Roger,
I think you are misstating them as well. People younger than 12 are not restricted from drowning, that statistic cuts through all age groups. But those under 12 are not able to be vaccinated (yet). Furthermore, I don't know why you're
applying the vaccination percentage (which includes the almost 20% of the population that cannot be vaccinated) to deaths by drowning. The statistic is odds of dying. Of course, I'm sure there would be people attributing a vaccinated, COVID+ person who died
from drowning as a COVID death and not a drowning death.
But that illustrates a misuse of the chart. Everyone's gonna die. The chart was saying the odds of your eventual cause of death being X is Y. It's a lifetime odd. So it's not really useful for our discussion and I probably shouldn't have
included it. That said, I do believe it does highlight the poor personal risk management that people are engaging in with COVID, which was my point in bringing it up. And I do maintain that we all have traditionally engaged in activities that carry more risk
than being in the room with 100 unmasked people at a F2F IEEE 802 meeting. And we probably will again, e.g. when we next get into a motor vehicle. The safetyism surrounding "zero covid" is irrational and emotional.
Dan.
--
"the object of life is not to be on the side of the majority, but to
escape finding oneself in the ranks of the insane." – Marcus Aurelius
Dan,
You are still misstating the statistics. For example, the NSC chart says that the "Odds of Dying" from drowning is 1 in 1128. That means that, among 1128 people who died, 1 drowned. But you can't meaningfully compare that to 1 in 42K and say that drowning is
much more likely than breakthrough COVID death, because the denominators are completely different. To illustrate, "In the US, an average of 3,500 to 4,000 people drown per year." Let's presume that, in 2021, 55% of those will be unvaccinated. So about 2000 vaccinated people will die in the US in 2021 from drowning, but 4333 of them have already died due to COVID.
On Oct 6, 2021, 9:20 PM -0600, Harkins, Daniel <daniel.harkins@hpe.com>, wrote:
OK, I will withdraw my comment about the probability of being struck by lightning being equal to me being killed by COVID provided that you agree that 42K means that it's still an order of magnitude less likely than choking on food or dying from sunstroke.
Since I have engaged with you socially in different IEEE meetings I know that you are not an obsessive over death by sunstroke or death by choking (we had a nice, normal meal together in Korea if memory serves).
So join me in saying that COVID should not be a reason to not meet face-to-face (since choking on food was not a reason to avoid face-to-face meetings before). If you're vaccinated you shouldn't care about the vaccination status of your fellow attendees (be
more concerned about chewing each bite 11 times) and if you're not vaccinated you're just putting yourself at risk. Now, let's meet!
Dan.
--
"the object of life is not to be on the side of the majority, but to
escape finding oneself in the ranks of the insane." – Marcus Aurelius
57% (183,000,000) of the US population is vaccinated. So, to be fair to lightning, we should normalize to only vaccinated people; maybe only 6 of the 11.
So maybe a better comparison of the ratio is 4333/6 instead of 4333/11. That’s bigger!
The attachment, per its label, is from a political advocacy group, and the statistics are displayed accordingly. Why else would someone create a chart in which “deaths by cause in a fixed period of time, divided by population” is compared to “deaths by cause
divided by all deaths per lifetime”?
Also, 183,000,000/4333=42K, not 137K.
On Oct 6, 2021, 8:24 PM -0600, Harkins, Daniel <daniel.harkins@hpe.com>, wrote:
The "odds of dying" according to the NSC (see the attached):
https://injuryfacts.nsc.org/all-injuries/preventable-death-overview/odds-of-dying/
Those 4333 are of how many vaccinated?
Dan.
--
"the object of life is not to be on the side of the majority, but to
escape finding oneself in the ranks of the insane." – Marcus Aurelius
On Oct 6, 2021, 7:28 PM -0600, George Zimmerman <george@cmephyconsulting.com>, wrote:
All –
I know how much we like to debate stuff outside our fields – it’s interesting, makes us feel smart, and an issue like this can impact our actual lives.
I guess today is the day we all pretend to be immunologists and public health professionals. Personally, I read the direct literature, and often. The headlines and summary papers are usually just a guide to go look these things up. With this, and particularly
on this issue, what I can say is see that the data is complex, nuanced, and relatively varied – as there are a lot of variables at play. Odd how real science in medicine is pretty much like real science in engineering.
What anyone can see is that if you want to find sound bites, you can, but the answer of whether you have durable immunity due to infection is not clear. One can also see (as John D points out) that false positives or even the ability to track whether someone
actually had covid is problematic. And I’m sure we could find more observations.
But instead, I decided to get a data point on from the SMEs, as we’d say. I decided to ask some folks I know who work for large hospitals in settings where the people really ought to know the science what the policies were, and why. One is chief resident in
surgery at UCSF, and the other a professor of clinical pharmacy working in both Los Angeles County hospitals and University of California Irvine.
In both cases, proof of vaccination is a job requirement to be on site. Prior infection is not a substitute. The reasons for this include all the above.
The plan below would err on the side of safety. What I see being debated is whether that level of safety is needed. I suggest that if & when we go back to face-to-face meetings we should take what are then considered the proper safety precautions. As of
today, the plan below seems to fit.
-george
From: ***** IEEE 802 Executive Committee List ***** <STDS-802-SEC@ieee.org>
On Behalf Of Harkins, Daniel
Sent: Wednesday, October 6, 2021 5:08 PM
To: STDS-802-SEC@LISTSERV.IEEE.ORG
Subject: Re: [802SEC] F2F meeting safety
Andrew,
To quote your link:
"Townsend and his team analyzed known reinfection and immunological data from the close viral relatives of
SARS-CoV-2 that cause 'common colds' — along with immunological data from SARS-CoV-1 and Middle East
Respiratory Syndrome. Leveraging evolutionary principles, the team was able to model the risk of COVID-19
reinfection over time."
So they made a model. Models tend to suffer from the bias of their makers and some of them are just garbage (e.g. the Imperial College one). Better to pay attention to studies that actually worked with people who had the virus and recovered. Like this one.
Here's a study of COVID that shows the opposite of what the model you referred to does:
https://www.science.org/content/article/having-sars-cov-2-once-confers-much-greater-immunity-vaccine-vaccination-remains-vital
Dan.
--
"the object of life is not to be on the side of the majority, but to
escape finding oneself in the ranks of the insane." – Marcus Aurelius
G’day Steve,
I agree that that we should follow the science …
A study reported in
The Lancet Microbe reports, “Reinfection can reasonably happen in three months or less. Therefore, those who have been naturally infected should get vaccinated. Previous infection alone can offer very little long-term protection against subsequent
infections.” (see summary)
… which suggests strong protection following natural infection is short-lived
Andrew
Can’t support a non-scientific plan like this. Suggesting that a person previously infected must get vaccinated is non-scientific. I will stop there.
Regards,
Steve
WARNING:
This email originated from outside of Qualcomm. Please be wary of any links or attachments, and do not enable macros.
I agree it is a good plan that we could mimic.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Jon Rosdahl Engineer, Senior Staff
IEEE 802 Executive Secretary Qualcomm Technologies, Inc.
office: 801-492-4023 10871 North 5750 West
cell: 801-376-6435 Highland, UT 84003
A Job is only necessary to eat!
A Family is necessary to be happy!!
G’day all
A Cisco colleague recently attended his first F2F conference for some time (it was actually a hybrid meeting, but the on-line component was mainly broadcast rather than interactive). It was sponsored by the Linux Foundation.
The experience was apparently not perfect, with my colleague reporting that some sessions were too full for his comfort, but generally pretty good. The most important aspect was that the Linux Foundation took COVID safety very seriously, including imposing:
A mask mandate
A vaccine requirement (with no exceptions for previous infection, etc)
Daily temperature checks
A social distancing code, with wristbands
See https://events.linuxfoundation.org/kubecon-cloudnativecon-north-america/attend/health-and-safety/#in-person-attendance-requirements for details
This is the sort of thing that is going to be required for F2F activities to be provided in safety and comfort, at least in the near future. The Linux Foundation has done an excellent job at showing what is possible. This might be a good example for IEEE 802
to follow …
Andrew Myles
Manager, Cisco Standards
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Andrew Myles
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