TRUE / BUT, a 🧵.

TRUE:

* Severe illness and death from acute COVID are much less likely now than they were. Several reasons for that, most notably vaccines and immunity from prior infections. (And obviously a lot of vulnerable people have already been lost.)
BUT...

* Severe illness or death from acute infection are only one metric of concern. Hospitalizations can overwhelm healthcare systems and widespread illness can disrupt all sorts of industries. This is happening right now (see e.g. ER closures and air travel disruptions).
* Immediate death is not the only thing to be concerned about. SARS2 affects many organ systems and increases risk for heart attack, stroke, diabetes, etc. We don't know what the medium or long term impacts will be in terms of mortality.
* Long COVID is very real and potentially life changing. Protection from severe illness or death afforded by vaccines or past infection may not do very much when it comes to preventing long COVID.
TRUE:

* Vaccines still work very well to prevent severe illness and death and boosters make a difference (get boosted!).
BUT:

* Vaccine protection wanes over time.

* First generation vaccines were developed for the original version of SARS2 and newer variants can escape prior immunity.

* Herd immunity is not possible, and vax only or hybrid immunity (vax + infection) strategies will not work.
TRUE:

* New variants have some advantage over previously dominant variants, but that does not mean they are more virulent (cause more severe effects) or inherently more transmissible. The advantage may be mostly immune escape.
BUT:

* Immune escape is not a good thing either. It means multiple waves per year and a lot of reinfections.
* Rapidly evolving variants that escape immunity and cause multiple waves per year will make it much harder to keep up with updated vaccines than for something seasonal like flu.
* "Not more severe than previous variants" is not an encouraging standard. Being equally or even less virulent than previous variants is bad if people can be reinfected over and over.
* Often, early claims about a new variant being "no more severe" (or even "mild") are based on very limited information from countries that have different demographics and have not been good predictors for what will occur elsewhere (e.g., beware extrapolations from South Africa.)
TRUE:

* Most people will experience SARS2 infection as relatively "mild", especially if vaccinated and boosted.
BUT:

* Usually mild, or even asymptomatic, infection is the case for many diseases, including polio for example.

* Mild initial infection may still lead to long COVID and can still increase risk of serious complications later on.
TRUE:

* It is entirely possible that reinfections are less severe and come with a lower risk of long COVID than earlier infections. (This issue is not settled yet, and data are still coming in as more and more people get reinfected.)
BUT:

* Even if each reinfection is less severe, more infections is much worse than fewer infections and no infections remains ideal. Reinfections that are equally severe or come with equal risk of long COVID would make it even more important to avoid getting reinfected.
So, here is the COVID realist position as I see it:

* The pandemic is not over.

* We cannot sustain multiple waves per year caused by immune-escaping variants, even if they are no more severe than past variants and even if deaths and severe illness are lower.
* We need next-gen vaccines, but these alone will not be enough to get things under control.

* Ventilation, air filtration, and quality masks worn properly work against all past, present, and future variants and must be implemented in a vax+ strategy.
* We need to stop platforming minimizers who ignore all the BUTs above.

* Calling everything Omicron is failing to communicate the degree to which the virus is evolving and the challenges that this engenders.
* We need to mitigate transmission, not only reduce deaths. That means tracking metrics other than deaths or ICU occupancy. These lag too much to be useful in shaping policy and they are not the only concern.
* The time to prevent subsequent waves is during lulls. Ignoring early warning signs and reacting when things are clearly bad does not work.
* We must address the pandemic as a global challenge. That means vaccine equity, distributed production of vaccines and PPE, and so on. The virus does not see or respect political borders.
* We have to move away from the individualistic approach we've taken. We cannot "me" ourselves out of a "we" problem.

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More from @TRyanGregory

Jul 15
I was asked today what I think universities should be doing in response to the pandemic.

Buckle up. 🧵
1. Form strategic working groups consisting of experts on campus (epidemiology, virology, immunology, public health, evolutionary biology, engineering, communications, psychology, etc.). LISTEN TO THEM.
2. Do not have all decisions made by a handful of senior administrators with zero relevant expertise based only on (mis)information from public health officials (who also may have no expertise in pandemic management).
Read 13 tweets
Jul 14
Here are some simple solutions to the problem of a) not enough clarity/too much minimizing as a result of @WHO calling everything "Omicron", and b) the risk of confusing or discriminatory (e.g., location-based) naming of variants. These options are not mutually exclusive. 🧵
Option 1:

* Develop clear criteria for new formal Greek letter designations. This can be based on genetic or antigenic divergence, prospect for immune escape and causing another wave, reaching a certain prevalence, etc.
Option 2:

At minimum, make it clear that it's not "all just Omicron" but different versions of the virus causing new waves. Name them like sequels if necessary. Omicron I (BA.1), Omicron II (BA.2), Omicron III (BA.5), Omicron IV (BA.2.75).
Read 12 tweets
Jul 14
Dear @uofg leaders,

You've ignored your own scientists for 2.5 years.

You've relied on/ hidden behind incorrect info from regional public health and provincial directives.

As a result, you've been wrong about the pandemic six waves in a row.

Please start listening to us.
Mask mandates reinstated NOW.

Vaccine mandates in place in time for students to get boosted before they arrive in fall.

CO2 monitoring and reporting for buildings.

Air filters in residences.

Do not continue to repeat the same mistakes.
Some of us have been right about every wave, not because we have a crystal ball or special insight, but because we look at the data and are not committed to droplet dogma or minimizer messaging like public health officials.

Very, very simple. Wastewater and UK.
Read 4 tweets
Jul 13
Your creative responses to the pandemic (songs, art, crafts, customized masks, anything else). Go.
Here's mine. A blanket using all the cloth masks that I made for the family early in the pandemic (before the switch to N95s).
Have to share this again. Great song "Minimizers" by @ampincivero.

Read 4 tweets
Jul 13
There are people who fancied themselves heroes who would expertly guide a confused and terrified public through the pandemic. They emphasized keeping people calm, with increasingly minimizing language as things got worse. 🧵
They cannot seem to abandon the narrative to which they have attached their identity, and the cognitive dissonance after 2.5 years of utterly failed messaging and countless incorrect predictions is becoming palpable.
Some don't even realize (or at least outwardly deny) that they have been minimizers.

I am hard on these minimizers because I believe they have done, and continue to do, enormous damage.
Read 7 tweets
Jul 12
Confused about COVID "denialists" vs "minimizers" vs "hopium dealers"? Some gifs to help! 🧵
Denialists:
Minimizers:
Read 5 tweets

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