661 cases reported since last Friday. The 7-day average is now 226. That is double what it was in the beginning of this month and a 44% rise in the last week. Upsetting but totally predictable trend.
Vaccine rates for Oklahoma counties as of 6/21
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Went to pro bass shops Saturday place was packed maybe saw 5 people with a mask. Eye doctor today no one wore a mask. I think there was just a story on NBC over 60% think covid is over and it also showed that people who are being effected right now are mostly from unvaccinated people. I'll see if I can find it and post later.
COVID *is* over for those of us that are vaccinated. The unvaxxed are about to get hit with the Delta variant pretty soon, bad for them (and yes, fully aware that some unvaxxed *can't* get the vaccine, and truly sad that so many others that *could* get vaccinated won't in order to help you out).
I got positive word in the last week that two of my adamantly reluctant work colleagues got vaccinated. I know they are a microcosm of a much broader segment of Okie: urban / suburban folks, relatively conservative FOX News viewers who occasionally get info from CNN and other news sources including the newspaper. Incidentally they both live in South Tulsa. So, a good sign.
One of them flat said she would not get the vaccine two months ago. The other was hesitant to do so and says things like, "I'm not sure I agree with it, but....." Either way, they got the shots and there are a lot more folks like them, so I am hopeful that in Oklahoma we will get over 60% of adults with at least one shot in the next week or so.
BG918, thank you for posting the county map. I've been wondering, what is going on in Caddo County to be leading the state? I'm familiar with the county, from Anadarko in the South to Weatherford in the North. Is it an aggressive push by tribal governments? Either way, hats off to Caddo County for leading the state.
I read today that SSM Health (old st Anthony’s) will require all 40k employees be vaccinated by September.
I am curious to see how that flies locally. Certain state governors have not been shy about meddling with the vaccine plans that private companies make.
kind of surprised who low Cleveland County is. Isn't it considered the most liberal county in the state with OU?
This has a lot to do with what else is in Cleveland County besides just Norman. Norman is deep blue; Biden won downtown Norman by 56 points and the area just west of there around Norman High by 54 points. But there are a ton of precincts around Moore where Trump won by 30 points and small rural precincts around Stella and Lake Thunderbird that voted for Trump even more than that. So overall Cleveland County averages out as conservative, even though it contains a really dense, deep cluster of liberalism. It is still a lot less conservative than the more outlying counties like McClain, however.
Oklahoma's county lines happen to fall in such a way that they fail to capture cultural differences in the way they do elsewhere. You look at the Kansas side of metro Kansas City, for instance, and you have one county (Wyandotte) that contains the inner city, one (Johnson) that contains the upper-middle-class commuter suburbs, and one (Douglas) that has the college town in it. So you get two blue counties and one red one. Meanwhile, in Oklahoma, the liberal college town and the inner city share their counties with rural areas and suburbia, so they are both red counties. You have to look at precinct-level maps to get a feel for where the liberal parts of Oklahoma really are.
With the way the tribes rolled out the vaccines early this year I’m surprised the percentages are not higher in Indian Country especially eastern and south-central Oklahoma.
In court, sure. I was thinking more along the lines of: Cruise Lines Wrestle With Florida Ban on Vaccine Passports
Of course, a hospital requiring employee vaccination is not quite the same story as cruise lines requiring passenger vaccination, but given the illogic of the latter I could easily see someone trying to mess with the former. On the other hand it is perhaps notable that the state of Texas has (as far as I am aware) stayed out of that Houston hospital situation.
So what was your point in wondering how SSM requiring employee vacinations would fly locally? I don't see a connection with cruise ship customets.
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