NBA protocols/Covid/Vaccine - Discussion thread

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Re: NBA protocols/Covid/Vaccine - Discussion thread 

Post#901 » by michaelm » Sat Oct 2, 2021 3:54 pm

TheAlanParsons wrote:
michaelm wrote:
TheAlanParsons wrote:Jesus. This isn't the polio vaccine. Back when I was a kid they gave the polio vaccine in 2 stages. First an injection. This was akin to the covid vaccines. It was not steralizing but dampened effects. The second dose was oral and WAS steralizing. In rare cases though it could activate and cause the disease. To protect against this was the reason the first leaky dose was given. Just giving a leaky vaccine is dangerous. You aren't wiping out a damn thing.

So how was the Salk vaccine dangerous exactly ?. I had both the Salk and the Sabin oral vaccine as a kid as well. An oral attenuated live virus vaccine is the one that later led to milder forms of polio in third world populations . The Salk vaccine was a killed virus vaccine which never gave polio to anyone. I am not saying this medically but there was no polio in Australia by the time I got the Salk vaccine as a kid or after.

Yes those two are exactly what I was referring to. The reason just giving the first one alone is dangerous is that people who have gotten it still get infected. It sits and their bodies and has the opportunity to mutate. Also, since their symptoms are repressed they go around like nothing is wrong and spread it. Ironically this is what the unvaccinated accused of doing. Personally I feel the covid vaccines are perfectly appropriate for the at risk portion of the populace.

I am pretty old, but I looked it up and there was an initial oral vaccine of which I was unaware prior to the injected Salk vaccine which I got in the sixties as a preschooler by which time there was no poliomyelitis in Australia. If you are referring to that very early vaccine concerning which I have no knowledge you may have a point. The Salk vaccine was a killed virus vaccine which didn't contain live polio virus and hence no viable polio virus which could lay dormant and later infect anyone. I think Jonas Salk used a monkey kidney cell culture in the preparation of the vaccine and there was a concern the Salk vaccine hence contained a monkey virus which could cause cancer, but afaik this was never shown to have occurred; you would have to ask a virologist or infectious disease guy which I am not. The oral Sabin vaccine which I later received and it sounds as though you did as well was a live attenuated poliovirus vaccine, and I believe it in one form, or a successor live attenuated polio virus vaccine, did cause cases of a mild form of polio in third world populations. One of my uncles before I was extant caught polio as a strapping 19 year old and was on calipers and crutches for the rest of his life perhaps giving me a conviction about the utility of vaccination from well before I went to medical school.

Medical science has rather moved on in the last 60 or more years, and none of the current Covid vaccines contain viruses which can lie dormant, although I guess some faith in science is required to believe the human adenovirus used as the viral vector in the Johnson and Johnson vaccine and the chimpanzee virus used as the vector for the Astra Zeneca vaccine are replication inactivated as they are said to be, which I would imagine was proved to the satisfaction of the FDA for the Johnson and Johnson vaccine. Basically all of the vaccines are designed to provide Covid 19 spike protein against which the body mounts an immune response. I believe the mRNA is metabolised in the case of the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines. The Novavax vaccine which is awaiting FDA approval is pretty much just the spike protein; I don't think the company has previously produced a vaccine which has come into clinical use though.
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Re: Woj:The NBA has reached a 95 percent vaccination threshold of its players 

Post#902 » by Mavrelous » Sat Oct 2, 2021 4:26 pm

nikster wrote:
KhalilS wrote:
michaelm wrote:Not independent of the rights of others not to be infected with preventable communicable diseases as previously. Do you think typhoid Mary who was doubtless a lowly paid ordinary worker should have had the liberty to keep working as a cook ?.

Again I say I agree it is indeed arguable for NBA players in the current circumstance.


This is getting circular and quite frankly stupid.
You don't have the right for 0 risk in society, I already mentioned this at one of my 1st responses, there are measure that can and should be taken if proven to have a significant effect, but not every reduction of risk is an opening for tyranical measures.
A vaccinated person has 95-99% protection from severe COVID, these difference in risk the unvaccinated poses compared to the vaccinated is 37%*(1-5)%, is this different than the flu? and this reduction is only effective for the 1st 3 months.
Is this a justification for firing an unvaccinated person (and medical personel of all things)?
Is this a justification to practically isolate an unvaccinated NBA player and claim he can't play in his homecourt?

Is this a justification to breach an existing contract by forcing the player to take the risk of vaccination, however small that be?

You have lost all grasp of reality and the actual risks and probabilities being presented here.

The antivax always cling to percentages not realizing (or intentionally ignoring) how large of an impact that means on a populatoin level. A 37% reduction would mean 3000 less hospitalizations every day at the US current rate. In the last year thats over a million hospitalizations preventable just from reduction in transmission alone.


The 37% is relarive reduction in risk to transmit for unvav vs vaxed, the vast majority are vaxed or recovered, this does not translate in any way shape or form to 37% less reduction on the US now.
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Re: Woj:The NBA has reached a 95 percent vaccination threshold of its players 

Post#903 » by michaelm » Sat Oct 2, 2021 4:35 pm

KhalilS wrote:
nikster wrote:
KhalilS wrote:
This is getting circular and quite frankly stupid.
You don't have the right for 0 risk in society, I already mentioned this at one of my 1st responses, there are measure that can and should be taken if proven to have a significant effect, but not every reduction of risk is an opening for tyranical measures.
A vaccinated person has 95-99% protection from severe COVID, these difference in risk the unvaccinated poses compared to the vaccinated is 37%*(1-5)%, is this different than the flu? and this reduction is only effective for the 1st 3 months.
Is this a justification for firing an unvaccinated person (and medical personel of all things)?
Is this a justification to practically isolate an unvaccinated NBA player and claim he can't play in his homecourt?

Is this a justification to breach an existing contract by forcing the player to take the risk of vaccination, however small that be?

You have lost all grasp of reality and the actual risks and probabilities being presented here.

The antivax always cling to percentages not realizing (or intentionally ignoring) how large of an impact that means on a populatoin level. A 37% reduction would mean 3000 less hospitalizations every day at the US current rate. In the last year thats over a million hospitalizations preventable just from reduction in transmission alone.


The 37% is relarive reduction in risk to transmit for unvav vs vaxed, the vast majority are vaxed or recovered, this does not translate in any way shape or form to 37% less reduction on the US now.

i have tried to be polite. The 37% to which you refer means something different than you think it does. It is the protection against transmission from a vaccinated person who gets a breakthrough infection, as opposed to protection against getting infected in the first place which perhaps oddly is also rather protective against transmission, and does fall off but has been shown in Israel to be restored by re-vaccination which is why they are giving booster doses to their health workers at 5 to 6 months, reportedly with no more complications from the 3rd jab compared to the 2nd.

I don't btw know what the rate of prior infection is in the USA but don't think this has been established, and that you haven't achieved a high enough percentage of vaccination is I would imagine the reason mandates were considered in the first place.
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Re: Woj:The NBA has reached a 95 percent vaccination threshold of its players 

Post#904 » by nikster » Sat Oct 2, 2021 5:43 pm

KhalilS wrote:
nikster wrote:
KhalilS wrote:
This is getting circular and quite frankly stupid.
You don't have the right for 0 risk in society, I already mentioned this at one of my 1st responses, there are measure that can and should be taken if proven to have a significant effect, but not every reduction of risk is an opening for tyranical measures.
A vaccinated person has 95-99% protection from severe COVID, these difference in risk the unvaccinated poses compared to the vaccinated is 37%*(1-5)%, is this different than the flu? and this reduction is only effective for the 1st 3 months.
Is this a justification for firing an unvaccinated person (and medical personel of all things)?
Is this a justification to practically isolate an unvaccinated NBA player and claim he can't play in his homecourt?

Is this a justification to breach an existing contract by forcing the player to take the risk of vaccination, however small that be?

You have lost all grasp of reality and the actual risks and probabilities being presented here.

The antivax always cling to percentages not realizing (or intentionally ignoring) how large of an impact that means on a populatoin level. A 37% reduction would mean 3000 less hospitalizations every day at the US current rate. In the last year thats over a million hospitalizations preventable just from reduction in transmission alone.


The 37% is relarive reduction in risk to transmit for unvav vs vaxed, the vast majority are vaxed or recovered, this does not translate in any way shape or form to 37% less reduction on the US now.

We saw what this most recent wave looked at with majority of the population vaxxed or recovered. 2 months in august and september thats 86 000 dead and several hundreds of thousands hospitalized. Those that were unvaxxed could have reduced transmission by 37%. Those that were vaxxed would have increased transmission by 37% if they chose not to get it. No matter how you slice it, there is massive benefits to getting the whole population vaxxed
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Re: NBA protocols/Covid/Vaccine - Discussion thread 

Post#905 » by MHeat0279 » Sat Oct 2, 2021 8:08 pm

This is an interview with a well respected virologist from La Jolla institute of immunology.

https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/954796#vp_1

It should answer some questions about all this immunity ordeal.
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Re: NBA protocols/Covid/Vaccine - Discussion thread 

Post#906 » by art_tatum » Sat Oct 2, 2021 11:16 pm

Damn i just saw a clip of ines kantor firing off on lebron about covid. Wtf lol. I think its from cnn. They dont like each other right?

Basically he said he is disappointed and surprised that lebron didnt get the vaccine early and tell everyone else to do so given his star status and standing in the black community.
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Re: NBA protocols/Covid/Vaccine - Discussion thread 

Post#907 » by MoneyTalks41890 » Sat Oct 2, 2021 11:25 pm

Most of this was preventable

Read on Twitter
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Re: NBA protocols/Covid/Vaccine - Discussion thread 

Post#908 » by FNQ » Sun Oct 3, 2021 1:26 am

MHeat0279 wrote:This is an interview with a well respected virologist from La Jolla institute of immunology.

https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/954796#vp_1

It should answer some questions about all this immunity ordeal.


This guy is a heavyweight in the community btw and has been sourced so so many times. I got a lot of my info early on directly from his twitter feed and following his public posts, linked to a bunch on the CA board as well. Gonna highlight some of the best quotes and give them subtitles for specific questions people might have:

On mRNA vaccines and how they work
These vaccines looked incredible, but a lot of what was in the news and on Twitter was about fear of RNA vaccines. They were being called genetic vaccines, and I didn't see that being corrected anywhere or better communication about them.

At that point, I'd worked about 200 days straight since March. I was taking Thanksgiving Day off and I thought, Why don't I write something for Twitter on RNA vaccine safety, and what an RNA vaccine actually is and how it works? The safety data from the clinical trials were phenomenal. So that's what I did. It was seen about a million times in the first 24 hours and 3 million times in 72 hours. That's when I referred to RNA as being like a Post-it Note. It's just a temporary message that the cell writes instructions on. There are around 5000 Post-it Notes inside every single cell, and once they're read, they are shredded and thrown away. It's not a permanent change to the cell.


On how COVID replicates unlike most other viruses
In general, your innate immunity is important to dampen down the levels of viral replication and keep it from spreading further by activating those antiviral pathways in neighboring cells and tissues. But also, almost all of the adaptive immune response — your antibody and T-cell response — is completely dependent on that first innate immune signal. The adaptive immune response does not start until those innate immune alarm bells go off. You can think of it as a burglar alarm or a fire alarm. Until that alarm goes off, your B-cell and T-cell fire trucks are just sitting parked there because they don't do anything until they hear that alarm. That timing is a big deal, because the virus is replicating on an exponential scale and the adaptive immune response also replicates on an exponential scale. So any of those time lags matter.


On mRNA's effectiveness against Delta
The most detailed analysis of RNA vaccine protection from Delta is from Public Health England, which calculated 88% efficacy still against Delta for symptomatic cases, essentially no change in protective efficacy against hospitalization that is still in that 95% range.


On the study from Israel vs. England, and its possible medical benefits
There's definitely a flip side, which is the data coming out of Israel and more concern from the Israeli government about how much protection there is. We'll have to see how it plays out, but that definitely, as far as I can tell, gets pretty deep into the epidemiology of what's the proper way to calculate efficacy and how well you match the cases.

...

Moreover, in England, they took this pretty bold strategy of giving the two doses 12 weeks apart instead of 3 weeks apart, whereas in Israel, they followed the clinical trial schedule with the 3-week interval. As a result, more people in Israel are further out from their last dose than in England. It will be interesting to see more head-to-head comparisons of that over time and how it affects protective efficacy.


On a potential shortcoming of the mRNA vax, and why boosters are needed
With our HIV vaccine, we asked whether we would get a different immune response if the immune system sees the antigen over a different period of time. Working with Darrell Irvine, our MIT collaborator, we compared a single bolus injection with a conventional syringe with providing the same amount of antigen and adjuvant over a 14-day window instead. The results were dramatically different. All of the monkeys made neutralizing antibodies in one case (14-day administration) and none of them in the other case. That sort of delivery of antigen over a 14-day period is more like what would happen during an infection. It matches what your immune system has essentially evolved to do. One thing we learned by doing that was that when you deliver the same amount of protein, the same amount of antigen, over a longer window of time your immune system gets a lot better at retaining that antigen, and as a result, it gets better at sustaining a protective immune response, even though in actuality it's the same amount of material.

Those results have been repeated in multiple experimental systems, so there's a lot of interest in trying to figure out whether that can be mimicked in other contexts. The thought at the moment is that the RNA vaccines aren't doing that. The reports of the RNA vaccines have been that the RNA probably results in expression of protein for just a couple of days. If that's true, and if that could be changed to protein being expressed over a longer period of a week or two, we might be able to produce a big improvement in the quality of the immune response just by changing the kinetics.



On the importance of antibodies, B cells, T cells - and when they are important:
For any virus that's susceptible to neutralizing antibodies, your perfect vaccine is a vaccine that elicits high levels of neutralizing antibodies forever. If you can do that and you can get essentially sterilizing immunity, you have such high neutralizing antibodies, you stop the virus at the front door, and that's the end of it.

...

So that then raises the question: If the virus gets past those neutralizing antibodies, that frontline defense, do you have additional lines of defense and/or do you have redundancies and backup systems in place?

For an acute infection like SARS-CoV-2, that's where the T cells come into play. Once you are infected, the T cells become more important than the antibodies because now you have a lot of virus inside cells, generally inaccessible to the antibodies. Combined with that, it's generally very hard for acute viruses to evolve and escape T cells because there are so many different epitopes available for the T cells to recognize. And my T cells will recognize different epitopes than your T cells. So if the virus could escape some of my T-cell epitopes, they wouldn't be escaping yours, and thus there's not that much evolutionary advantage. So it makes sense for there to be a high level of attention on the antibodies, along with a recognition that they're not the only source of protection, particularly when you shift from talking about protection from infection vs protection from hospitalization-level disease.


more about mRNA's limitations and the *actual* long-term questions we have about them / why boosters are necessary
One of the things we haven't known about RNA vaccines is how long they generate memory for the virus. That's a big consideration when you're talking about the need for boosters. We studied the low-dose Moderna vaccine at 25 µg and, quite impressively, we found essentially no change in T-cell memory between 1 month post-vaccination and 6 months post-vaccination. So it looks like the RNA vaccines actually generate impressively stable T-cell memory, which is a positive sign.

If these backup systems, so to speak, the military reserves, are so good, why would you need boosters? I'd say that comes down to two things. First, there's no proof that T cells are providing that protection. It's much harder to show scientific proof for T cells than antibodies because you can purify them and passively transfer them into another person or a monkey and have direct experimental proof. It is 30 times more resource-intensive to study a T-cell response than an antibody response. It's harder to get samples, and biologically it's tougher to prove. So you have to hedge somewhat because there isn't enough proof on that side.

Second, it comes down to the definition of protection. One level of protection is hospitalization or death. Another level of protection is obviously infection and/or symptomatic infection. It's less likely that T cells are contributing protection against symptomatic disease and certainly against infection because they take some time to kick in. They have to wait until you're infected. Then they have to detect the infection. Then they have to get to the site of the infection and expand and whatnot. Normally, that's going to take time, which is fine for prevention of hospitalization, but this is a virus that's fast at replicating in your upper respiratory tract and transmitting in just a handful of days. So if the goal is to prevent symptomatic disease and transmission, you want to bias things more toward that antibody component.


Should you get vaccinated if you've already had COVID?
Last question first. Is prior COVID plus one dose of mRNA vaccine better than, well, anything else? Yes. I summarized that literature in a one-page piece in Science a few weeks ago, which I called "Hybrid Immunity." Eric, you and some others have called it super-human immunity, which is bulletproof, and is fair enough. The immune responses in those individuals — the T-cell and antibody responses — are dramatically higher than what you get from either infection or immunization.


There is a lot of hope for natural immunity, but it should be tempered re: variants; especially relative to vaccines
Do people with prior COVID need vaccination? I think it's a topic about which reasonable people can disagree because the epidemiologic data so far have been out to 8 or 9 months post-infection. Those people are still something like 93%-100% protected, depending on the study. Those are relatively large studies, so that's pretty good evidence.

Against variants, however, that protection drops, and how much that protection drops really has not been quantified well. The best paper on the topic is the Science paper on the Manaus, Brazil, outbreak, which suggested something like a 30% drop in protective efficacy against the P-1 variant compared with the original virus in terms of reinfection.

That's obviously a big drop if it's occurring in other contexts and with other variants, whereas the vaccine seems to be more consistent than that. In our Science paper, where we measured the immune responses, the immune memory in people who had had COVID, it was quite encouraging 8 months out.


Why trusting natural immunity can be problematic but is not personally risky
The status of the discourse before our paper was centered on the possibility that people don't have any memory at all and maybe don't have any protective immunity. Maybe coronaviruses are just strange in this way. We didn't think that would be the case immunologically, but obviously you want data. That was the largest ever study of immune memory to a virus over 6 months, with each of these different immunologic compartments. We showed that people do have antibodies over that period — a number of groups have shown that. We showed they have memory B cells over that period. If anything, they have more at 6 months than at 1 month. We also showed that memory T cells were retained rather well over that time period, such that we projected that people who have had COVID are likely to have a reasonable amount of protective immunity for years into the future; it wouldn't necessarily prevent infection or even symptomatic disease but it would prevent serious outcomes.

A caveat that we put on that is that there were 100-fold differences between individuals in those components of immunologic memory, and we don't know which ones are most important over time. So if you show me 100 people who had COVID, some of those people will have very low immune memory but I don't know which ones. A serum antibody test can't tell me. Public health officials always want to lean on the safety side, in which case the recommendation is certainly that all those people should be vaccinated. If they want to roll the dice and not get vaccinated, most of them probably are protected.
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Re: NBA protocols/Covid/Vaccine - Discussion thread 

Post#909 » by michaelm » Sun Oct 3, 2021 2:30 am

Yes so the bottom line is that vaccination + infection gives you strong immunity, quite likely stronger than natural immunity from infection, and the virus doesn’t kill you while this is being achieved.
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Re: NBA protocols/Covid/Vaccine - Discussion thread 

Post#910 » by MoneyTalks41890 » Sun Oct 3, 2021 2:38 am

michaelm wrote:Yes so the bottom line is that vaccination + infection gives you strong immunity, quite likely stronger than natural immunity from infection, and the virus doesn’t kill you while this is being achieved.


I would also add to that don’t try for natural infection
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Re: NBA protocols/Covid/Vaccine - Discussion thread 

Post#911 » by michaelm » Sun Oct 3, 2021 2:49 am

MoneyTalks41890 wrote:
michaelm wrote:Yes so the bottom line is that vaccination + infection gives you strong immunity, quite likely stronger than natural immunity from infection, and the virus doesn’t kill you while this is being achieved.


I would also add to that don’t try for natural infection

Exactly
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Re: NBA protocols/Covid/Vaccine - Discussion thread 

Post#912 » by FNQ » Sun Oct 3, 2021 3:13 am

michaelm wrote:Yes so the bottom line is that vaccination + infection gives you strong immunity, quite likely stronger than natural immunity from infection, and the virus doesn’t kill you while this is being achieved.


Only thing I would say is that quite likely is underselling it. Here, this virologist says 0-7%, with a median of 3.5%. Thats on the low end, especially relative to the delta variant, from numbers being thrown around medical circles right now. 3-15% has been the standard lately, but that is down from 5-20% towards the end of August, so it is absolutely trending that direction as well. (FWIW I would expect the high end to drop down to single digits relatively soon, as those studies did not have the volume as the others ones that landed with lower numbers)

These are SIGNIFICANT numbers in the medical field. 1% of unvaccinated people in the US is about 1.3 million people. Which is why overarching generalizations should be avoided, and are avoided by the medical field
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Re: NBA protocols/Covid/Vaccine - Discussion thread 

Post#913 » by 76ciology » Sun Oct 3, 2021 5:08 am

Will the league still do routine covid tests for the players?

Because I read how that in Harvard Business School where there’s like a big outbreak despite having the students 95% vaccinated that they were forced to go back to online classes.

If they dont do tests, then wouldnt they put some of the people at risk? Like a 70+ year old coach who’s vaccine efficacy has waned after taking it more than 7 months ago (study shows vax efficacy wanes after 7 months).

If they do tests, so it’s gonna be a weird season again where there will be guys who will be missing games
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Re: NBA protocols/Covid/Vaccine - Discussion thread 

Post#914 » by Noodlesoop » Sun Oct 3, 2021 9:07 am

76ciology wrote:Will the league still do routine covid tests for the players?

Because I read how that in Harvard Business School where there’s like a big outbreak despite having the students 95% vaccinated that they were forced to go back to online classes.

If they dont do tests, then wouldnt they put some of the people at risk? Like a 70+ year old coach who’s vaccine efficacy has waned after taking it more than 7 months ago (study shows vax efficacy wanes after 7 months).

If they do tests, so it’s gonna be a weird season again where there will be guys who will be missing games


I can’t speak on the Harvard study.

My first thought is the coach should get a booster if his protection is supposedly waning although I don’t know the American view/policy on this.

Most the quarantining from last season was caused by people who didn’t have the virus but had come in to contact with those that had (it was basically a precaution). This season I’m presuming only the people who actually test positive will quarantine as they should relax the rules for those that are vaccinated which will now be 95%+ players. In other words, there should be much less time lost to players quarantining so there’s no harm in continuing to test to avoid major outbreaks/positive COVID cases.
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Re: Woj:The NBA has reached a 95 percent vaccination threshold of its players 

Post#915 » by garrick » Sun Oct 3, 2021 9:48 am

MoneyTalks41890 wrote:
TheAlanParsons wrote:
MoneyTalks41890 wrote:
It’s not a coincidence that folks against the vaccine are also against mask mandates, distancing, and other evidence based measures. It’s an objectively pro Covid position based on feelings and emotions, not science. The science is really clear, no matter how much people want to try to turn this into a debate. There is none.

The CDC's own study said that mask mandates only made a 1%-2% difference in infection rates. Is that your "science"?


The science of masks has been available for over a year. Again there is no debate. They work. N95s work both ways. Regular surgical masks work one way but if everyone wears them it’s mutually protective. Like this isn’t hard or controversial.


Surgical masks do protect both ways if the mask has an electrostatic filter but efficiency is greatly improved if you're wearing it properly because if you don't ensure a proper fit more air will leak from the gaps in the mask.

Just wearing a surgical mask alone is probably around 50-70 percent and the reason for these masks being less efficient than N95 masks is that surgical masks are very leaky due to poor fit, KN95 and KF94 masks offer anywhere from 90-98 percent protection so they offer even greater levels of protection compared to a surgical mask alone.

Aaron Collins has done quite a few tests on a variety of KN95 and KF94 masks and I highly recommend his channel if N95 masks aren't available in your area.

https://youtu.be/1-zRjrwsMWY?t=427
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Re: NBA protocols/Covid/Vaccine - Discussion thread 

Post#916 » by DOT » Sun Oct 3, 2021 1:46 pm

76ciology wrote:Because I read how that in Harvard Business School where there’s like a big outbreak despite having the students 95% vaccinated that they were forced to go back to online classes.

This was already brought up as a talking point

The "big" outbreak was like 64 positive tests, and they only went online for 1 week

In fact, this news is so old that they're now back to regular classes.

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Re: NBA protocols/Covid/Vaccine - Discussion thread 

Post#917 » by 76ciology » Sun Oct 3, 2021 4:35 pm

K-DOT wrote:
76ciology wrote:Because I read how that in Harvard Business School where there’s like a big outbreak despite having the students 95% vaccinated that they were forced to go back to online classes.

This was already brought up as a talking point

The "big" outbreak was like 64 positive tests, and they only went online for 1 week

In fact, this news is so old that they're now back to regular classes.

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Then what happens when there’s another outbreak again? which research papers and real world data would show how vaxed could still transmit the virus.

So when a player tested positive (which i dont know if they would still test), would they not allow the player to play and go thru some quarantine again?
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Re: NBA protocols/Covid/Vaccine - Discussion thread 

Post#918 » by xdrta+ » Sun Oct 3, 2021 4:45 pm

76ciology wrote:
K-DOT wrote:
76ciology wrote:Because I read how that in Harvard Business School where there’s like a big outbreak despite having the students 95% vaccinated that they were forced to go back to online classes.

This was already brought up as a talking point

The "big" outbreak was like 64 positive tests, and they only went online for 1 week

In fact, this news is so old that they're now back to regular classes.

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Then what happens when there’s another outbreak again? which research papers and real world data would show how vaxed could still transmit the virus.

So when a player tested positive (which i dont know if they would still test), would they not allow the player to play and go thru some quarantine again?


If you're actually interested in the answers to your questions they're not hard to find.

"NBA COVID-19 protocols, explained: What are the rules for vaccinated and unvaccinated players?"
https://www.sportingnews.com/us/nba/news/nba-covid-19-protocols-rules-players-vaccinated/1xxo3t2i5r1921e4ygxv85a696
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76ciology
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Re: NBA protocols/Covid/Vaccine - Discussion thread 

Post#919 » by 76ciology » Sun Oct 3, 2021 5:00 pm

xdrta+ wrote:
76ciology wrote:
K-DOT wrote:This was already brought up as a talking point

The "big" outbreak was like 64 positive tests, and they only went online for 1 week

In fact, this news is so old that they're now back to regular classes.

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Then what happens when there’s another outbreak again? which research papers and real world data would show how vaxed could still transmit the virus.

So when a player tested positive (which i dont know if they would still test), would they not allow the player to play and go thru some quarantine again?


If you're actually interested in the answers to your questions they're not hard to find.

"NBA COVID-19 protocols, explained: What are the rules for vaccinated and unvaccinated players?"
https://www.sportingnews.com/us/nba/news/nba-covid-19-protocols-rules-players-vaccinated/1xxo3t2i5r1921e4ygxv85a696


Thanks for the link.

So Unvax players sounds like they’re gonna live like in a bubble while Vaxed players can be more free and have no testing unless symptomatic.

And say anything happens to a senior citizen staff with comorbidity because a asymptomatic vaxed player transmitted the virus at him, it would be hard for the MSM to blame the league because it would be hard for anyone to say where he got the virus from.

Overall I like how the league is handling this.
There’s never been a time in history when we look back and say that the people who were censoring free speech were the good guys.
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Re: NBA protocols/Covid/Vaccine - Discussion thread 

Post#920 » by Optms » Mon Oct 4, 2021 12:10 am

MoneyTalks41890 wrote:
Optms wrote:
The High Cyde wrote:Lol these anti-vaxxers need to create their own commune, live isolated from all of us and create your own dumbass anti-science society for all I care. Let them go the way of the dodo, fly with that ignorance baby.
Done coddling these fools. 700000+ dead “bu..bu..but my body my choice!! Wahhhh” get a grip.


:lol: Someone has the audacity to share a different opinion as you and now you want segregation. Unfortunately for you that is not reality and we're living in 2021. Not 1951.


Gonna be wild when you learn what we do with TB patients. Public health measures are just that. They aren’t some reason to act oppressed. Drawing apologies to segregation is in fact disgusting.


I don't blame you for not reading what I responded to but through his blabbering, he stated anyone ant-vaccine AND anyone anti-science (For the record, I'm not religious but a huge portion of the population and world are, which generally aren't pro-science) to create their own society.

It sounds like something an insecure person would say and thankfully people like him are in the minority. One was segregation by tone of skin, this is proposed segregation by belief. Either way. Its segregation. :crazy:

That dude is probably vaccinated like me. Difference is I'm not a sheep that is going to push it on anyone else just because our over the hill commander-in-chief has lost his damn mind and decided to treat society like children.

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