitalization caused by the Delta variant of SARS-CoV-2, compared to the BNT162b2 two-dose vaccine-induced immunity. — https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.08.24.21262415v1
The data you're using isn't for the delta variant. This is the problem with preferring data over the friendly voice. — frank
The alternate is to suppose that there may well be a cause, but that what that cause is, is unknowable. — Banno
If a friendly voice says, "No really, go ahead and do it.", I usually do. — frank
I cant see how you avoid solipsism.
If all that is, is your perceptions, then other people are just your perceptions. — Banno
You're risking long term loss of lung function if you don't get vaccinated. — frank
What would you be approving of? — Srap Tasmaner
But again, someone choosing the non-favored option only means you require some explanation — Srap Tasmaner
in some cases the scientist is wearing a public health hat with the lab coat, so I grandfather them in. — Srap Tasmaner
there's an armchair version of it that still rubs me the wrong way. — Srap Tasmaner
It still seems like a long way around to me — Srap Tasmaner
Maybe there isn't a single premise everyone shares that carries more weight than all their other preferences put together. Maybe what we're looking at here is more of a "family resemblance" situation, lots of overlap and so on, but not one single most important thread. — Srap Tasmaner
An alternative to your response would be to address the entire sentence. What color is your "Covid Passport" for internal travel within your borders? I don't have such a document and I doubt you do either. — Cheshire
I'm seeing some accusations of hypocrisy (double standards) here, while at the same time committing a two-wrongs-make-a-right fallacy. — jorndoe
What jurisdictions? — Cheshire
the partitioning of the alternatives by naming a "favored term" -- only means I'll need an explanation to understand your choice. — Srap Tasmaner
if men and women in lab coats hold press conferences and tell me they think I ought to do something, I'll need reasons not to — Srap Tasmaner
we'd have to add some premises to get it looking like an inference. I don't like the look of what we'd have to add, though: that's a lot of individuals with their own reasons and given their own circumstances. — Srap Tasmaner
the goal is to compare what someone says about one thing with what they say about another. Even if I'm careful, and do the work, do I get anything better than plain "whataboutism"? — Srap Tasmaner
That doesn't always matter, but explicitly here we're supposed to be interested in why people say one thing and another, and you've decided for them why they're saying what they do. — Srap Tasmaner
Add the right premise or premises and their views might be perfectly consistent. — Srap Tasmaner
Obviously because they have other beliefs informing their views. Is that so strange? — Srap Tasmaner
If the exercise is to have any point at all, it has to start by settling on shared criteria, our criteria. — Srap Tasmaner
What I meant was this: suppose I did not avoid but preferred risks that were of my own choosing; or suppose I wanted to support the pharmaceutical industry; or suppose I generally approved of prophylactic medicine. Any such preference might even trump other views I have about risk in general, or about the risks of covid and vaccination in particular. But without knowing about those preferences, you might be hard pressed to make sense of my views -- that was the point. — Srap Tasmaner
If I held a position that could be summarized thus, warning bells would be going off that I had made some kind of mistake somewhere. — Srap Tasmaner
But from my side, there's a crazy patchwork of argument and obiter dicta with the actual structure obscured by a tangle of threads connecting everything to everything else. — Srap Tasmaner
Now NicK does not want to get vaccinated... — ArguingWAristotleTiff
Just if it wasn't clear, in this context, speaking of harmless/harmful isn't the same as when speaking of Dihydrogen Monoxide. — jorndoe
Largest real-world study of COVID-19 vaccine safety published (Aug 26, 2021) — jorndoe
the comment was explicitly using broader categories: — jorndoe
Nope, I selected whatever demographics-related reports. — jorndoe
Just if it wasn't clear, in this context, speaking of harmless/harmful isn't the same as when speaking of Dihydrogen Monoxide. — jorndoe
Yeah, most reports show that more education and vaccine acceptance (less education and vaccine hesitance) correlate. — jorndoe
But I'm clearly right and you said exactly that: — Srap Tasmaner
Normally, I don't like to get into this pointless back-and-forth about who said what, but it's oddly on point here. — Srap Tasmaner
You want them to apply (P) and find you blameless. Why should they do that? Is (P) the standard of risk of everyone you've interacted with here? — Srap Tasmaner
I submit that a better starting point would be to assume, for the sake of investigation, that if someone's views appear inconsistent, perhaps it is because you don't fully understand their views. — Srap Tasmaner
Reverse some of those and see if an inclination to get vaccinated, simply as a matter of preference, appears, notwithstanding any of someone's other views about risk. — Srap Tasmaner
And I just don't see that this is the course you've followed. What do you actually know about the views of anyone participating in this thread? — Srap Tasmaner
Could you make up a short list of preferences like yours above for anyone you've argued with here? — Srap Tasmaner
For comparison, if you had not spelled them out, would it be perfectly clear to everyone here that you held the preferences you listed above? — Srap Tasmaner
I think scepticism is given far more prominence than it deserves. A cultural extrusion form fablsificationism, itself an overrated notion. — Banno
Versions of the virus that make their host very sick (are highly virulent) are generally selected against. This is because people would be more likely to die or be isolated, lowering the chance of the virus transmitting to others.
SAGE thinks this process is unlikely to cause the virus to become less virulent in the short term, but this is a realistic possibility in the long-term.
we can expect an arms race between vaccine developers and the virus, with vaccines trying to play catch up with viral evolution. This is why we’re likely to see us having regular booster shots, designed to overcome these new variants, just like we see with flu booster shots.
The problem I see with this is not the scope so much as the "really".
Take it out and the statement is clearly wrong: "Nothing is 'true', except this statement. — Banno
Isaac; do you think that your view is the consensus amongst epidemiologists? — Banno
Some consensus widely reported down here last week was that the virus would more likely take advantage of the unvaccinated, mutating so as to infect the easier target. — Banno
Do you find the burdens placed on the healthcare system by obesity, smoking, etc. -- do you find them acceptable? — Srap Tasmaner
Why would you engage in a decision making process relying on a standard of risk it is evident you consider lax and ill-informed? — Srap Tasmaner
I think you made your decision without any consideration of those thresholds at all: — Srap Tasmaner
Having now compared your decisions to other decisions you don't approve of, but which "we" the public at large are evidently fine with, you want everyone to be fine with your decision too — Srap Tasmaner
Near as I can tell, your participation here has never really been about justifying your decision to us or to anyone -- you're completely qualm-free; it's been about demanding justification from those who disapprove. — Srap Tasmaner
there is almost no reason for you to get vaccinated — Srap Tasmaner
what if you're wrong about your chances of getting very sick — Srap Tasmaner
I suspect if you had the chance to explain to Prof Pollard how you had been following his work and had yourself not gotten vaccinated, he would say, "Don't be a damned fool. Get the shot." — Srap Tasmaner
the cost to you barely registers; the potential benefit to you is considerable; from a rational point of view, this isn't even a close call. — Srap Tasmaner
That's the real issue with the burden on the health care system. The system itself will survive. It's the people in it, or who want to use it, that suffer. — James Riley
