Kerokeronim on Nostr: Curator of Mastodon.art fediblock :newt: John Paul Grips Matoi:z:Ryuko:shrussia: ...
Curator of Mastodon.art fediblock :newt: (npub1wc2…4sk7) John Paul Grips (npub175d…wrtj) Matoi:z:Ryuko:shrussia: (npub1xan…jlvy)
>ould very well be both. Older people might be finally catching up with those undiagnosed conditions, while the youth is eroded by vaxx side effects. Among my peers (20-35yo age bracket), I don't know anyone who has been sick with covid and suffered from anything worse that what you get with a nasty cold, i.e. having to stay in bed for a couple of days. But several people had ugly side effects from vaxx and took a sick leave for at least a week. Nothing permanent or life-threatening for both groups so far, though.
Ditto. I never hear anyone getting sick from having Covid, heck I don't think I ever heard anyone got Covid. It goes the same way as you do, some people feels the side effect of the vaxx and actually suffers from it. I hope people that take them got no life threatening injury from it.
Maybe the side effect of the vaxx is greater than what we know and it makes a disease grows stronger and more fatal?
>On a related note, I would like to point out how in the past 40-50 years healthcare in the developed world was been slowly eroded by... BUREAUCRACY. Most healthcare spending these days isn't going to doctors or nurses or to buy drugs and equipment, but on medical administration. The graph below is for the US, but you can easily find a similar one for any first world country. So no wonder than when shit really hit the fan, all hell broke loose.
I don't know much about medical bureaucracy so I can't really tell my opinion. Bureaucracy in general sucks though, in my country you can tell that most of the problem is caused by the administrative alone. I've seen how bad the administration of a local office. It's easy to imagine that a countrywide institution would be more inefficient with the admin.
>ould very well be both. Older people might be finally catching up with those undiagnosed conditions, while the youth is eroded by vaxx side effects. Among my peers (20-35yo age bracket), I don't know anyone who has been sick with covid and suffered from anything worse that what you get with a nasty cold, i.e. having to stay in bed for a couple of days. But several people had ugly side effects from vaxx and took a sick leave for at least a week. Nothing permanent or life-threatening for both groups so far, though.
Ditto. I never hear anyone getting sick from having Covid, heck I don't think I ever heard anyone got Covid. It goes the same way as you do, some people feels the side effect of the vaxx and actually suffers from it. I hope people that take them got no life threatening injury from it.
Maybe the side effect of the vaxx is greater than what we know and it makes a disease grows stronger and more fatal?
>On a related note, I would like to point out how in the past 40-50 years healthcare in the developed world was been slowly eroded by... BUREAUCRACY. Most healthcare spending these days isn't going to doctors or nurses or to buy drugs and equipment, but on medical administration. The graph below is for the US, but you can easily find a similar one for any first world country. So no wonder than when shit really hit the fan, all hell broke loose.
I don't know much about medical bureaucracy so I can't really tell my opinion. Bureaucracy in general sucks though, in my country you can tell that most of the problem is caused by the administrative alone. I've seen how bad the administration of a local office. It's easy to imagine that a countrywide institution would be more inefficient with the admin.