leswp1
Well-known member
California is the 5th largest economy in the world. If they're too poor to do this, we need to just call it a day.
Just like you can't eat money, money can't administer care or staff resources out of nothing.
California is the 5th largest economy in the world. If they're too poor to do this, we need to just call it a day.
What's beautiful is that he's also threatening to fine hospitals $100,000 for not vaccinating people fast enough.
No one is equipped to handle this until the Feds can work out the supply chain. It is not a question of hand holding. It is a question of giving very clear guidance and developing protocols that are evidence based. Medicine does not work well using a business model or libertarian model where everyone gets to pick what works for them like you are choosing a color of paint. Protocols should have decision trees that take into consideration the different situations each state is in*.
*a lot of the fly over States and southern States have minimal Public Health infrastructure. This has been true since I was in grad school in the mid 80s. No matter what the protocols say, they are incapable of implementing without a whole lot of help- esp in the rural areas decimated from yrs of underfunding and no State support.
Flu vaccine is a whole different animal in multiple ways-
-in general there is no shortage-
-there are different formulations- injection and nasal mist with only one does required.
-the orders and coordination for ordering happen months in advance- you have options of where to obtain and have predictable, scheduled deliveries
-it is distributed in multiple settings- private offices, clinics, pharmacies, various town/county 'clinics', in-patient settings, residential settings
-all settings have protocols set up to encourage people to get the vaccine and most start promoting this months in advance- our practice sent out messages to everyone on the portal.
-storage is pretty basic- regular fridge- in some of the pop up places they put it in a cooler but it is gone so fast it doesn't spoil.
Even when we had H1N1 where they had to work on the fly, we had excellent communication re the supply of vaccine, when it was coming, and who should get it first.
Current vaccine is completely different-
-more than one type- not interchangeable.
-2 doses needed and they have to be the same kind
-limited supply. Usual system of ordering, coordinating what/when/how much is not in control of the people who are attempting to coordinate.
-there was no ramp up preparing people for what would happen creating confusion for everyone at every level. They didn't make recommendations until it was approved and there was all sorts of debate in attempt to predict what the recommendations would be.
- supply chain is not clear/not predictable. It's not delivering as promised which makes planning a cf- you need to give vaccine while rationing what is available hope delivery happens for dose 2
- Most places are getting both types but what and how much is is a roll of the dice. exacerbating planning issues.
- guidance has been given but no real leadership- it is like the wild wild west with different States doing different stuff.
- you need to observe the pt after it is given for at least 15 minutes so you can't just do drive thru- you need to put them somewhere- NH is doing drive thru and holding in parking lot.
- Not available to many of the places who would usually give flu vaccine- private practices, small clinics, pharmacies, various small facilities- the distribution lots are too large and they don't have volume or storage. Storage is an issue for most of the places that pop up to distribute the flu vax.
yes all the reasons stated. This isn't as simple as just stabbing people. there are multiple issues beyond availability of supply. They need to give 2 doses so that means they have to track and coordinate dose 2.I know it's not the same, and the supply of the new vaccine is still evolving.
But in terms of distributing it to people, is there a good reason why the existing flu shot system not work? Especially the pharmacies, who have data on their customers, so they could easily get it out to people who meet reasonably specific health criteria.
It would be better than a parking lot out in the middle of Florida.
Countries that stopped the virus from spreading got R from 2.7 to 1, a reduction of ~60%. Now, they need to reduce R by ~75%. But remember: all the low-hanging fruit is already used (masks, social distancing...). The next measures are all more expensive.
Yes, it’s def here and it’s gonna spread fast.
I have two colleagues in iowa who just found out they have it with little to no symptoms and seem surprised after they’ve been hanging out with friends for months.
They have B117?
Covid, sorry. You think Iowa is sequencing lol
This is a long read and I am not anywhere near knowledgeable enough to offer an opinion on it, but I found it to be an interesting story.
I gotta assume Walz figures a lot of places are skirting the rules anyways and are willing to lose their business to do so what is the point. He can't really do anything anymore and too many people just dont care.
At this point I have no clue anymore. The amount of people willing to risk their lives to eat crappy food at mediocre restaurants for stupid prices just astounds me. The amount of business owners willing to risk their workers and their customers lives is even crazier. The priorities of America are so out of whack I dont think there is any way to solve it. Do the right thing and you are a tyrant, do the wrong thing and people die.
(I am not supporting or ripping Walz with this post...in all honesty I am glad I dont have his job)