Skip to main content

Prepare for Poop Hitting the Fan

What do you get when you cross a wave of illness with an exodus of nurses and caregivers? We may be about to find out. The experience in Israel, where they vaccinated early and widely, shows the Pfizer vaccine starts petering out around six months. A Japanese preprint study says that with a few common mutations, the delta variant could escape the Pfizer vaccine neutralizing antibodies. And now, several hospitals are mandating vaccination and Biden is requiring nursing home employees to be vaccinated. I'm not in the health care industry, but from what I've heard, a lot of nursing homes would have to shut their doors in the face of such a requirement. Alex Berenson, on the other hand, thinks the hospital mandates, at least, will go bye-bye if nurses sit tight. Let's hope so. 

Vaccine Mandates

The FDA's approval of the Pfizer vaccine is likely to increase the mandates--which seems to be the only purpose of the approval. The acting commissioner of the FDA was their "watchdog" during the opioid epidemic, which should offer a clue about how much the FDA cares about your health. Opioids aren't the only problem drugs the FDA greenlighted

Seventy-one of the 222 drugs approved in the first decade of the millennium were withdrawn, required a "black box" warning on side effects or warranted a safety announcement about new risks, Dr. Joseph Ross, an associate professor of medicine at Yale School of Medicine, and colleagues reported in JAMA on Tuesday. The study included safety actions through Feb. 28....

It took a median of 4.2 years after the drugs were approved for these safety concerns to come to light, the study found, and issues were more common among psychiatric drugs, biologic drugs, drugs that were granted "accelerated approval" and drugs that were approved near the regulatory deadline for approval.

Europe is less like a corrupt banana republic than we are in approving drugs. The British Medical Journal blasted the FDA's decision for its haste, lack of data, the vaccine's waning efficacy, problems with the studies (unblinding of the control group, for one thing) and urged the FDA to "slow down and get the science right."

The increase in vaccine mandates from the FDA's approval may lead to job losses, nursing home closures and even more nurse shortages.

Nursing Homes

Surely, though, they won't let nursing homes close and make Grandma--oh, wait. They sent COVID patients to nursing homes in New York, Michigan, New Jersey and Pennsylvania. They cleared COVID patients out of the hospital and into care homes in the UK. Even Sweden acknowledged it didn't take care of its elderly. Biden's mandate requires nursing homes' employees to be vaccinated to get federal funds like Medicare and Medicaid, but employees are noping out of vaccinations. If you have a family member at a nursing home that relies on those funds, it might be time to start looking for alternatives. If your family member is ON Medicaid--I don't know what to tell you: taking care of someone at that stage can be a full-time job. But it's better to start making a plan now than later.

Job Loss

What to do if your employer wants you to get a COVID vaccine but you don't want to? Mentally prepare yourself to find another job. I've been through many, many layoffs and the hardest part is mental, not the material privations that follow. If you work at a small company, you might talk about facts with the decision maker, but if you're at a big corporation, forget it. Sit tight, don't give your employer any reason to discipline you. If enough employees refuse, your employer might reverse course. An employee without health insurance at a very small or flaky outfit should ask for proof of workers' compensation coverage before getting an experimental vaccine (yes--the clinical trials are still in progress). The manufacturers are immune from liability, but you can file a workers' comp claim if your employer requires a vaccination that ends up harming you.

Nursing Shortage--Don't Get Sick

There's already a nursing shortage: many of them retired or left and now there is or soon will be, depending on where you are in the US, a wave of delta cases. Don't get sick. Get a vitamin D test and start supplementing now: unless you're a lifeguard, you're not likely to get enough sunlight and unless you start now, your level won't be optimal going into winter. Your level should be 60-70 ng/mL. Also, cut the carbs and lose the COVID-19 pounds and high blood sugar. Almost all of the "young, healthy" people with severe COVID I keep hearing about turn out to be obese. I'm not trying to be mean or suggest any of these people deserved to get sick--I'm acknowledging that too much excess weight is a risk. 

Vitamin D and limiting carbs are a few of several strategies we use at the Inner Circle, and hardly anyone in our group of mostly retirement-age people has mentioned getting a bad case of COVID. (I don't get any consideration for sending people there.) Dr. Davis has YouTube videos and books if you want more details of our health strategies. People talking about wearing a mask or juicing or 5G aren't serious. 

Think about a surgery center if you need an operation but have time to plan it. And think about avoiding surgery by postponing your ski trip--or an illness by postponing your cruise.

Begin Stocking Up

I don't have any insight into supply chains, but this might not be a good time to be caught short. Find a farm that sells to the public in case stores run short as they did last year. Stock up on supplements and medicines, too--and don't go crazy with toilet paper.

Photo from Pexels.com


Protect Yourself!

Proceed as if you are going to be exposed to the delta variant, keeping in mind that masks don't stop aerosol spread and vaccine protection wanes with time. Not everyone who was vaccinated will get booster shots. If your area hasn't had a big wave or two of COVID, it's likely to get one soon. 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Infrared Light: How much is too much?

It's the sort of thing that sounds like quackery: a pad with tiny red LED lights and a few buttons that's supposed to help you heal, just $30 on ebay. I never would have bought it, but Dr. Davis gave a presentation on infrared light late in 2024. Since I was still suffering from achilles tendonitis after being floxxed , I decided to try it.  I wrapped it around my ankle and turned it on the lowest setting for five minutes. Nothing seemed to happen, but the next day, I wrote,  My tendonitis is GONE after one 5-minute treatment! I didn’t feel it doing anything, I didn’t think it was going to do anything (at least not that quickly), but for the first time in several months, I’ve gotten out of bed and started walking normally and didn’t have any pain reaching with my left arm. I'd been shuffling around like an 80-year-old woman after getting out of bed in the morning. The tendonitis returned, but it was improved. I eventually had physical therapy for it, and now, apart from a l...

Gym Influencer Doubles Down and Should Have Regretted It

Jennifer Picone isn't the most abusive gym influencer--far from it--but she may be the most annoying. In a video she posted that went viral, she was working out in a gym when another member appeared in the background by the free weights. The member was minding her own business, not looking in Picone's direction, when Picone got up and told her to move. After filming, Picone edited the video with a note about "Gym etiquette lesson #47" and accused the other gym member of "[doing] that 💩 on purpose."  Shaming other gym members has gotten to be such a big genre that Joey Swoll has a YouTube channel, with half a million subscribers, dedicated to calling out these content creators. Just for Picone, he took a break from his vacation to tell her to mind her own business. This may be the first time that Joey Swoll has taken one of his followers to task. The fact that she follows him and still doesn't know better than to treat the gym like her personal studio sh...

Stay in your car!

If there's ever a lunatic outside your vehicle, do not engage. Stay in your vehicle. Drive away or call the police. Drive over the curb, lawn or median if necessary; just avoid putting innocent bystanders at risk.*  Save yourself from lunatics like a boss. Screen grab from video by Fredrik Sørlie on Youtube . That advice might have saved a 69-year-old delivery driver from being attacked by former NFL player Mark Sanchez, who for unknown reasons was in an alley after midnight in downtown Indianapolis and decided to pick a fight over a parking space. I say might have because I haven't seen any video of the attack. But other incidents over the years bear out the safety of staying in your car. A neighbor was assaulted and robbed after she got out of her car after someone followed her home and blocked her driveway. And remember Reginald Denny from the LA riots? The victim maced and stabbed Sanchez, but suffered a bad cut to his face and tongue and looks like he was badly beaten. Bo...

Fasting blood sugar & insulin have crept up!

It's pretty bad when even conventional medicine thinks your blood sugar is high. I had lab tests done last week, as I do every year, and saw things were going in the wrong direction. Photo from Pixabay . Uh-oh.  Ideal blood sugar is about 70-90. Your blood sugar can be high because you're stressed or ill, but I felt OK. I can't blame it on cortisol, which was smack in the middle of the normal range. And my A1c, which reflects blood sugar over the past few months, shows that whatever is going on has been happening for a while. My insulin is more than double what it should be. Oddly, my triglycerides, which typically indicate carb consumption, were good.  I don't have an explanation for the triglycerides. I should have suspected something was wrong, though. I've felt very tired and a little sad for the past few months. Unlike many people with higher than ideal blood sugar and insulin, I had only gained about three pounds.  Regardless of my good weight and triglyceride...

1972: Carole King, M*A*S*H and...Food for 2014?

I feel well enough to try Atkins induction again. The palpitations are gone, even without taking potassium. My energy level is back to normal--no more trucking on the treadmill early in the morning  to burn off nervous energy or emergency meat, cheese and mineral water stops after yoga. It's back to lounging around to Chopin and Debussy in the morning and stopping at the wine bar for pleasure. I'm using the original Atkins book: Dr. Atkins' Diet Revolution from 1972. While looking in the book for a way to make gelatin (which is allowed on induction, but Jello(TM) and products like it have questionable ingredients), I felt the earth move under my feet : those recipes from 42 years ago look delicious and they're mostly real food. It makes sense, though: the cooks who wrote the recipes probably didn't have had a palette used to low-fat food full of added sugar or a bag of tricks to make low-fat food edible. Anyone who writes a recipe called "Cottage Cheese and...