2010 wrote:god shammgod wrote:
Ok, I’ma address the elephant in the room. Everyone pretending a new wave of COVID infections ain’t kinda running rampant in the NBA right now. And all the positives lately have been vaccinated individuals.
Who’s responsible? Kyrie? Beal? Isaac? General citizens in everyday life who may be unvaccinated? Or are the vaccines failing? Are boosters needed. Then boosters for the boosters? Then new vaccines for the new variants.
On the flip side are the vaccines working cuz none of the infected have been reported to be hospitalized or deceased. But then again, neither is Kyrie, Beal, Isaac, etc. (who haven’t even been positive in any recent reportings).
I won’t pretend to be smart enough to have a handle on this but it’s getting confusing.
Both of these are probably true. Antibodies decline over time, and breakthrough infections become more likely. So we'll see initial vaccinations still have breakthrough infections, but the vaccines will still keep the impacts mild (for the vast majority, no perfect results of course).
The other thing is Omicron variant so far looks like it's more likely to breakthrough and potentially more infectious than the Delta variant (that's the most prevalent one right now), but on the flipside the initial outlook is that the sickness is more mild. So more infections, but less hospitalizations ought to continue as a trend if that holds.
I have a feeling that players who were skeptical but got the shot to play will also be skeptical of having to get a booster (I know a bunch of people in my life that fit this profile though I keep tryna talk 'em into getting a booster). So I'd speculate that this is the reason we're seeing more spread...and also the old rules probably still apply that as places loosen restrictions, infections increase and as Winter moves people indoors more often the infections increase.