(Thread IKs:
PoundSand)
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Cabbages and Kings posted:It's about to be ski season but I'd prefer to not have a heart attack, is there any guidance there other than "wait a month from when you weren't sick anymore to do any hardcore cardio"? To be clear, it isn’t hardcore cardio after a month. It’s a graded return to cardio as tolerated. As I recall it would look like a two mile walk at 20 min/mile, with a day off between. Sorry about your season, but at least if you are cautious you might be able to enjoy future seasons? Precambrian Video Games posted:A double dose of NYT takes because I hate myself enough to read them, starting with the more reasonable: Yeah I wonder why everyone is so gloomy. Can’t be because of the novel plague that gives people depression and anxiety, so let’s look for something else!
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# ? Dec 7, 2023 13:32 |
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# ? May 25, 2024 02:58 |
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SplitSoul posted:Also they're asking MPs with active COVID to vote in parliament. Getting more brain damage to throw another xenophobic vote
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# ? Dec 7, 2023 13:37 |
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TehSaurus posted:Yeah I wonder why everyone is so gloomy. Can’t be because of the novel plague that gives people depression and anxiety, so let’s look for something else! CDCishly: eighty percent of depressed individuals owned dogs. CDC prescribes adopting a cat.
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# ? Dec 7, 2023 13:41 |
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Platystemon posted:CDCishly: eighty percent of depressed individuals owned dogs. that sounds like a cdc level understanding of causality, yeah
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# ? Dec 7, 2023 13:44 |
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Failure to protect: COVID infection control policy privileges poor-quality evidence
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# ? Dec 7, 2023 13:57 |
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https://twitter.com/goblinkatie/status/1732523634336432247 https://twitter.com/theegoosegirl/status/1732105383421018367
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# ? Dec 7, 2023 14:21 |
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Get Pax post Pax.
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# ? Dec 7, 2023 14:33 |
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gradenko_2000 posted:Failure to protect: COVID infection control policy privileges poor-quality evidence Next thing you know we’ll be basing health policy on letters from airline CEOs.
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# ? Dec 7, 2023 14:40 |
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If someone ran a poll question asking if someone thinks covid just disappeared I wonder what percentage of people would answer yes. I bet somewhere between a third and a half.
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# ? Dec 7, 2023 15:02 |
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Yeah took me a while to figure out why people weren’t masking at a Paxlovid convention. Man the brain is broke.
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# ? Dec 7, 2023 15:09 |
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Pingui posted:Get Pax post Pax. Get pax if you poz for post-Pax pox, post haste!
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# ? Dec 7, 2023 15:12 |
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Honestly I don’t see the point of tweets like that anymore. Of course you were exposed to COVID at the convention. And at the hotel. And on the flight there. And at the restaurants and bars you went to. You don’t need to actually have knowledge of someone popping positive to know that.
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# ? Dec 7, 2023 15:15 |
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WrasslorMonkey posted:Yeah took me a while to figure out why people weren’t masking at a Paxlovid convention. Man the brain is broke. lol, thoroughly owned by reality.
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# ? Dec 7, 2023 15:17 |
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the refusal to say/print the word "covid" is insane it has absolutely worked in erasing covid from people's minds. watching the realtime deployment of language in such an obvious way to shape thought has been something incredible to see.
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# ? Dec 7, 2023 15:19 |
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... I was requested to not mask (?) Well that explains why you went along with it at least. I was going to say 'didn't question it' but apparently they did exactly that amount of thought.
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# ? Dec 7, 2023 15:20 |
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Thoguh posted:Honestly I don’t see the point of tweets like that anymore. Of course you were exposed to COVID at the convention. And at the hotel. And on the flight there. And at the restaurants and bars you went to. You don’t need to actually have knowledge of someone popping positive to know that.
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# ? Dec 7, 2023 15:21 |
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we got an email from our school district in august saying don’t talk to us about covid we don’t care anymore
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# ? Dec 7, 2023 15:23 |
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euphronius posted:we got an email from our school district in august saying don’t talk to us about covid we don’t care anymore If it makes you feel any better, by being honest about COVID your school district has one of the best COVID responses in the US
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# ? Dec 7, 2023 15:33 |
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Snowglobe of Doom posted:Get pax if you poz for post-Pax pox, post haste! Post-Pax pox poz? Pop Pax pills.
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# ? Dec 7, 2023 15:35 |
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Thoguh posted:Honestly I don’t see the point of tweets like that anymore. Of course you were exposed to COVID at the convention. And at the hotel. And on the flight there. And at the restaurants and bars you went to. You don’t need to actually have knowledge of someone popping positive to know that. It's almost 2024 and most of the American population still doesn't understand that people can have COVID and spread it everywhere they go without displaying symptoms.
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# ? Dec 7, 2023 15:35 |
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JAY ZERO SUM GAME posted:the refusal to say/print the word "covid" is insane I've been trying to come up with a good way to describe the tortured linguistics behind the phrase "triple-demic of flu, covid, and RSV" and I think the best example I can come up with is "Squeaky Fromme was charged with carrying an unlicensed handgun, attempted presidential assassination, and unlawful entry."
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# ? Dec 7, 2023 15:38 |
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Snowglobe of Doom posted:Get pax if you poz for post-Pax pox, post haste! [Pestilence]: Get pax if you poz for post-Pax pox, post haste!
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# ? Dec 7, 2023 15:42 |
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Regarding COVID-19, please know, currently we are not following any specific protocols (i.e. required masking, distancing, isolating periods), nor are we asking families to report positive cases to the district. We now look at COVID as an endemic, not a pandemic, due to the Pennsylvania Department of Health’s expiration of the federal Public Health Emergency (PHE) declaration. The district will treat COVID-19 as an upper respiratory illness and follow our traditional protocols related to fevers as a consideration for sending students home and returning to school. Masking remains a personal option for any student or employee.
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# ? Dec 7, 2023 15:42 |
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Some genuinely and surprising good news. Test to treat is being expanded to cover flu as well.https://www.nih.gov/news-events/news-releases/home-test-treat-program-extends-nationwide posted:Home Test to Treat program extends nationwide
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# ? Dec 7, 2023 15:42 |
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I love how COVID doesn't exist anymore in most of America but suddenly we have a year-round "allergy season" for the past 3 years.
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# ? Dec 7, 2023 15:42 |
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‘baby! great news! Alexander Hamilton middle school in fuckme, PA says covid is endemic!’
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# ? Dec 7, 2023 15:44 |
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euphronius posted:an endemic
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# ? Dec 7, 2023 15:45 |
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ikr what can you do
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# ? Dec 7, 2023 15:46 |
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"An endemic" what though!!!!
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# ? Dec 7, 2023 15:48 |
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I got this year’s mrna booster back in early oct. Has it been long enough to go get novovax?
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# ? Dec 7, 2023 15:58 |
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Anne Whateley posted:Iirc early on there was a huge pdf about rehabbing D1 athletes, which is probably overkill for most goons, but a little princess treatment is nice, for a functioning heart. I can’t find that now, but there’s this After quickly looking stuff up on some patient side physical therapy sites: the CDC description which is the first result is unhelpful here, but some sites suggest an 18-19 is the most that most people have experienced, and a 17 is the point of longer forms of fatigue or concentrated acute effort like extended full sprints. A lot of the discussion also centers around heart rate (multiply each number by 10 for a corresponding heart rate in the middle of an exercise for a healthy 20 year old, scale the multiplier down a bit with age) rather than other longer forms of physical fatigue. Perhaps the heart rate aspect is more useful here for cardiovascular diseases or even for the scale in general? But in any case, that at least it gives me an idea of what they're going for and how my subjective idea of exertion might line up with the scale. For reference for the other end of the scale, examples of "6" I saw proposed were things like "laying in bed awake" and "sitting down", and "7" is like "standing up but still". Having people take 7 days after symptoms dissipate to do basically nothing more strenuous than a slow walk seems like ambitious amount of non-productivity for most people, especially if they weren't in the hospitalization or acute cardiac symptoms groups. Suzera has issued a correction as of 16:22 on Dec 7, 2023 |
# ? Dec 7, 2023 16:20 |
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euphronius posted:ikr
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# ? Dec 7, 2023 16:29 |
Suzera posted:Having people take 7 days after symptoms dissipate to do basically nothing more strenuous than a slow walk seems like ambitious amount of non-productivity for most people, especially if they weren't in the hospitalization or acute cardiac symptoms groups. The good news is that nobody is being expected to do anything at all,,, and most are knocking it out of the park!
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# ? Dec 7, 2023 16:42 |
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Nobody cares about Covid anymore and it's kinda fascinating to me because I can certainly see the subtle impact Covid is having on everything. Not the obvious thing but the smaller things. Like on Tiktok, I follow several young fitness and weight lifting creators that produce videos for their young audiences. Lately they've been making more and more videos on exercises for weak knees, how to alleviate back pains, ways to reduce pain in your feets and strengthen your hips. Ya know... old people common problems. Also been seeing a awfully lot of advertising that's targeted to younger folks for blue chews, and other ED medicines. Hair growth medicines for hair loss too as well. It's almost as if there's something that's going around aging our population on the cellular level, what could it be?
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# ? Dec 7, 2023 17:20 |
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Four days post-party and I'm going to run a Cue test on myself. Based on all the above discussion should I throat swab, or nose, or both on one swab (and in what swabbing order)?
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# ? Dec 7, 2023 17:23 |
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If you don't mind putting snot in your mouth, the order you do a swab shouldn't matter. (Everyone always say do throat then your nose)
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# ? Dec 7, 2023 17:28 |
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Even knowing that, thanks to post-nasal drip, my nose and throat mucus are identical, I still do not want boogers on my uvula. But, I would take it for the team if it worked better.
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# ? Dec 7, 2023 17:32 |
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Suzera posted:
yes, that's the point. society and our dipshit oligarchy doesn't permit people to adequately recover.
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# ? Dec 7, 2023 17:40 |
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I feel like I’m seeing a ton of hair loss stuff for women. Some of it is probably the algorithm being rude to me personally, but telogen effluvium after covid is absolutely real and widespreadSuzera posted:Having people take 7 days after symptoms dissipate to do basically nothing more strenuous than a slow walk seems like ambitious amount of non-productivity for most people, especially if they weren't in the hospitalization or acute cardiac symptoms groups. NeonPunk posted:If you don't mind putting snot in your mouth, the order you do a swab shouldn't matter. (Everyone always say do throat then your nose)
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# ? Dec 7, 2023 17:45 |
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# ? May 25, 2024 02:58 |
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TehSaurus posted:To be clear, it isn’t hardcore cardio after a month. It’s a graded return to cardio as tolerated. As I recall it would look like a two mile walk at 20 min/mile, with a day off between. Sorry about your season, but at least if you are cautious you might be able to enjoy future seasons? I appreciate the concern, but, the complex spreadsheet the other person posted showed (lacking any symptoms) a potential return to usual baseline levels in a minimum of 5 weeks and of course all these ideas are extremely conservative compared to what the general medical establishement says Mentioning skiiing was poor framing because it's a voluntary opulent thing. The way I ski involves less sustained cardio and not higher maximum heartrate, than "basic life as we live it": we chew through 750-1200 pounds of firewood some weeks, which needs to be moved multiple times; I paid a cousin to do this once and have been since keeping up on it as carefully as possible, but then on top of that, sometimes one of the kids does something unpredictable and I have to break into an absolute sprint and push myself into the 120-130 bpm range for some period of time until the situation is under control. That's not something I can outsource to anyone and "parenting" is probably literally my most significant exercise activity. I've explained to the kids that poo poo like vigorous piggyback rides etc are off the table for a while, but it's the involuntary, daily stuff that's pushing me back towards "usual levels of activity" before I'd like to be there. Fortunately for me, aside from skiing, all my hobbies and my work is quite sedentary. Suzera posted:Having people take 7 days after symptoms dissipate to do basically nothing more strenuous than a slow walk seems like ambitious amount of non-productivity for most people, especially if they weren't in the hospitalization or acute cardiac symptoms groups. It's literally impossible for huge groups of people that include people whose employment and cashflow needs prohibit it, to basically any parent of small children who can't afford to pay 24/7 help, and I am sure lots of other groups I am not thinking of. That doesn't mean it's not going to have overall negative consequences for those groups It was impossible to avoid even worse environmental lead poisoning than we have now for a long time, because people pumped it into their cars' fuel for years; this had catastrophic public health consequences. So, something being impossibly ambitious doesn't mean it wouldn't still provide a better outcome than what is pragmatically possible.
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# ? Dec 7, 2023 17:55 |