When thinking about myocarditis, vaccines in children, and COVID-19 in children, it’s important to recognise that myocarditis is a recognised complication of COVID-19 and it is under-estimated in young fit people. Investigations should be done into the same for kids. ->
-> This study was done on young athletes. Symptom based diagnosis was less sensitive than investigations. We may be missing this in kids with COVID-19, although mild myocarditis changes often resolve spontaneously.

jamanetwork.com/journals/jamac…
The point being… the very rare myocarditis in kids from vaccine should be compared to the risk of myocarditis with COVID19 natural infection, and the myriad of other complications of COVID-19.
In the ideal world, we wouldn’t expose kids to COVID-19,however,it is now 2021 &things are going in only one direction. It seems inevitable that children in many countries will be exposed to COVID-19 at some point. Seems reasonable to balance the risk of vaccination against that.

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Dr Noor Bari

Dr Noor Bari Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @NjbBari3

19 Jul
Both @NSWCHO and @VictorianCHO have made me feel *VERY* reassured about some things today.
I was so pleased to hear Prof Sutton reveal the difficulties UK is facing with “opening up”. He has reassured us that this must be defeated, if we can. That this is a difficulty that we don’t want to accept lightly.

Dr Chant has said vaccines for kids are being planned for.
These are wonderful public health officials working under difficult circumstances.

I am also deeply grateful to all in the community playing their part with testing, getting vaccinated and reducing movement.

Make no mistake. You are saving lives.
Read 4 tweets
19 Jul
@VictorianCHO just said they have seen transmission between strangers, sitting outside the *whole time*, at a sports event.

#COVIDisAirborne
#Delta
The cases were not seated near each other. Suspecting pinch point at the gates.
Suspected outdoor transmission at MCG and AMI stadiums. No known shared indoor time in more than one case.

I hope to see this written up when time allows.

#COVIDisAirborne
#Delta
Read 4 tweets
17 Jul
I have worrying news from Australia, which you may already know if you have been following.

TTI alone used to work to shut down clusters. Now a moderately tight lockdown and TTI together does not work to stop the outbreak. Has lead to a plateau of sorts instead.

#DeltaVariant
If we make a vaccine resistant strain that is as fast as delta and even less responsive to vaccines… it may become very difficult to stop outbreaks even with mitigations in place. Countries that can’t “lockdown” very strictly may be very hard hit.
For some countries “lockdown” means crops fail and famine…

It is VITALLY important that we urgently reduce transmission… NOW!
Read 6 tweets
12 Jul
Dear colleagues.

Airborne disease control requires the professional advice of engineers.

It’s an actual thing.

Engineering.

Exams. Bits of paper saying you know what you are doing. Post graduate qualifications. Research. Regulations.

We shouldn’t make stuff up.->
It’s fine to ask questions, and cross pollinate knowledge… but at some point we have to also be humble and willing to learn.

If you have a building where airborne disease is spreading… the building needs fixing. Ask the building experts.
Indoor air quality and aerosol/particle control is something that engineers and scientists have been working on long before we started trying to apply it to COVID-19.

Disease control in buildings has been thoroughly researched by engineers and applied in hospitals too.
Read 4 tweets
12 Jul
I need a hug. I have spent more than an hour on the phone to a loved one in the UK. The descriptions of everyday life there are terrible. From the mental health and moral injuries in essential workers and others, to the graphic description of how people’s health has changed.
On the TV screens joy… but in homes a sense of nervousness. Despite being vaccinated, people don’t really know what to expect as the third wave rolls in… and memories of trauma are as fresh as can be…
Particularly touching… watching a healthy taxi driver, that used to be chatty and energetic, shuffling to his car in the morning, to breathless for banter. 🥺
Read 8 tweets
11 Jul
@profdalefisher on @60Mins says that either you’re are vaccinated or not. That we have to “live with it” & that it will spread asymptomatically between most so it will be impossible to contact trace.

A brave new world where we leave those that don’t respond to vaccine to die?
My view:

It will be those vulnerable people that we left to die that will be immunocompromised. Immunocompromised persons are more likely to produce a wide variety of strains.

Also, it doesn’t feel right to do this.

(If we haven’t done so already.)
Before someone says mAb… not only have variants reduced the efficacy of our vaccines, they also reduce the efficacy of mAbs.
Read 5 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Too expensive? Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal Become our Patreon

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us on Twitter!

:(