Spyke
lemmy.world

It's a good thing healthcare in the US is being run by competent professionals and not, I don't know, a brainworm

77
lemmy.world

Diamond Open Access, and the writing seems reasonable: study

I'll note that, afaict, the kind of long term symptoms they describe aren't acutely dangerous: We still have lots of covid infections today and not much increased mortality anymore. (Edits for clarity)

Could a medical professional chime in? Does the study justify the rhetoric in the OP link?

10

Apologies if my language is unclear. I'm takling about post vaccine, 2023+. Today rates of mortality are close to, say, 2018 rates as far as I'm aware.

My reasoning: there are lots of folks who do not keep boosters current, do not try to avoid disease. They treat it as a common cold. I would expect the current mortality numbers to reflect it if this was a mistake. (Edit: eg, the cdc data show essentially the same mortality rate in 2023 as 2004)

6

You reached the end