Grim news, but not unexpected. Vaccines are not going to save us—at least not in the near future. We need to figure out how to live with the virus without losing our minds.https://twitter.com/joshnathankazis/status/1353808841931108353 …
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As we learned to live with AIDS in the 1990s, I guess. Investing in treatments to keep HIV+ people from getting AIDS, educating people on how to prevent transmission (clean needles, condoms).
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The lack of a coherent rollout plan for the vaccine is what I find worrying and frustrating.
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Yeah but that's not what the article is saying.
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His (negative) focus is on the difficulties of the rollout. That too many improve but at this stage, it's a huge stumbling block in spite of the relatively good news around Moderna, so I do feel like it's quite warranted even if having working vaccines is great.
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Maybe we are feeling this more here in Canada where .... at least in Quebec vaccine rollout has really not happened. We are feeling the crunch and as new variants pop up the risk feels very real.
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That’s a financial article, not an article about public health.
Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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@zeynep, thanks, and could we also get your take on this FT article? Angst-inducing and perhaps overly-pessimistic, but still sounds rigorous enough to a non-expert like me. Thanks for helping us cut through the noise as always!https://www.ft.com/content/17c44c96-39f2-4ada-badd-d65815b0a521 … -
Lost me at "We do not yet know if the vaccines curb transmission" even with the qualifier, and totally went over the edge with the "antibodies gradually decline" as "warning." Really need a new kind of expertise to write this stuff.
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