Sunday, January 16, 2022

You're not doomed to get Omicron - by Erin Kissane

You're not doomed to get Omicron - by Erin Kissane:The data so far shows that Omicron outbreaks spike extremely quickly and then burn through and start subsiding. The risk of transmission is high during outbreak peaks, but people with boosters (and those with recently completed two-shot mRNA series) stand quite a good chance of avoiding Omicron infection, especially if they’re able to wear N95 or equivalent masks, maintain good ventilation, and cut out non-essential activities for a few weeks.

If you can do that for just a few weeks while Omicron blows through your area, your individual risk will start to decline. And at the same time, hospitals will start getting breathing room back, so if someone in your family does happen to get sick enough to need an IV or oxygen, they’ll be able to get it. (And I say this a lot, but if your area is experiencing an Omicron surge, this is a great time to drive carefully and postpone risky activities.)

Monday, January 10, 2022

Pfizer CEO says two Covid vaccine doses aren't 'enough for omicron'

Pfizer CEO says two Covid vaccine doses aren't 'enough for omicron': Real-world data from the United Kingdom has found that two vaccine doses are 52% effective at preventing hospitalization 25 weeks after receiving the second shot, according to data from the U.K. Health Security Agency.

Covid-19 Variant Deltacron Is Real, Scientist Says - Bloomberg

Covid-19 Variant Deltacron Is Real, Scientist Says - Bloomberg

So I don't know if this is just fear mongering or a real problem but if we get the infection rate of Omicron and the severity of the Delta variant, then millions will quickly die, many of them outside of a collapsed health care system.  We're talking bodies in the streets.

Deltacron infection is higher among patients hospitalized for Covid-19 than among non-hospitalized patients, so that rules out the contamination hypothesis, said Kostrikis, a professor of biological sciences at the University of Cyprus and head of the Laboratory of Biotechnology and Molecular Virology.

What’s more, the samples were processed in multiple sequencing procedures in more than one country. And at least one sequence from Israel deposited in a global database exhibits genetic characteristics of deltacron, he said.

“These findings refute the undocumented statements that deltacron is a result of a technical error,” Kostrikis said.

Saturday, January 8, 2022

Omicron could be ‘first ray of light’ towards living with Covid

Omicron could be ‘first ray of light’ towards living with Covid

:“The thing that might happen in the future is you may see the emergence of a new variant that is less severe, and ultimately, in the long term, what happens is Covid becomes endemic and you have a less severe version. It’s very similar to the common cold that we’ve lived with for many years,” he told Times Radio on Saturday.

What makes omicron spread so quickly? A new study offers a tantalizing clue : Goats and Soda : NPR

What makes omicron spread so quickly? A new study offers a tantalizing clue : Goats and Soda : NPR: The omicron variant multiplies about 70 times faster inside human respiratory tract tissue than the delta variant does, scientists at the University of Hong Kong report. The variant also reaches higher levels in the tissue, compared with delta, 48 hours after infection. "That's amazing," says immunologist Wilfredo Garcia-Beltran, who's a fellow at the Ragon Institute of Massachusetts General Hospital and wasn't involved in the study. This finding indicates that mutations in omicron have sped up the process of entering or replicating (or both) inside the tissue.

Friday, January 7, 2022

Boosted? Got Omicron? You Still Might Not Be 'Super' Immune - The Atlantic

You really don't want to get Omicron, but avoiding it seems almost impossible.

Boosted? Got Omicron? You Still Might Not Be 'Super' Immune - The Atlantic

The problem, though, is that none of this is assured, especially when factoring in the thorny variable of time. Viruses that linger too long in the body could exact a punishing cost—transmission, disease, death. But if they’re cleared out too fast, they might not have enough time to teach the body something new. And those dynamics depend partly on when someone got their last immunological boost. Someone who’s very recently received a vaccine, for instance, might still be flush with antibodies that could swiftly sweep out the virus. Ellebedy, who was exposed to his COVID-sickened wife about a month after boosting and had pretty minor symptoms, thinks that’s what happened to him, which is great from a disease-severity standpoint, and potentially a transmission one. But a truncated infection might also cut short the immune system’s review session on the virus itself. Bodies will sometimes try to calibrate their defense to match the opponent’s offense, and trifling infections aren’t always worth a massive reinvestment in protection. A later encounter with the virus might spur cells to react more dramatically and squirrel away another slew of safeguards—but at the risk of a longer, more dangerous, and more contagious infection.

Saturday, January 1, 2022

Good night, sweet prince

 I'm going to shut this blog down on January 27th, before the domain renews.  I think it will still exist at http://supermutantvirus.blogspot.com


It was basically an experiment in running a blog with its own domain name, and a way to bookmark information about the virus mutations.  The Google newsfeed, unless you live in crazytown, does a pretty good job of this already.

Thanks to the four people who visited this site!

h - Google Search

h - Google Search