Posted on 09/30/2023 2:41:50 PM PDT by nickcarraway
Santa Cruz Health Officer Lisa Hernandez announces new mask mandate and answers questions about Covid
This week, the latest FDA-approved Covid vaccine is anticipated to hit hospital and providers’ shelves across Santa Cruz County. Scientists and health officials say the new vaccine will better target the latest Covid variant.
On Tuesday, county Deputy Health Officer Hernandez announced that the county’s masking mandate will expand starting Nov. 1 to include everyone in a skilled nursing facility, healthcare workers who work in acute care hospitals and surgery centers, and outpatient settings in places like dialysis and chemo infusion centers.
In Santa Cruz County, the latest data shows that in the beginning of September, about 13% of people who tested for Covid in hospitals had positive results. But not everyone who has Covid takes a test, so that might not reflect the number of people who have it in our community, says Hernandez.
santa cruz restaurant week 2023 The county measures Covid in wastewater, because “everyone poops,” Hernandez says—this method allows the county to get a more accurate read on how much of the virus is in the county. Hernandez says there’s been an uptick in Covid as we head into fall, but it’s similar to what we saw this time last year.
Still, Hernandez says she wants to be proactive, especially for those people who are at higher risk of contracting Covid: particularly, older citizens and people who are immunocompromised.
“So far we’re seeing the impacts of more disease but we’re not seeing unusual things in the general public in terms of the severity of the disease,” Hernandez says. “I will say we are seeing deaths in older individuals, especially in skilled nursing facilities.”
That’s ultimately what led Hernandez to issue a mandatory masking in August for healthcare workers in senior centers and what led to her decision to expand the ordinance on Tuesday.
“The focus for myself and many public health officials is really on the highest risk individuals in our community,” Hernandez says.
Good Times asked Hernandez what’s different about this variant, what to expect from the new vaccine and more.
Good Times: It’s hard to keep up to date with the most recent Covid variants. What would you say is the most important thing for people to know when it comes to different variants and Covid right now?
Lisa Hernandez: Covid mutates, that’s what a variant is. We are going to see variants happen with Covid for the foreseeable future. What we’re seeing is that if there’s going to be a change in the behavior of the virus, it’s more likely going to be more contagious, not more severe. So that’s good news, right?
We are going to see more people potentially getting Covid and some of that will be due to the change in the variant. Some of it also might be due to change in our own behavior. If someone has Covid, they’re more likely to give it to more people than the other variants have shown. And, again, we’re still trying to understand if it is just the variant or is it that people have or not, are not using the tools that we know work.
We have tools to help us protect against transmission. We also have tools for the fact that Covid does, unfortunately still cause severe disease, causing people to be hospitalized, causing people to feel really terrible. And also causing people to die.
GT: What are the protocols people can use to protect themselves from Covid? Have they changed since the start of the pandemic, are they the same?
LH: So, what people should keep in mind is to use the things that we know work. Staying home when you’re sick. Washing your hands still matters, covering your nose and mouth when you sneeze or cough, those are big things. And then the other things that are important, such as getting vaccinated, so we just had the approval from FDA and the CDC for the new vaccine that we’re going to be available soon. Then a lot of folks that end up getting Covid are also eligible for medicines to reduce their chances of getting severe disease.
GT: What’s different about this vaccine, who is eligible to get it and why should people?
LH: Yeah, so the new vaccine is a monovalent vaccine. The other vaccines were bivalent, so they had the variants of the original virus that started circulating almost four years ago. What has changed in the new vaccine is it only has a single variant in the formulation, and it seems to cover and be protective against what’s circulating at this point. The vaccine was approved for anyone six months and older. And if you haven’t received a vaccine in the past two months, then you can get the updated vaccine.
GT: Some of the tests that the government provided cost-free are now expired. Does Covid still show up on an expired test?
LH: There is a FDA website for the Covid test, where you could see which tests were still good, this works, which tests were still valid. It’s: www.fda.gov/medical-devices/coronavirus-covid-19-and-medical-devices/home-otc-covid-19-diagnostic-tests#list
GT: What are the most up-to-date protocols for someone who has Covid or who has been exposed to Covid?
LH: If you test positive for Covid, you should stay home for five days. As long as you’re improving and you’re without a fever for two days, then you can not isolate anymore. And it’s recommended that for the additional five days that you mask. So you are essentially either isolated and or masking for a total of 10 days.
GT: Are there any notable differences between Covid or the flu that somebody could recognize?
LH: It’s really hard to say. It used to be that people early on would think, Oh, if I lost my sense of taste or smell, it’s definitely Covid. But it’s really hard to tell based on symptoms alone. So testing is the best way to confirm a diagnosis.
GT: Do you see a world where we would return to a mask mandate for the general public?
LH: I hope not.
I hope airlines bring back the mask mandate. That way I can cancel a biz trip I have to go to in late Nov.
Let’s see how many Lemmings are left in this once great Country.
Yes....the jabs and the masks are causing the continued variants.
Are you fully boo$ted, nick?
You seem worried.
Let’s see how many Lemmings are left in this once great Country.
LOL...that...is exactly it!
Uh, NO, NO and NO. That should cover it.
🤔😱🐑🚫😷💉🐴💩
Why do I seem boosted? No, I forgot to get all of them.
Just say no. Grow a spine.
How much is Ms. Hernandez getting paid for her wisdom? Whatever it is, it's way too much.
Exactly. The vaccines are causing the variants. But gee, let’s keep vaccinating. Such utter bullshit.
Saw a whole bunch lining up for it at the local pharmacy here. Two at once. All ages.
Correct me if I’m wrong, but I understand the covid mortality rate is down near zero and that prescribed treatment is almost always successful - that flu is more dangerous.
If that is true why the big push for covid inoculations.
Correct me if I’m wrong, but I understand the covid mortality rate is down near zero and that prescribed treatment is almost always successful - that flu is more dangerous.
If that is true why the big push for covid inoculations.
More on Original Antigenic Sin and the Folly of Our Universal Vaccination Campaign!:
Strategic vaccination conferring immunity against likely future strains is of course exactly the opposite of our current efforts to give every last living human multiple vaccinations against an extinct strain of SARS-2.
*To review: We have now had ten months of mass vaccination against SARS-CoV-2. Nearly 7 billion doses have been administered worldwide.
This unprecedented campaign has not eradicated Corona; it has not even suppressed infections. Instead, case statistics have ballooned almost everywhere. While the vaccinated appear to enjoy some protection against severe outcomes, skyrocketing transmission means most countries have seen little benefit, on balance, from their universal vaccination campaigns.
The most pressing question has become, simply: What is going on?
I’ve explored a few different possibilities. First, there seems to be a Marek Effect at work. We might imagine that all viruses have an optimal level of population-wide virulence – an advantageous degree of aggression at which they can spread effectively, while not driving their hosts underground too soon. Certain Delta sub-strains, previously punished for their excessive aggression in unvaccinated populations, have likely been favoured by the vaccines, which reduce symptoms in the vaccinated without preventing infection for more than a few months. Our vaccines reduced the average vi
The existence of Original Antigenic Sin has been confirmed by generations of research, and the literature is full of curious findings. A major reason flu shots don’t work, for example, is that they are powerless to redirect adult immune systems against novel influenza strains. Most people who get flu shots are adults, with immune systems long since primed by childhood infection. Hence this old Lancet case study of influenza outbreaks among boys at Christ’s Hospital in Sussex in the 1970s:
In each outbreak, the protective effect of inactivated influenza-A vaccine was limited to those boys, not already immune, who were vaccinated for the first time with the most up-to-date strain. Revaccination with the same strain did not increase the degree of protection, and revaccination with a later strain did not afford protection against subsequent challenge.
The flu vaccines, in other words, work great if you’ve never had the flu before. Otherwise, they don’t do any good/nor work.
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