They will ship two sets of doses. With the unique storage requirements of the Pfizer vaccine there is no real way of holding onto anything for the second dose. So if you get X this time, the same people will get the same number of doses in 3 weeks.
They will ship two sets of doses. With the unique storage requirements of the Pfizer vaccine there is no real way of holding onto anything for the second dose. So if you get X this time, the same people will get the same number of doses in 3 weeks.
Both mRNA (Pfizer and Moderna) vaccine candidates are two doses.
Is there a good site or paper that explains the difference between vaccines and which one we should take or at least give us enough information that we can make an informed decision on which one to choose when we get an opportunity to take the vaccine?
I was listening to an interview on NPR last week with an infectious disease expert about this very question. He basically said that all of the current vaccines work similarly and you should just take the first one that is available to you and not worry about which one it is.
Vaccine Expert: Once A COVID Vaccine Is Available, 'Don't Overthink It. Don't Wait'
"One of the questions that I'm asked all the time is, 'Hey, doc, which vaccine are you waiting for?' And the answer is ... I'm going to take any of those vaccines that's made available to me that's authorized by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration," he says. "Don't overthink it. Don't wait. Get what vaccine you can."
1,737 new cases reported today. 7-day rolling average now 2,696.
15 additional deaths; 7-day rolling average now 13.4.
As of last night, hospitalizations were 1,718 (+65) for an all-time high. ICU was 461 (+29), another record.
Hopefully this downward trend indicates real change and not just a short term leftover from Thanksgiving
And we're now at the "setting up field hospital tents to prep for COVID overflow" stage of the pandemic. Ugh.
https://twitter.com/KOCODillon/statu...29736477450242
Good read on the continuing work on vaccines and what will have to continue for years. Had heard the trials relied on a pretty small number of cases, but didn't know how small, which is in the article.
Covid-19 vaccine efficacy results are not enough
Gotta love your optimism, but this is probably just a statistical lag from non-reporting over the holiday. The next three weeks or so are going to be a complete nightmare. Hopefully the mayor's strong press conference will mitigate this somewhat for people who pay attention to news and listen to experts.
I suspect that number of people (who would even listen to the mayor) is less than half of the adult population in the OKC Metro, meaning more than half went about their lives like nothing is going on.
You probably didn't have it. That study has some issues re: specificity and cross-reactivity to seasonal coronaviruses circulating at the time: https://twitter.com/CT_Bergstrom/sta...44891516895234
As of today, slightly more than 5% of all Oklahomans have been infected with Covid-19.
That's one in 20 people; almost 200,000 total.
This video of an Oklahoma nurse who lost her mother and husband is heart wrenching: https://www.cnn.com/videos/health/20...olduan-vpx.cnn
I’m sure he doesn’t feel it, but Stitt should feel shame for the rest of his life for playing politics while his constituents died.
I guess there is the possibility that the increased testing before Thanksgiving identified some potential asymptomatic spreaders that, in turn, actually did what they were supposed to do and isolate, but I doubt that would be enough to offset those who were infected and participated in family gatherings.
Either way, it takes at least a week for the data to reflect a change in transmission rates. For those infected on Thanksgiving day, a lot of would not test positive before today.
Oklahoma physicians dispute claims that COVID-19 is just another flu-like virus: https://www.fox23.com/news/local/okl...=snd-autopilot
FROM ARTICLE: "Oklahoma physicians are fighting back against the common claim that COVID-19 is just another influenza-like virus. Dr. George Monks with the Oklahoma Medical Association said Tuesday people are throwing out the common misconception that the coronavirus is just another virus as an excuse to not wear a mask and take other precautions when the data shows, COVID-19 is ten times deadlier than the flu.
“In Oklahoma, we have about 85 average flu deaths a year,” Monks said. “With COVID ever since this thing began we are now to almost 1,800 people. That’s not flu-like numbers.”
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