Some clarification about this. TL/DR: It's not shocking at all. We expected it. Take-away: Vaccination doesn't give you the right to stop distancing (until everyone is vaccinated and/or the threat of community transmission relents).
First, he was not "diagnosed with COVID". He tested positive for SARS-COV-2 infection. He shows no signs of disease - #COVID19 is the disease. And you can test positive with even just small amounts of virus. Many people test positive even when they are not/no longer contagious.
Vaccines don't keep you from being infected. They let you to mount an immune response much faster and stronger than if you'd never been infected before. This allows you to avoid experiencing disease and, in most cases, clear the pathogen before it can amplify enough to transmit.
AFAIK, only one of the vaccine trials tested for impacts on testing positive (all tested for symptomatic infection). Results were promising but they don't necessarily tell us if transmission is reduced, either. Hopeful -and likely- it is the case. But we simply don't yet know.
So, vaccinated people *will* still be 'colonized' (found to have virus in the body, infected without disease or amplification) by #SARS_CoV_2 when exposed, *may* still transmit it (🤞not often), and *can* very rarely still get #COVID19. so, #WearAMask#StayVigilant#SaveLives
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I'm not going to post it, but if you watch the widely circulated #JudyMikovits "documentary", you will hear many many untrue things. Let me point out two of them. (1/n)
tl;dr: If someone is this assertive AND wrong, you have to question the rest of their "knowledge".
At 9'50" she asserts that "There is no vaccine currently on the schedule for any RNA virus that works"
Rotavirus and Influenza vaccines both work and are currently on the schedule. Even in years where flu vax "misses", it still typically keep people from dying. (2/n)
Not "on the schedule", but still very important to note:
Ebola virus is an RNA virus for which there is a safe and highly effective vaccine. Without it, there may have been little stopping any of the urban-centered outbreaks that have occurred since its deployment. (3/n)
1. The US will likely be as bad as Iran for exporting cases, at least for Canada 1/n
2. If we do nothing, 70% of people will get it (during the first wave of the epidemic). If we implement moderate social distancing measures, 30% are still likely to get it.
3. With strong social distancing measures (see Singapore & China) the epidemic can be controlled
2/n
4. When to implement social distancing measures is a balancing act. Act too late, the hospitals will be inundated and people will die due to lack of ICU beds. Act too soon, there's not enough "social capital" because people will not believe that it's really necessary.
3/n