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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsOmicron Is the Beginning of the End
No matter the severity of the variant, the appetite for shutdowns or other large-scale social interventions simply isnt there.https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2021/12/omicron-end-of-pandemic/621089/
https://archive.fo/rmgdE
It feels like everyone I know has COVID. During earlier stages of the pandemic, most of my friends were spared a direct brush with the virus. Perhaps they used to be much more careful. Or perhaps they were just lucky. Whatever the reason, their good fortune has now run out. Seven close friends recently told me they had tested positive. Several more strongly suspect they have COVID but are unable to get their hands on a test. Thankfully, everyone has decidedly mild symptoms (no doubt in part because they all are vaccinated and they are not in high-risk categories).
The pattern among my circle of friends fits with whats unfolding in South Africa, where the coronaviruss new Omicron variant was first identified. The number of cases in the country shot up quickly, but the number of deaths has so far increased much, much more graduallypossibly indicating that Omicron is more contagious but causes less severe disease than previous variants. Early signs from other places are a little more concerning, however. And even a significantly less deadly strain could cause a whole lot of carnage if it spreads very quickly.
Muddy early data mean that, for now at least, the immediate epidemiological future is uncertain. We could be in for a few months of relatively mild inconvenience before Omicron goes out with a whimper. Or we could be about to experience yet another exponential rise in hospitalizations and deaths. And yet I wager that, whatever course Omicronor future strains of the diseasemight take, we are about to experience the end of the pandemic as a social phenomenon.
From the first days of the pandemic, both experts and laypeople have disagreed about the extent to which we should engage in social distancing or government-imposed shutdowns. At every stage, some people wanted to take radical steps while others were more worried about the costs and drawbacks of such interventions. And that still holds true today. But the continuous fights over masks and vaccine mandates obscure the extent to which the field of battle has shifted in recent months.
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ismnotwasm
(41,976 posts)Working as a nurse though this has been bullshit. And I only took care of a few cases my hospital in my highly vaxxed well managed area has exactly 4 Covid patients.
uponit7771
(90,335 posts)... without having to be concerned with critical and lethal outcomes.
leftstreet
(36,107 posts)That would have required nationalizing healthcare and monthly stimulus payments
This seems to be what those here screeching to shut everything down don't seem to want to understand.
Wingus Dingus
(8,052 posts)A few minor restrictions like curfews at night, or closures, or building occupancy limits. Some people lost their minds over not being able to get a haircut. That's what true deprivation and hardship looks like to them.
Response to Wingus Dingus (Reply #6)
Chin music This message was self-deleted by its author.
uponit7771
(90,335 posts)... majority wont have critical or lethal outcomes.
At this point I pray those who can NOT get vaxed stay protected and those who can but don't want to because of Facebook if they get sick don't go to the hospital but go to face book and treat them selves with horse laxatives
Voltaire2
(13,023 posts)We really dont know how this ends.
wellst0nev0ter
(7,509 posts)roamer65
(36,745 posts)Only hope now is that it burns out quickly.