BoatsNZones wrote:I have ran a wine laboratory, but I am far from a virologist and frankly don't think we can determine if this is any quicker of an evolution of the virus than is standard (we have not studied any this closely). We do know its strains have proven to be extremely dangerous to the elderly and immune compromised (especially the obese). We also know that the hospitalization and death rate have significantly waned in the past year relative to its peak.
I have to go to bed but I do think in general you're making fair points. I just have to question how long you want to continue to make them.
to the bolded and underlined: we have, a lot. Although each generation has been limited by their technology, and we have the most advanced ways of looking at them, we have definitely studied viruses evolutions a lot - its a huge part of virology.
As for the facts above you presented - the obese, simply by virtue of being obese, are not much more at risk than an average individual. Its heart health that really determines danger levels, and while an obese person will likely have a less healthy heart, its far from a 1:1 ratio of them being in more danger than an average person.
Also re: hospitalization... we also know why those rates have declined. A large part of it is the vaccine's intended effect: individual protection. Another significant part of it is the secondary effect of the vaccine, which is to effectively disrupt the supply chain of the virus - less infected people with lesser viral loads = less opportunities for the virus to evolve/mutate. And that part is why the excessive testing is vital right now - not only to inform individuals that they are carrying the virus, but for us to get an idea of how prevalent it is, so we can define markers for case studies. And while its not relevant to the discussion, natural immunity of course is a part of this as well, but it is more focused on specific variants and lacks the versatility that a vaccine can have
Unfortunately the timeline is unknown right now - its way too early to even have an educated guess, unless there's an active virologist around here. But currently we're accumulating and cleaning data, which is usually the first and typically longest step. But we've been doing that for at least a month now (closer to 2) and studies have already begun at different intervals to determine if we're dealing with strictly one variant (Omicron) that's spiking, or similar variants. Now if there are similar variants instead of just one, that's probably better for our long-term study, because then we can determine an evolution/mutation marker, and figure out what the virus is doing to ensure its survival, and possibly close those roads for the future. At the same time we can also see what the average viral load is, which would go a long ways to determine how strong this strain is, and whether or not a booster vaccine is necessary, or even wise (as vaccinating for a relatively inert virus could restart its evolution to something more dangerous).
But since testing hardly disrupts people's lives other than going into various timelines of isolation based on vaccination status, I'd turn the same question to you when you wake up: I have to question what level of inconvenience is worth taking a stand on. Because right now I'd say that the response is fairly lax - no leagues are threatening to shut down, there are no rumblings of lockdowns or increased safety measures.. the only telltale sign right now is athletes catching it and not being able to play every game, which is pretty mild compared to what we went through for the past 20+ months