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dbx999 t1_j0i6rka wrote

It's a strategy that we may not win due to the significant portion of the population that will not vaccinate. This permits the virus to remain in wider endemic circulation which creates an incubation process to give rise to mutations that can become more successful at evading the vaccine as well as natural immune response. In effect, the virus will continue to "improve" and attempt to infect those vaccinated and eventually will find a strain that possesses evasion traits and high transmissibility to move back into the vaccinated population.

Meanwhile mRNA vaccine developers may or may not continue to develop new vaccines to address the newest versions of circulating covid viruses. I say "may not" because some of those choices may be driven by variables such as governmental financial support to guarantee volume purchases for the population - which could evaporate - and populations that develop vaccine fatigue and shows low demand for continued rounds of upgraded boosters.

But one thing is certain - covid IS endemic and will be a permanent part of our ecosystem.

The light at the end of the tunnel is that it is also *likely* that each new successful strain that develops in the future will carry a lower mortality rate meaning that they'll be less deadly and more in line with what the seasonal flu does in terms of death rates.

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MUCHO2000 t1_j0iymfy wrote

This is a bizarre post. You seem to be pinning COVID becoming endemic on the unvaccinated. That's not remotely close to what has happened. Second, COVID currently is not more deadly than the flu if you're vaccinated. Finally, the hope is for a fast spreading strain that is as deadly as the common cold which is to say not at all. However this is not more likely with each strain because it's mortality rate is already so low. A virus becomes less deadly over time when it starts with a high mortality rate. With COVID it's just as possible to mutate into something more deadly as it is less. Either way if you're vaccinated you have little worries of death.

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mightcommentsometime t1_j0kez1d wrote

> That's not remotely close to what has happened.

You need to qualify this assertion with data and research.

> Second, COVID currently is not more deadly than the flu if you're vaccinated

Clinical mortality rate isn't, nor has it ever been the only determining factor of when vaccines should be used. The effective R value is always considered. Covid is over 1 and past the bifurcation point for epidemic spread. Influenza teeters around 1. Comparing the two doesn't make any sense from an epidemiological standpoint. The dynamics of covid spread is very different than that of influenza spread.

> Finally, the hope is for a fast spreading strain that is as deadly as the common cold which is to say not at all.

What? Where did you hear/read this nonsense? The hope is to push the effective R value below 1 so that we can get past the bifurcation point of epidemic spread.

> A virus becomes less deadly over time when it starts with a high mortality rate.

Where are you getting this from? That highly depends on multiple factors of the virus. Including how stable the virus is.

> Either way if you're vaccinated you have little worries of death.

Why are you so focused on death and ignoring the infection rate? Measles has a pretty low death rate but has absurd infection rate. That's why it's important to vaccinate against it.

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MUCHO2000 t1_j0llbon wrote

Sorry kid I am making comments on Reddit. No citations needed. Go kick rocks.

Regardless I am not focused on anything but rebutting the post I responded to. Since you asked though the main concern I have (and think most people should have) is with long COVID. That said feel free to write up a research review on my post history.

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mightcommentsometime t1_j0lu78u wrote

> Sorry kid I am making comments on Reddit. No citations needed. Go kick rocks.

And I'm free to call you out for being a kid who makes things up, then balks when asked to back up your BS.

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MUCHO2000 t1_j0lvuya wrote

I'm not balking in the slightest. You're being critical due to lack of citations and incomplete information but I'm not writing a thesis here. I'm responding to a comment on Reddit.

You have refuted nothing. Where are your citations that I am wrong about anything?

Hypocrite.

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mightcommentsometime t1_j0lwepv wrote

I'm being critical because you're making things up and passing that garbage as knowledge.

> You have refuted nothing. Where are your citations that I am wrong about anything?

My flair on this subreddit is citation enough when we're talking about simple things like your comments.

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mo_tag t1_j0ov1ug wrote

>My flair on this subreddit is citation enough when we're talking about simple things like your comments.

Cringe

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mightcommentsometime t1_j0yp8e2 wrote

It's oh so cringe that I have a verifiable and proven education. Lol.

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mo_tag t1_j0yuloz wrote

You're being obtuse.. It's cringe that you're appealing to your mathematics degree which you think makes you an authority on epidemiology after literally just criticising someone for not citing sources... And the other commenter needs to cite sources because they don't have a flair? I think you'd be surprised how many flairless ppl have "proven education".. so yeah, cringe

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mightcommentsometime t1_j0yw7p9 wrote

> You're being obtuse.. It's cringe that you're appealing to your mathematics degree which you think makes you an authority on epidemiology

Do you know what epidemiology is? Do you know what applied computational mathematics is? Do you know what mathematical and computational biology is?

Yes. I'm appealing to my extensive study and my research on epidemiology.

> And the other commenter needs to cite sources because they don't have a flair?

The other commenter made many dubious and questionable claims. Asking them to prove said claims instead of accepting them as fact is prudent and proper for scientific discussion.

> I think you'd be surprised how many flairless ppl have "proven education".. so yeah, cringe

Then these people should be able to back up their assertions and claims. As all of us have had to do.

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mo_tag t1_j0z924i wrote

>Do you know what epidemiology is? Do you know what applied computational mathematics is? Do you know what mathematical and computational biology is?

Dude, just stop.. you know damn well that an applied mathematics degree doesn't make you a subject matter expert in any field that happens to enploy applied mathematics.. Are you also an expert on structural engineering and genomics?

>Yes. I'm appealing to my extensive study and my research on epidemiology.

..and that a masters degree hardly qualifies as "extensive research". I'm not saying you haven't done but that's hardly self-evident from your flair, mate.

>Asking them to prove said claims instead of accepting them as fact is prudent and proper for scientific discussion.

Yeah, and noone said it wasn't, it's the fact that you think you're exempt from it that's weird

>Then these people should be able to back up their assertions and claims. As all of us have had to do.

Except from you apperently

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mightcommentsometime t1_j0zarjz wrote

> Dude, just stop.. you know damn well that an applied mathematics degree doesn't make you a subject matter expert in any field that happens to enploy applied mathematics..

Do you know what applied computational mathematics actually is?

> Are you also an expert on structural engineering and genomics?

Structural engineering and genomics aren't epidemiology. Nor are they even remotely as specifically based on dynamical systems.

> ..and that a masters degree hardly qualifies as "extensive research".

Uh-huh. I just had to write a masters thesis on the subject. I guess I didn't do any research at all. Right?

> I'm not saying you haven't done but that's hardly self-evident from your flair, mate.

Unless you understand the field, and what it is.

> Yeah, and noone said it wasn't, it's the fact that you think you're exempt from it that's weird

What specific claims did I make that required me to cite/prove because they were beyond baseline knowledge of the subject?

> Except from you apperently

I repeat my previous question.

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mo_tag t1_j12oya4 wrote

>Do you know what applied computational mathematics actually is?

Yes, I did my second masters in computational chemical engineering.. but I'm not continuing this silly conversation, I'm cringing at myself for even engaging w you

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mightcommentsometime t1_j12pxvg wrote

> Yes, I did my second masters in computational chemical engineering..

Which is not even remotely the same at all. It's funny you think it is though.

> I'm not continuing this silly conversation, I'm cringing at myself for even engaging w you

Have fun!

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MUCHO2000 t1_j0lx23a wrote

You have literally refuted nothing. Don't break your arm patting yourself on the back.

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mightcommentsometime t1_j0lyplz wrote

You're trying to shift the burden of proof to me because I called your bullshit out, and you dont have the ability to actually back up the nonsense you keep making up about epidemiology.

Grow up. If you want to spout uneducated nonsense in the science subreddit, be prepared to be called out for it.

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MUCHO2000 t1_j0m05mh wrote

I'm sorry? Go look at your replies to me. Now you're whining that I am not respecting your authority? Honestly it's pathetic.

You're mad because I'm not providing citations for my decidedly (I admit) unscientific post. Yet you refuted nothing and you missed the point on more than one occasion.

So either refute me or don't. I'm happy to learn new things but so far I have only learned you have a fragile ego.

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js1138-2 t1_j0jik9g wrote

Are we sure covid is becoming less deadly, or is it less deadly because nearly everyone has had some exposure?

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MUCHO2000 t1_j0jrjpo wrote

I am not arguing it has become less deadly. Maybe reply to the guy I am disagreeing with

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js1138-2 t1_j0js1wr wrote

It’s not intended as a rhetorical question. I thought you might have an answer, or at least know why there isn’t one.

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MUCHO2000 t1_j0jv8gp wrote

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js1138-2 t1_j0jx1is wrote

Maybe my reading comprehension is deficient, but it looks to me like the article implies omicron is less deadly because it doesn’t attack the lungs as severely. This is counter to the headline.

Also, the article was written shortly after omicron appeared, and we now have a year of experience with it.

The death rate around the world for the last six months has been the lowest for any six month period, and doesn’t seem to be rising with winter.

The question remains, is this because the disease has changed, or because people have adapted. Perhaps after a non-fatal infection, the immune system no longer goes into storm mode.

Or perhaps the most vulnerable people have already died.

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Forsaken_Rooster_365 t1_j0moqd5 wrote

I thought that when Omicron went into places with limited vaccination and limited experience with prior covid-exposure, they had similar to WT mortality? Like, it may have been less deadly than some of the other mutants (like Beta and Delta), but I don't think it was much different from WT. Been a long time since I've heard anything though.

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js1138-2 t1_j0n4ugs wrote

That’s hard to study, because the most vulnerable people are also the most vaccinated. But, when omicron had its first enormous peak, most of the people hospitalized were unvaccinated.

Now it’s hard to find anyone who is neither vaccinated nor a survivor.

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dbx999 t1_j0j1inl wrote

It’s not a bizarre post at all. It’s bizarre you think it’s bizarre. You’re also restating much of what I said. I said generally viruses evolve into higher transmissibility and lower lethal versions over time. I also said vaccines lower mortality.

I also don’t see what is bizarre about stating that a significant portion of the population remaining unvaccinated will offer an incubating pool for more mutation opportunities. Anything that lowers the chances to establish meaningful and effective herd immunity logically means that endemic prevalence and mutation over time is a natural consequence of such an ecosystem - one that will eventually back flow into the vaccinated population when a strain with sufficient evasion and transmissibility surfaces.

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MUCHO2000 t1_j0j9era wrote

Which mutation came from those unwilling to get vaccinated? We suspect Delta came from India and Omicron from Africa. The current strains of COVID escape immunity to a high degree. Your statement is bizarre about the unvaccinated having anything to do with the state we are in.

Second, while it's true that the goal of a virus is to survive, replicate, and spread it therefore tends to evolve toward being more infectious and less deadly context still matters. COVID is rarely deadly so while fast spreading mutations will be favored less deadly is far less relevant. It's not likely (your word) that each strain will be less deadly. The only likely thing is that the next mutation will be better able to replicate and spread. So yeah, bizarre.

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dbx999 t1_j0javyi wrote

You need to reread my comment. I said it is LIKELY that each new successful strain that develops in the future will carry a lower mortality rate. Those are the exact words. And your comment states that I am saying the exact opposite.

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MUCHO2000 t1_j0jft5o wrote

No I read you loud and clear. The problem is you're wrong.

It's not LIKELY because the death rate of COVID is so low. If COVID had a higher mortality rate it would be LIKELY to see less deadly variations over time.

I'm not interested in debating the meaning of likely.

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mightcommentsometime t1_j0kgxgv wrote

> Your statement is bizarre about the unvaccinated having anything to do with the state we are in.

Higher transmission and infection rates create a higher probability of mutation. The only bizarre thing is ignoring that well documented and well observed outcome.

> therefore tends to evolve toward being more infectious and less deadly context still matters

You seem to be trying to give some intelligent and predetermined goal to a virus. Mutations are random. Whether one mutation dominates another may depend on this, but the actual evolutionary path of the virus does not.

Where did you hear that it would?

> The only likely thing is that the next mutation will be better able to replicate and spread.

According to what?

> So yeah, bizarre

Your assertions are extremely bizarre indeed. I'd like to know where you get them from and what evidence you have to back them up.

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TheFriendlyFelcher t1_j0i77v6 wrote

As to what you said on your last paragraph, it seems omni is a bit of a blessing in that sense. Anecdotally, delta wrecked everyone I knew that caught it, but omni was a brush off to moderate flu for all but seniors. Is that attributed to the initial rounds of vaccinations?

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dbx999 t1_j0i9ov2 wrote

It’s both. Vaccines helps give the immune system the genetic information to pinpoint the exact way to make antibodies specific to fight off Covid.

The natural immune system without vaccines first launches a generalized response against it because the body doesn’t have the blueprint for what antibodies to produce yet. So this gives the virus a head start and a longer time window to successfully reproduce inside your body and infect more of your organs since it appears it can affect multiple systems and not just one area (such as the cold virus staying mostly in the upper respiratory area).

Vaccination lets the body direct a more effective attack and a faster response to infection so this gives the patient a much better chance at avoiding severe infection and will shorten recovery. Vaccines don’t prevent infection but they do allow a rapid immune response that should effectively kill off the virus to make the infection short lived and not severe.

At the same time these newer strains SHOULD (this is no guarantee but generally a virus that doesn’t kill its host is more successful since it can spread more widely) become less lethal. And this SHOULD continue as a trend. The disclaimer being that just like with the flu, you could see the appearance of a evasive strain that has a high lethality trait too just as we saw with the 1917 Spanish flu epidemic.

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mightcommentsometime t1_j0kfyn0 wrote

Yes and no. A higher infection rate bad in its own way. Even though there's a lower mortality rate.

The flu is mind and has a low infection rate. That makes it have wildly different dynamics in how it spreads through a population.

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kslusherplantman t1_j0igcha wrote

Essentially we have the seasonal flu, but now with Covid… not enough people vaccinate or stay home when sick with the flu, leading much to the same situation we are seeing with COVID.

There were doubts really early whether herd immunity was even possible due to the nature of coronaviruses. Again, much like how herd immunity with the flu is also impossible

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mightcommentsometime t1_j0kf6to wrote

> There were doubts really early whether herd immunity was even possible due to the nature of coronaviruses. Again, much like how herd immunity with the flu is also impossible

Lol. No. Herd immunity is possible with the flu, but the infection rate and mortality rates combined have never warranted it.

We literally wiped out a flu strain in 2020 due to all of the covid restrictions.

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