2/ "The best way to prevent Long COVID is to prevent COVID in the first place". He makes a compelling case that this is something that requires government action.
In the meantime, we still have some agency as individuals, too. Check out:
@sunsweptforest Exactly. The big-name journals have a huge optimism bias.
In 2020&21, we predicted the virus would quickly evolve to evade immunity, that vaccines alone wouldn’t bring the pandemic to an end, that schools would seed disease, that appeals to altruism from PH would backfire. (1/)
@sunsweptforest For the first 2-3 papers, we tried our luck at the big name journals. They would sit on the manuscript for a month and then send a form-letter rejection. Meanwhile, they were fast tracking review and publication of “good news” papers on the exact same topics (2/)
@sunsweptforest Science, in particular, actively promoted the idea that immunity to covid would be long lasting.
For example, our paper (preprint in fall 2020) on the outcome of a “vax & relax” strategy made a bleak prediction- “making COVID-19 the third leading cause of death in the US” (3/)
If you think of high-contact-rate professions in the US, ones where people are likely to come in contact with Covid, what are they? Childcare workers, bus drivers, nurses, pharmacists, prison guards, for example? (2/)
So how’s the labor situation working out in these professions? Chronic and nationwide shortages in each of these categories, showing no signs of abating and in some cases, the worst that they have been since the beginning of the pandemic. (3/)
Grimly fascinating thread on the way in which the murderous Tory response to covid was shaped by advisors who believe in (surprise, surprise!) eugenics (1/)
“Covid is just nature’s way of dealing with old people”. Can’t make this shit up. It explains why, as groups like ours were warning about the negative consequences of a negligent covid policy, governments such as UK were actively pursuing such policies (2/)
The tsunami of death and disease that would inevitably follow from such poor choices represented success to these politicians. Far from being an unanticipated failure. They knew all along. (3/)
Taking Paxlovid in this study was associated with a minuscule reduction in risk of long Covid. Note that the article is written in a way to make that less obvious. (1/) cidrap.umn.edu/covid-19/resea…
While the article is focused on inequity, the magnitude of the effect size (reduction in LC risk upon taking Paxlovid) is so small that you have to squint to see it (2/)
Their classification of “Covid” patients was based in part on whether the patient took Paxlovid. If you look at the subset of patients who were definitively diagnosed with Covid, the hazard ratio is 0.94.
A ~5% reduction in relative risk of getting LC is not meaningful (3/)
@white_bite @xabitron1 @G_Commish @NjbBari3 @DavidJoffe64 @PDAquinas @0bj3ctivity @LauraMiers @HarrySpoelstra @MeetJess @ejustin46 @elisaperego78 @1goodtern @RadCentrism @AndrewEwing11 @outbreakupdates @AltenbergLee @C_A_Gustave @Alitis__ @CarlvKeirsbilck @TRyanGregory @kasza_leslie @SGriffin_Lab @fitterhappierAJ @tohmes1 @DrJohnHhess Umm. I see it very differently, I guess. The confusion arises from the difference in evidentiary standards required to call something a “probable carcinogen” vs a “possible” or “known” carcinogen (1/)
@white_bite @xabitron1 @G_Commish @NjbBari3 @DavidJoffe64 @PDAquinas @0bj3ctivity @LauraMiers @HarrySpoelstra @MeetJess @ejustin46 @elisaperego78 @1goodtern @RadCentrism @AndrewEwing11 @outbreakupdates @AltenbergLee @C_A_Gustave @Alitis__ @CarlvKeirsbilck @TRyanGregory @kasza_leslie @SGriffin_Lab @fitterhappierAJ @tohmes1 @DrJohnHhess We know that sc2 causes DNA double strand breaks and chromosomal instability. Any agent that causes those outcomes is carcinogenic, provided that the dose used in the studies is relevant to human exposures in the real world (2/)
@white_bite @xabitron1 @G_Commish @NjbBari3 @DavidJoffe64 @PDAquinas @0bj3ctivity @LauraMiers @HarrySpoelstra @MeetJess @ejustin46 @elisaperego78 @1goodtern @RadCentrism @AndrewEwing11 @outbreakupdates @AltenbergLee @C_A_Gustave @Alitis__ @CarlvKeirsbilck @TRyanGregory @kasza_leslie @SGriffin_Lab @fitterhappierAJ @tohmes1 @DrJohnHhess But this is a virus, so the question of dose doesn’t arise. The likelihood that the in vitro studies used a “dose” that was too high is pretty much zero. That eliminates the primary reason for translational failures (3/)