The Pandemic is Over

 

Before you demand that I share the source for my title, I suggest instead that my observation is obvious. The highly maligned term “common sense” would tell you that. In fact, if we look at the definition of pandemic, the truth becomes even clearer (unless you have no interest in the truth):

1: an outbreak of a disease that occurs over a wide geographic area (such as multiple countries or continents) and typically affects a significant proportion of the population: a pandemic outbreak of a disease; a global pandemic Influenza pandemics seem to strike every few decades and to kill by the million—at least 1m in 1968; perhaps 100m in the “Spanish” flu of 1918-19.— The Economist

2: an outbreak or product of sudden rapid spread, growth, or development.

Don’t you think it is fair to say that the outbreak has exhausted its “sudden rapid spread, growth or development?”

‘The question is not when do we eliminate the virus in the country,’ said Paul Offit, the director of the Vaccine Education Center and an expert in virology and immunology at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. Rather, it’s when do we have the virus sufficiently under control? ‘We’ll have a much, much lower case count, hospitalization count, death count,’ Offit said. “What is that number that people are comfortable with?” In his view, ‘the doors will open’ when the country gets to fewer than 5,000 new cases a day, and fewer than 100 deaths.

We can debate how he knows that “people are comfortable with” that number and whether it is a fair assessment.

There are other data that show how far we’ve come in the past year:

The facts are undeniable: The seven-day average of new cases in the United States has fallen by 74 percent since their January peak, hospitalizations have gone down by 58 percent, and deaths have dropped by 42 percent. Meanwhile, more than 60 million doses  of vaccine have gone into American arms.

But this post goes beyond the argument about whether the pandemic rages on or not.  I’m much more interested in exploring if we should be treating Covid-19 as if it were still terrorizing our country, or if there is a more sensible way to understand and manage it that won’t destroy our children, everyone’s mental health, inflame fear or isolate people.

I’m not saying that we will ever be rid of this nasty virus. It’s become clear to me that it will be with us for the foreseeable future. That’s right: COVID-19 will likely never disappear :

‘It’s pretty unrealistic to think that we can eliminate a virus from both the human population and from its natural reservoirs,’ Dr. Anita McElroy of the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine tells CBS News.

She adds that since many people will choose not to get vaccinated — either for medical reasons or out of personal opposition to the vaccine — the world will always have ‘pockets of the population where the virus continues to spread and be susceptible.’

But doctors say that just because COVID is here to stay doesn’t mean it will disrupt our lives as much as it has in the past year. Vaccination and containment measures will eventually get the pandemic under control, potentially turning COVID into another disease we simply learn to live with.

So, in many ways we will treat COVID-19 much like we treat the flu; it can be a serious illness, but we can vaccinate to protect ourselves and try to minimize its effect.

Given that likelihood, here are some ways to move forward:

  • Acknowledge that the strategies for dealing with Covid-19 have become so politicized, particularly by government bureaucrats including university researchers, that we simply cannot rely on them to give us sensible, sound advice.
  • Marty Makary, a professor at Johns Hopkins, emphasized the benefits, especially freedom, that comes with vaccinations:

‘An unpublished study conducted by the Israeli Health Ministry and Pfizer showed that vaccination reduced transmission by 89% to 94% and almost totally prevented hospitalization and death, according to press reports,’ Makary said. ‘Immunity kicks in fully about four weeks after the first vaccine dose, and then you are essentially bulletproof.’

  • Makary also believes through his analysis of death rates, that many more people have had the virus than the estimates. He believes that 2/3 of the population has had the infection and that we will have reached herd immunity by the end of March.
  • Start reading the work of scientists who are highly esteemed, yet condemned by the mainstream and their peers. Those who are attacking them are telling us unintentionally that they are threatened by these realistic messages. Scientists like Jay Battacharya, Scott Atlas, John Ioannidis, Dr. Sunetra Gupta, and Dr. Carl Heneghan have all been attacked, not only by the media but by mainstream scientific publications.
  • Over the coming months, there may be occasional blips (what the “experts” like to call surges) that could be used to justify lockdowns. Rather than lockdowns, the proper response would be to study the numbers and track them for an agreed-upon period of time.
  • Children rarely contract or transmit the virus. Insisting that they continue remote learning can be devastating to their learning and their mental health.
  • The people who have been vaccinated should not be expected to wear masks; those who have not been vaccinated should make the mask decision for themselves.
  • Businesses that continue to have mask requirements should be complied with.

This exchange between Senator Rand Paul and Dr. Anthony Fauci illustrates the struggle between the theater of masks and reality. In an additional discussion, the Senator points out that there is no data to show that the variants will respond differently to the vaccine.

I think that Dr. Makary has the most reasonable approach to viewing our current situation, as well as the months and years ahead:

The doctor argued that it is time to ‘liberate vaccinated people to restore their relationships and rebuild their lives,’ something he says would ‘encourage vaccination by giving hesitant people a vivid incentive to have the shots.’

‘We cannot exaggerate the public-health threat, as we did with hospital visitation rules, and keep crushing the human spirit with overly restrictive policies for vaccinated Americans.’

We’ve been trapped in this insanity long enough. It’s time to move on.

Published in Healthcare
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  1. Susan Quinn Contributor
    Susan Quinn
    @SusanQuinn

    RushBabe49 (View Comment):
    The government that is letting them in employs Fauci, with malice and forethought.  Do you think the new illegals will bother to wear a mask?  For some reason, I doubt it.  I wonder how fast they can spread the Wuhan Coronavirus.

    They will not mask up. We can only hope that those cases will be identified to reinforce our arguments against this illegal influx.

     

    • #31
  2. Vince Guerra Inactive
    Vince Guerra
    @VinceGuerra

    KCVolunteer (View Comment):
    The most recent week with reliable data,

    When the test results aren’t reliable, and the cause of death reports aren’t reliable, and even some of the hospitalization causes aren’t reliable, how can we call any of the data reliable? 

    • #32
  3. KCVolunteer Lincoln
    KCVolunteer
    @KCVolunteer

    Vince Guerra (View Comment):

    KCVolunteer (View Comment):
    The most recent week with reliable data,

    When the test results aren’t reliable, and the cause of death reports aren’t reliable, and even some of the hospitalization causes aren’t reliable, how can we call any of the data reliable?

    Mea culpa, I should have said, “the most recent time period where the state stopped altering the falsified data”.

    • #33
  4. Percival Thatcher
    Percival
    @Percival

    Vince Guerra (View Comment):

    KCVolunteer (View Comment):
    The most recent week with reliable data,

    When the test results aren’t reliable, and the cause of death reports aren’t reliable, and even some of the hospitalization causes aren’t reliable, how can we call any of the data reliable?

    I can’t watch the newsthings report the “data” anymore. It makes my brain ache. When they report “new and suspected” cases, what constitutes a “suspected” case? Do “suspected” cases that don’t turn out ever get reported? There is a false-positive rate: what is it? I know that I’m asking a lot of questions unlikely to be answered (or even contemplated) by folks whose math skills have been deteriorating since sixth grade, but absent all that, the numbers become noise.

    • #34
  5. OldPhil Coolidge
    OldPhil
    @OldPhil

    Vince Guerra (View Comment):

    KCVolunteer (View Comment):
    The most recent week with reliable data,

    When the test results aren’t reliable, and the cause of death reports aren’t reliable, and even some of the hospitalization causes aren’t reliable, how can we call any of the data reliable?

    Narrator: “You can’t, because it’s not.”

    • #35
  6. Vince Guerra Inactive
    Vince Guerra
    @VinceGuerra

    KCVolunteer (View Comment):

    Vince Guerra (View Comment):

    KCVolunteer (View Comment):
    The most recent week with reliable data,

    When the test results aren’t reliable, and the cause of death reports aren’t reliable, and even some of the hospitalization causes aren’t reliable, how can we call any of the data reliable?

    Mea culpa, I should have said, “the most recent time period where the state stopped altering the falsified data”.

    But how would you know? Once they’ve proven their not worthy of our trust the onus is on them to reestablish it. They’ve made no attempts at doing so.

    • #36
  7. Stad Coolidge
    Stad
    @Stad

    You know, this whole thing about documenting you’ve had the vaccine to get services, travel etc. . . . how does HIPPA come into play?

    • #37
  8. KCVolunteer Lincoln
    KCVolunteer
    @KCVolunteer

    Stad (View Comment):

    You know, this whole thing about documenting you’ve had the vaccine to get services, travel etc. . . . how does HIPPA come into play?

    They’re leftists. Inconsistency is a virtue. It only comes into play when it is to there advantage.

    • #38
  9. Manny Coolidge
    Manny
    @Manny

    The infection rate is definitely coming down. What infection rate would you consider no longer a concern?  I think we’re about 4% here in NYC when I last saw. 

    • #39
  10. Manny Coolidge
    Manny
    @Manny

    Oh by the way, I got my first dose vaccine (Moderna) yesterday. No issues except a slight sore shoulder. 

    • #40
  11. KCVolunteer Lincoln
    KCVolunteer
    @KCVolunteer

    Vince Guerra (View Comment):

    KCVolunteer (View Comment):

    Vince Guerra (View Comment):

    KCVolunteer (View Comment):
    The most recent week with reliable data,

    When the test results aren’t reliable, and the cause of death reports aren’t reliable, and even some of the hospitalization causes aren’t reliable, how can we call any of the data reliable?

    Mea culpa, I should have said, “the most recent time period where the state stopped altering the falsified data”.

    But how would you know? Once they’ve proven their not worthy of our trust the onus is on them to reestablish it. They’ve made no attempts at doing so.

    What I mean is for roughly a week, the count for deaths on a particular day keep increasing. Yes I follow this. Then there is per the state’s web site, with my comments inserted,

    Regular reviews of (searches through) death certificate data maintained in Vital Records reporting systems are conducted by MDHHS staff (unqualified people) three times per week. As part of this process, records that identify COVID-19 as a contributing factor to death (this is obfuscation as these deaths with COVID-19 are automatically included in the MDSS) are compared against laboratory confirmed cases (which include cases of false positives) in the Michigan Surveillance System (MDSS). If a death certificate (that didn’t indicate COVID-19 as a contributing factor) is matched to a confirmed COVID-19 case (even if the individual recovered months earlier) and that record in the MDSS does not indicate the individual died, the MDSS record is updated to indicate the death (include it as a COVID-19 death) and the appropriate local health department is notified. These matched (falsely attributed) deaths are then included with mortality information posted to the Michigan Coronavirus website (to keep the populous as scared as they are able). As the result of the most recent assessment, todays data includes 30 additional deaths identified by this methodology.

    This is how I know. And yes I have a screen shot. There is no onus on them. What ever keeps them in power.

    • #41
  12. OldPhil Coolidge
    OldPhil
    @OldPhil

    KCVolunteer (View Comment):

    What I mean is for roughly a week, the count for deaths on a particular day keep increasing. Yes I follow this. Then there is per the state’s web site, with my comments inserted,

    Regular reviews of (searches through) death certificate data maintained in Vital Records reporting systems are conducted by MDHHS staff (unqualified people) three times per week. As part of this process, records that identify COVID-19 as a contributing factor to death (this is obfuscation as these deaths with COVID-19 are automatically included in the MDSS) are compared against laboratory confirmed cases (which include cases of false positives) in the Michigan Surveillance System (MDSS). If a death certificate (that didn’t indicate COVID-19 as a contributing factor) is matched to a confirmed COVID-19 case (even if the individual recovered months earlier) and that record in the MDSS does not indicate the individual died, the MDSS record is updated to indicate the death (include it as a COVID-19 death) and the appropriate local health department is notified. These matched (falsely attributed) deaths are then included with mortality information posted to the Michigan Coronavirus website (to keep the populous as scared as they are able). As the result of the most recent assessment, todays data includes 30 additional deaths identified by this methodology.

    This is how I know. And yes I have a screen shot. There is no onus on them. What ever keeps them in power.

    In Virginia, over a 17-day period, the state added 2,692 deaths to the entire yearly pandemic total, a 37% increase. Then they added a note yesterday:

    In continued efforts to ensure that only COVID-19 related deaths are included in Virginia COVID-19 official statistics per the Virginia Case Definition for COVID-19 Associated Mortality, VDH recently conducted an extensive review of more than 10,000 previously reported COVID-19 deaths. Among these, less than 1% (99 deaths) were determined to not qualify as “COVID-19 associated” deaths per the case definition and re-classified to be a COVID-19 case that did not result in death. Today (3/19/21), a decrease in total net number of COVID-19 deaths is being reported on the VDH COVID-19 dashboard (more COVID-19 deaths were removed than added on 3/19/21). VDH strives to provide accurate and timely data to the public while performing ongoing and comprehensive data assurance and quality efforts.

    Oops, 90 were incorrectly coded.

    • #42
  13. Z in MT Member
    Z in MT
    @ZinMT

    At some point enough people will be vaccinated and the cases will be low enough that all but the shutdown fetishists will just ignore the mandates. Already the R led states are leading the way. I have a feeling that Illinois will lead the way for the Blue states. The hold outs will be MI, CA, OR, and CA. The west coast is filled with leftist knowledge worker introverts that are just happy staying home till the end of time.

    • #43
  14. RushBabe49 Thatcher
    RushBabe49
    @RushBabe49

    Z in MT (View Comment):

    At some point enough people will be vaccinated and the cases will be low enough that all but the shutdown fetishists will just ignore the mandates. Already the R led states are leading the way. I have a feeling that Illinois will lead the way for the Blue states. The hold outs will be MI, CA, OR, and CA. The west coast is filled with leftist knowledge worker introverts that are just happy staying home till the end of time.

    You forgot WA.  Ray opines that Inslee is a follower of Newsom, and will do nothing without CA doing it first.

    • #44
  15. Seawriter Contributor
    Seawriter
    @Seawriter

    Seawriter (View Comment):
    I am giving a talk tomorrow at the Lone Star Flight Museum.

    Twenty-some folks showed up for the talk and I sold fifteen books – and the museum gift shop sold a dozen or so copies of my book Ellington Field (the only one I wasn’t selling).

    About 600 folks attended Ellington Day. We had fun and got on with our lives.

    • #45
  16. CarolJoy, Not So Easy To Kill Coolidge
    CarolJoy, Not So Easy To Kill
    @CarolJoy

    Z in MT (View Comment):

    At some point enough people will be vaccinated and the cases will be low enough that all but the shutdown fetishists will just ignore the mandates. Already the R led states are leading the way. I have a feeling that Illinois will lead the way for the Blue states. The hold outs will be MI, CA, OR, and CA. The west coast is filled with leftist knowledge worker introverts that are just happy staying home till the end of time.

    And not only are the Leftists here in Cra Cra land happy to do whatever is required by Gov Gruesome, they blame Trump for every damn restriction. (smh)

    • #46
  17. Hammer, The Inactive
    Hammer, The
    @RyanM

    @susanquinn: see your shout-out on today’s update at lockdownskeptics.org

     

     

    • #47
  18. Frank Monaldo Member
    Frank Monaldo
    @FrankMonaldo

    deaths-per-day

    I thought this graph would be useful.  The red diamonds represent COVID deaths-per-day. The black line is the running average of deaths-per-day. We have fallen to one-third of the maximum value in January. The three dashed green lines are the IHME model’s low, medium, and high projections for deaths-per-day. By July 1, the deaths-per-day are projected to be 3% of the maximum we have experienced.

    The yellow bars are new-COVID-cases-per-day.  The yellow line is the running average of new cases.  

    • #48
  19. Susan Quinn Contributor
    Susan Quinn
    @SusanQuinn

    Hammer, The (View Comment):

    @ susanquinn: see your shout-out on today’s update at lockdownskeptics.org

     

     

    Cool! Thanks, Ryan!

    • #49
  20. Steven Seward Member
    Steven Seward
    @StevenSeward

    Hammer, The (View Comment):

    @ susanquinn: see your shout-out on today’s update at lockdownskeptics.org

    I followed your link but did not see anything about Susan Quinn.  Interesting site, though.  I wonder if Britons are less compliant about government pandemic restrictions than Americans have been.

     

     

    • #50
  21. Susan Quinn Contributor
    Susan Quinn
    @SusanQuinn

    Steven Seward (View Comment):

    Hammer, The (View Comment):

    @ susanquinn: see your shout-out on today’s update at lockdownskeptics.org

    I followed your link but did not see anything about Susan Quinn. Interesting site, though. I wonder if Britons are less compliant about government pandemic restrictions than Americans have been.

     

     

    You have to scroll down the page quite a ways and it’s under “News Roundup” where articles on other sites are listed.

    • #51
  22. Steven Seward Member
    Steven Seward
    @StevenSeward

    Found this interesting tidbit of Covid perspective from German Doctors on that site:

    • #52
  23. Steven Seward Member
    Steven Seward
    @StevenSeward

    Susan Quinn (View Comment):

    Steven Seward (View Comment):

    Hammer, The (View Comment):

    @ susanquinn: see your shout-out on today’s update at lockdownskeptics.org

    I followed your link but did not see anything about Susan Quinn. Interesting site, though. I wonder if Britons are less compliant about government pandemic restrictions than Americans have been.

     

     

    You have to scroll down the page quite a ways and it’s under “News Roundup” where articles on other sites are listed.

    Thanks, I found it!  You are now famous in England. I hope that doesn’t tarnish your good Irish name!

    • #53
  24. GLDIII Temporarily Essential Reagan
    GLDIII Temporarily Essential
    @GLDIII

    Steven Seward (View Comment):

    Found this interesting tidbit of Covid perspective from German Doctors on that site:

    I notice that they did not even highlight that they are not even fully replacing the dying with new births. Like most of us living “in the west” we are becoming extinct.

    • #54
  25. Seawriter Contributor
    Seawriter
    @Seawriter

    GLDIII Temporarily Essential (View Comment):

    I notice that they did not even highlight that they are not even fully replacing the dying with new births. Like most of us living “in the west” we are becoming extinct.

    Hey, Janet and I did our part – three children. Now my kids? So far only one grandkid.

    • #55
  26. GLDIII Temporarily Essential Reagan
    GLDIII Temporarily Essential
    @GLDIII

    Seawriter (View Comment):

    GLDIII Temporarily Essential (View Comment):

    I notice that they did not even highlight that they are not even fully replacing the dying with new births. Like most of us living “in the west” we are becoming extinct.

    Hey, Janet and I did our part – three children. Now my kids? So far only one grandkid.

    We started to late (plus fertility problems, who knew back then), and only eeked out two. Wife entered menopause right after the last boy @ 40 years of age. Of my folks five children, they had 15 grandkids, so only average on replacement rates. So far only 4 great-grand kids. Our offspring are running slow and behind us.

    At least my two boys are both married and well employed.

    • #56
  27. KCVolunteer Lincoln
    KCVolunteer
    @KCVolunteer

    GLDIII Temporarily Essential (View Comment):

    Steven Seward (View Comment):

    Found this interesting tidbit of Covid perspective from German Doctors on that site:

     

    I notice that they did not even highlight that they are not even fully replacing the dying with new births. Like most of us living “in the west” we are becoming extinct.

    My liberal in-laws have no children. That’s a good thing.

    • #57
  28. JustmeinAZ Member
    JustmeinAZ
    @JustmeinAZ

    KCVolunteer (View Comment):

    My liberal in-laws have no children. That’s a good thing.

    Are you not married to one of their children?

    • #58
  29. KCVolunteer Lincoln
    KCVolunteer
    @KCVolunteer

    JustmeinAZ (View Comment):

    KCVolunteer (View Comment):

    My liberal in-laws have no children. That’s a good thing.

    Are you not married to one of their children?

    Sorry, I mean my sisters in-law. They are still in-laws aren’t they?

    • #59
  30. Steven Seward Member
    Steven Seward
    @StevenSeward

    JustmeinAZ (View Comment):

    KCVolunteer (View Comment):

    My liberal in-laws have no children. That’s a good thing.

    Are you not married to one of their children?

    That reminds me of the time in science class when we were talking about genetics and inherited traits.  I raised my hand and said to the teacher “Did you know that according to genetic theory, if your parents didn’t have any children, then chances are you won’t have any either?”

    • #60
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