There are not any of those — not a single example of a medically-linked death proven to be caused by a Covid vaccine at this point world-wide. Stop making shiat up.
Hahahhaa. Big Pharma shill on cue. 6,000 in the US 15,000 in Europe. 2,000 in the UK. All underreported. More than 50% within 72 hours of vaccine. Let’s hot even discuss the vaxxed who still died of COVID. HILARIOUS. You are a delusional Big Vax Shill. Do the J&J offices give your spouse free baby powder for every pro jab post?
New data on re-infections. This shows that people who got infected earlier with COVID are more likely to get re-infected with the Delta variant. The reinfections are moving from under1% up to 10%. 10% of those who had Covid-19 were reinfected during April wave: Study The findings were based on the sequential analysis of samples from 1,000 people across ten locations part of the study, which found that the antibodies in them were mostly declining before they shot up again. https://www.hindustantimes.com/indi...-during-april-wave-study-101625257344070.html More than 10% of the people who had Covid-19 were likely exposed to the virus again during the April wave of infections in Delhi, found researchers from the Institute of Genomics and Integrative Biology (IGIB). The findings were based on the sequential analysis of samples from 1,000 people across ten locations part of the study, which found that the antibodies in them were mostly declining before they shot up again. “More than 10% of the people in our study showed declining and then increasing levels of antibodies. The proportion might increase further as we are analysing more data,” said Dr Anurag Agarwal, director, IGIB. The study found that 80% of the participants had antibodies against Sars-CoV-2 virus, which causes Covid-19, in June, after the fourth wave of infections (and the second nationwide) in Delhi. The findings are higher than the estimated 4.5% re-infection established by the Indian Council of Medical Research, although experts said those cannot be compared since they are based on people who test positive through the RT-PCR method. The distinction between the two relates to circumstances in which people may get a test – if they have symptoms or had a confirmed close contact. But re-infections can also be silent, and a more accurate way to catch them could be via antibody tests. The disparity could also be because the IGIB study includes data up to June, whereas the ICMR study is from January to October last year. “I think, measuring the antibody levels gives a better picture of re-infections in the population. This is because many may not get tested if they are asymptomatic or mildly symptomatic. If we have to confirm re-infection through genomic sequencing of the samples from both the infections, there would be just over a handful of cases in India perhaps,” said Dr Agarwal. The researchers have previously shown that the Delta variant (B.1.617.2) which was in circulation during the second wave pandemic is significantly less sensitive to immunity from a previous infection or vaccination. Experts said that a 10% re-infection rate was not sufficient to cause a third wave. “Reinfections is the norm and not the exception, but it is not enough to lead to a third wave. The increase in the antibody levels is sometimes the only way to detect re-infections as the second infection is likely to be less severe and people might not have symptoms or get tested for it,” said Dr Jacob John, former head of the department of virology at Christian Medical College-Vellore.
The Delta variant is causing more than 80% of new COVID-19 infections in 4 US states, including 96% of new cases in Missouri https://www.businessinsider.com/del...ctions-states-kansas-arkansas-missouri-2021-7 The Delta coronavirus variant is causing more than 80% of new COVID-19 cases in four US states. Kansas, Arkansas, Missouri, and Connecticut have the highest proportion of Delta cases, Scripps Research data shows. In Missouri, the highly infectious Delta is causing more than 96% of new cases, the data shows. (More at above url)
Delta variant slams Missouri as ICUs fill and ventilators run low Cases and hospitalizations surge amid the low vaccination rates and the spread of delta. https://arstechnica.com/science/202...sparagers-to-shut-up-as-delta-slams-missouri/ As the delta variant spreads rapidly in Missouri and cases of COVID-19 surge, some hospitals in the state are already strained. And projections suggest things will only get worse in the coming weeks. Cases have increased 45 percent statewide in the past two weeks, with hospitalizations rising 24 percent, according to data tracking by The New York Times. Numerous counties across the state have high per-capita infection rates, some as high as one in seven residents infected. But many of the counties with the highest daily new cases are clustered in Missouri's southwest corner. Taney County, home to the popular tourist town of Branson in southwest Missouri, has seen daily cases increase 50 percent in the last two weeks, with hospitalizations increasing 62 percent. Taney has an average of 52 daily new cases per 100,000 residents, the third-highest daily case rate in the state. North of Taney in the southwestern corner is Dallas County, which has the second-highest average of daily new cases, at 63 per 100,000. Cases there have increased 74 percent in the last two weeks while hospitalizations increased 44 percent. “Shut up” Dallas sits just north of the city of Springfield, which has been particularly hard hit in recent days. On the Fourth of July, the chief administrative officer at Mercy Hospital in Springfield, tweeted that the hospital had temporarily run out of ventilators due to an influx of COVID-19 case. Currently, the hospital's intensive care unit was 99 percent full, with only one ICU bed available. Cox Medical Centers in Springfield are also struggling, with 97 percent of their ICU beds currently filled. Steve Edwards, the president and CEO of CoxHealth, put out a desperate plea on Tuesday for more respiratory therapists. "Springfield, Mo is struggling with surging Covid volumes," he tweeted, adding that the hospital system's "heroic" therapists needed reinforcements. The plea followed an ominous tweet from Edwards on the fourth, in which he noted that the percentage of COVID-19 tests that have turned up positive had risen to 32 percent. "Very concerning!" he tweeted. He also reported that the hospital system had taken in four pediatric COVID-19 patients on Saturday alone, including one baby that was just a few weeks old. "If you are making wildly disparaging comments about the vaccine, and have no public health expertise, you may be responsible for someone's death," he tweeted, adding simply, "Shut up." On the same day, top infectious disease expert Anthony Fauci noted that 99.2 percent of COVID-19 deaths in June were in unvaccinated people. "No vaccine is perfect," Dr. Fauci said during an interview on NBC's Meet the Press with Chuck Todd. "But when you talk about the avoidability of hospitalization and death, Chuck, it's really sad and tragic that most all of these are avoidable and preventable." Dose of delta Low vaccination rates in Missouri are a critical vulnerability, particularly as the highly transmissible delta variant runs rampant through the state. According to variant-tracking efforts run by researchers at Scripps Research in La Jolla, California, Missouri has the highest prevalence of the delta variant of any state. Based on limited genetic evidence as of June 23, the delta variant made up an estimated 96 percent of daily cases in the Show Me State. The delta variant, first identified in India, is estimated to be more than twice as infectious as the original strain of the pandemic coronavirus, SARS-CoV-2, that mushroomed out of Wuhan, China. There is also some evidence that suggests the virus may cause more severe cases of COVID-19. Vaccines are still largely protective against the delta variant—particularly against severe disease, hospitalization, and death from the infection. However, that protection requires people to actually get vaccinated. Missouri's vaccination rate ranks 37th among states, with only 39 percent of the population fully vaccinated. And the areas now seeing surges have even lower vaccination rates. Taney and Dallas counties, for instance, have just 26 percent and 24 percent of their residents fully vaccinated, respectively. With the combination of low vaccination rates, the fast spread of the delta variant, and a recent holiday, health workers in the state are bracing for things to get worse in the coming weeks. "Our projections are only showing us continuing to go up," Ashley Kimberling Casad, vice president of clinical services at CoxHealth in Springfield, told the Associated Press. "We generally see an increase in hospitalizations about two weeks after big events, so knowing it was the holiday weekend and probably lots of people spent time with family and friends and with our vaccination rates so low, we are going to expect that in two weeks it gets really, really busy."
Im trying to stay updated on this.Another study are still showing less than 1% re infection and I still have yet to see it happen with anyone I know or know of personally.Everyone I know or know of aren't getting the vaccine until they personally see someone else get it twice.For many of us its been over a year and no re infection. https://medicine.missouri.edu/news/study-finds-covid-19-reinfection-rate-less-1-those-severe-illness A review of more than 9,000 U.S. patients with severe COVID-19 infection showed less than 1% contracted the illness again, with an average reinfection time of 3.5 months after an initial positive test. Those are the findings from a study conducted by researchers from the University of Missouri School of Medicine and MU Health Care. The researchers teamed up with the MU Institute for Data Science and Informatics and the Tiger Institute for Health Innovation to review data from 62 U.S. health care facilities. They found 63 of the 9,119 patients (0.7%) with severe COVID-19 infection contracted the virus a second time, with a mean reinfection period of 116 days. Of the 63 who were reinfected, two (3.2%) died. Patients categorized as non-white were at greater risk of reinfection than white patients. “Our analysis also found asthma and nicotine dependence were associated with reinfection,” said lead researcher Adnan I. Qureshi, MD, a professor of clinical neurology at the MU School of Medicine. “However, there was a significantly lower rate of pneumonia, heart failure and acute kidney injury observed with reinfection compared with primary infection.” Qureshi defined reinfection by two positive tests separated by an interval greater than 90 days after the initial infection resolved, as confirmed by two or more consecutive negative tests. He analyzed data from patients who received serial tests between December 2019 and November 2020. “This is one of the largest studies of its kind in the U.S., and the important message here is that COVID-19 reinfection after an initial case is possible, and the duration of immunity that an initial infection provides is not completely clear,” Qureshi said. In addition to Qureshi, the study authors include fellow MU School of Medicine collaborators Iryna Lobanova, MD, research specialist in the Department of Neurology; S. Hasan Naqvi, MD, associate professor of clinical medicine; William Baskett, graduate student; Wei Huang, graduate student; and Chi-Ren Shyu, PhD, Director, MU Institute for Data Science and professor of Informatics, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. Their study, “Re-infection with SARS-CoV-2 in Patients Undergoing Serial Laboratory Testing,” was recently published in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases. Support for this study was provided by the National Institutes of Health. The authors of the study declare that they have no conflicts of interest related to this study and the content does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health.
This study covers a time period (December 2019 and November 2020) before the Delta variant showed up. The Delta variant causes a much higher level of re-infections based on recent studies.
Oddly enough, the fully vaccinated actually had a much higher CFR than the unvaccinated. UK delta variant case fatality rates Fully vaccinated: 0.7% (7,235 cases & 50 deaths) Partially vaccinated: 0.1% (19,957 cases & 20 deaths) Unvaccinated: 0.08% (53,822 cases & 44 deaths)