M. Diamond. The latent effects of the policies we have followed, both in Canada and the US, are in part:
– we fear covid more than we should relative to its impact due to the campaign of our governments intended to create that outcome.
– we have spent trillions on covid, the repayment of which will be next to impossible, and the debt payments on which will make it difficult to do any number of things in the future which will leave us lacking in our medical systems, our educational systems, and our policing and defence. It’s a zero sum game and we have dramatically overspent on a short term problem (which is becoming a long term reality) at the expense of so many other alternatives.
– the closing of businesses have wiped out many who will never recover.
– the closing of schools has created a whole new class of students, many of whom will never recover to the potential they had.
This will ultimately weaken our productivity, and lead to a greater need for support for this group of young people who will, I predict, soon have a name….
– at a time when trust in government is needed more than ever, because there is so much to deal with both locally and internationally, trust has reduced because we were lied to and/or manipulated for so long in the pursuit of some grand solution to the pandemic which was at best, possible, and at worst, illusory, even as we intentionally eliminated the ability of dissenters to share their views.
When you do that, you cannot be following the science because science requires constant testing, disagreement, dissent, debate. That is its essence. We have not followed the science, we have reduced its ability to help us and broken trust at the same time.
Getting sick sometimes is the price of returning to normal. Dr. Vinay Prasad thinks it’s more than worth it.
By VINAY PRASAD
For the last few weeks, the media has been filled with stories about what The New York Times has described as our latest “viral onslaught.” It’s been dubbed a “tripledemic”—a combination of Covid-19, influenza, and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), which is being blamed for high rates of illness and an excess of hospitalizations, especially among children.
The message is clear: fear winter respiratory viruses, and take every possible precaution you can. It’s time to slap on those N95s once more, avoid crowds, and socialize outdoors if possible. But the best available evidence contradicts the narrative from the media and many public health officials. The precautions being recommended are essentially unproven—akin to burning an incense stick, or wearing garlic to ward off vampires. The way to think of the tripledemic is that it’s just another example of what we used to call normal life. And the insistence on never-ending precautions in the face of inevitable exposure to germs is not only medically misguided, it also threatens to stigmatize the most mundane human interactions.
In the case of the tripledemic, there is one action the media and its favored experts want more than anything else: increased masking. Philadelphia schools have returned, temporarily, to masking children, including toddlers in Head Start. Two New Jersey school districts are requiring the same from pre-K until 12th grade. Boston Public Schools are asking students, teachers, and staff to wear masks (but will not discipline those who don’t). Boston Mayor Michelle Wu said the masking “will help keep our kids safely in the classroom with their peers.”Dr. John Swartzberg, an infectious disease expert at UC Berkeley’s School of Public Health, told Reuters: “If you don’t want to get sick and you don’t want to go to the hospital and you don’t want to die of COVID or influenza, or if a very young child, RSV, then you should be wearing a mask indoors in a public place.”The California Department of Public Health agreed, tweeting: “There is no vaccine for RSV, so wearing a mask can significantly slow the spread and protect babies and young children who do not yet have immunity and are too young to wear a mask themselves.” (The advice, for which there is no data, has since been removed without explanation.)There are three important points to make about the tripledemic:
- There is limited evidence that it exists.
- There is no avoiding respiratory viruses.
- There is no evidence that prolonged precautions delay the inevitable.
First, let’s consider the evidence of the so-called tripledemic. Although flu season began early, there is limited evidence that it is worse than typical years. Dr. Michael Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota, says: “It feels like it’s bad because hospitals are so understaffed, but this does not represent an outlier season.”
RSV, which is a standard childhood illness, also surged early, and it generally hits very young children and the elderly hardest. There are ongoing shortages both in terms of medicine, like Tylenol, and pediatric hospital beds. But the latter is less about the rising cases and more about the disappearance of pediatric services. Caring for children is not a major moneymaker for hospitals, and often earns less than adult hospitalization.
Over the past two decades, as the Washington Post explained, there has been a major decline in pediatric beds nationally. The bottom line: we should be less afraid of RSV and more concerned about our broken ability to handle routine viral illness year to year.Second, there is no avoiding respiratory viruses. With extreme, draconian measures, exposure to respiratory viruses can be delayed, but can never be averted.
This is in contrast with, say, our ability to avoid contaminated drinking water or sexually transmitted diseases. The difference is that human beings have to breathe every minute of every day. And, as humans are social creatures, most of that breathing will naturally be very close to other human beings.“The piper must be paid at some point in nature; kids will get sick, and it has nothing to do with a more compromised immune system,” says Dr. Danuta Skowronski from the British Columbia Centre for Disease Control.
This point must be emphasized. It is natural, healthy, and necessary for young children to be exposed to many viruses. In order for children to build immunity to common pathogens—in order for them to develop a normally functioning immune system—they must have such exposure, which will sometimes make them sick. And third, there is no evidence that the interventions purported to stop Covid-19, flu, and RSV will help.
Before Covid-19, the evidence to support masking was thin. I co-authored a survey of masking trials that were done prior to the advent of Covid-19, examining whether masks stopped transmission of respiratory viruses. Fourteen of the 16 trials showed masks were ineffective at this. In other words, the pre-Covid evidence was clear that recommending masks for the average person was useless. This is likely one reason why Dr. Anthony Fauci, the CDC, the World Health Organization, and others initially advised against masking.
Even worse, the evidence for masking young children for Covid-19, flu, and RSV viruses is entirely lacking.
The two best studies on the topic take advantage of natural experiments. One experiment, in the Catalonia region of Spain, looked at the effectiveness of masking children to prevent Covid-19. The authors took advantage of a unique fact: that children six years and older in this region wore masks and those younger than six did not. If masking had a protective effect, then kids just younger than six years would have higher rates of Covid than those just older. But there was no such pattern.
In a separate analysis in Finland, the authors compared two towns with different policies for kids between the ages of 10 and 12. One town masked, the other didn’t. There was no benefit seen from masking there either. The spread of COVID19 was identical. There was no difference at all. Additionally, at this point, at least 9 out of 10 American kids have already had Covid-19. We know that having had and recovered from Covid-19—which confers what’s known as natural immunity—doesn’t mean you will never get Covid again. But if you were to, the odds are that it would be milder and less severe.
Masking kids who had COVID-19 is pointless in two ways. One, there is no evidence to suggest that it will delay the time until they get it again. Second, it’s being done to prevent something that—for them, at this point in the pandemic—is usually less severe than the common flu or even some cold viruses.
So what is the tripledemic in reality?Covid-19 disrupted all aspects of life. It disrupted immigration, travel, business, education, religious practices, family life—society itself. Some of these disruptions interfered with the spread of respiratory viruses like RSV and flu. The fact that Covid-19 continued to spread despite all this is a testament to how contagious it is, especially in a population that had at the time essentially no preexisting immunity.Now, as the disruptions fade, other viruses have inevitably returned. Hospitals should prepare for this. If pediatric beds are what’s in short supply, federal reimbursement should pay for pediatric beds. This would entice hospitals to expand capacity where it is needed. That’s a more productive solution than suggesting people withdraw from gatherings, or remain masked in perpetuity. Three years into the pandemic, we face a crucial question: How do we want to live the rest of our lives? Like most Americans and as a doctor, my answer is resounding: as normal.
Vinay Prasad, Hematology Oncology Medicine Health Policy Epidemiology Associate Professor
Read more of Dr. Vinay Prasad’s work here.
You have nothing to fear!
All you need is faith in G-D!
The scamdemic went according to plan, and so it should, having been rehearsed two years before the virus was released. The resulting ruination of the world’s economy was needed in order to make us all poorer and more fearful, so we would not be in a position to see or react to the implementation of the New World Order. But some of us have woken up – are there enough of us to stop this Satanic plan from being realized? I hope and pray so.
Marc Veldhoen Retweeted
Roby Bhattacharyya is also @roby@mstdn.science
@roby_bhatt
Our monitoring systems found a true but ~1 in a million signal of a potentially fatal side effect from the J&J vaccine (VITT) after 9 events, paused rollout, & eventually stopped using it bc alternatives were safer. Post-auth monitoring isn’t perfect, but it’s pretty darn good.
The Dempanic isn’t going to work this time.