Opinion The media is lying. On COVID, Florida is still doing well - Media lying? Imagine my shock!



The media is lying. On COVID, Florida is still doing well​


You wouldn’t know it from all the liberal news coverage of Florida’s COVID-19 response, but things are actually pretty good in the Sunshine State.

Take it from a guy who just moved back here on purpose. Florida is doing quite well if you’re a resident who has come here to escape heavy-handed state governments and avoid mandatory masking or vaccines. It’s great if you’re fully vaccinated because you run a less than a 1% chance of COVID-related hospitalization or death. It’s even great for the unvaccinated who choose not to get the vaccine and risk facing an aggressive COVID variant — you will be left alone.

Still, news outlets can’t stop talking about how high the COVID cases are among Floridians, stoking ire against Gov. Ron DeSantis’s laissez-faire pandemic response. They seem genuinely frustrated that DeSantis refuses to impose restrictions that would protect the unvaccinated at the cost of the livelihoods of those who have been vaccinated. "Why must he persist," they seem to wonder, "with this dangerous notion that people who want to get vaccinated can, and those who don’t want to don’t have to?"

The answer is quite simple: Because it works.

Florida is sitting squarely in the middle of the pack when it comes to nationwide state vaccination rates. As of Aug. 8, nearly 60% of the state is at least partly vaccinated, while nearly 50% of the state is fully vaccinated.

Kaiser Family Foundation released an analysis showing that COVID breakthrough cases (vaccinated individuals who have contracted COVID) represent less than 1% of those who have been vaccinated nationwide. The percentage of people who have been vaccinated, contracted COVID, and died is even lower.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, meanwhile, has transitioned “from monitoring all reported COVID-19 vaccine breakthrough infections to investigating only those among patients who are hospitalized or die, thereby focusing on the cases of highest clinical and public health significance.” Why? Because the CDC can only track the people who are being hospitalized by the virus — the vaccine, by and large, is doing its job keeping people no more than asymptomatic if they contract COVID.

As of July 26, the CDC reported 6,239 breakthrough hospitalizations nationwide. Of those patients, 26% of those hospitalizations were reported as asymptomatic or not related to COVID. Likewise, the CDC had reported 1,263 breakthrough fatalities, of which 24% were reported as unrelated to COVID.

The country is in a better place than it was a year ago. We have three safe and effective COVID vaccines. Anyone over the age of 12 who wants to get the vaccine can get it, and anyone who doesn’t want the vaccine doesn’t have to. Whether or not to be protected against COVID is, and should be, a decision folks can make all on their own. Florida knows and abides by this, even while getting lambasted everyday by the likes of CNN and White House press secretary Jen Psaki.

To be sure, Florida has faced an increase in hospitalizations over the past month. But it’s clear who is getting sick and hospitalized: younger, unvaccinated people. Through a concerted effort by the DeSantis administration to prioritize early vaccinations for Florida’s most prominent at-risk population, 85% of the state’s elderly population (65 and up) have been vaccinated with one or more doses. Conversely, ages 20-39 are only about 45% vaccinated.

As the state’s government has resisted new restrictions amid rising cases, the severity of the delta variant has come front-of-mind to many unvaccinated people. That’s why, in the past two weeks, Florida has seen an increased rate of vaccinations as the highly infectious and perhaps deadlier variant wreaks havoc on those who have resisted the shot previously. The rising case count has also informed other COVID-safe behavior. More individuals are seen sporting masks indoors and, in some cases, even outdoors.

What it boils down to, and what national news outlets can’t stand, is that Florida won’t sacrifice its economy and people’s freedom to protect the unvaccinated. And why should it when everyone has virtually full, unfettered access to the vaccine?

From Washington, D.C., to the Bay Area counties of California, many public health officials are urging or actively re-implementing mask mandates and other COVID restrictions, “regardless of vaccination status.” In the Sunshine State, regardless of vaccination status, you will be left to your own devices. Given the choice of where to live, I’ll take the risk of freedom every time.

Tyler Shanahan (@TylerKShanahan) is a contributor to Young Voices and a Florida native.
 
DeSantis more and more looks like the only person I'd support on the GOP ticket (Other than Trump if he runs again, fingers crossed he names DeSantis his political heir or something).

EDIT

Think this is her.
Oh no I think it is someone else this was in the US.
Some black doctor or someone claiming to be a black doctor. I did not save any of the pics because I was on my phone while at a bar listening to people talk about how Covid on Steroids was literally culling the youth of America because people would not take the vaccines.
 
Oh no I think it is someone else this was in the US.
Some black doctor or someone claiming to be a black doctor. I did not save any of the pics because I was on my phone while at a bar listening to people talk about how Covid on Steroids was literally culling the youth of America because people would not take the vaccines.
This woman? She's an RN,
 

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How horrifying.
We pretty much get everything, but it's been pretty mild the last couple years. Last summer was great, shame we were locked down. The weather is very unpredictable year to year, but when it's good, it's damn near perfect. It's like an abusive relationship and probably why the state sport is binge drinking.
 
My mom keeps reading shit on Facebook and I have to talk her off the ceiling. The other day she was on about how Covid numbers were up 200% in Florida and I asked how many total cases the article said there had been. Of course they didn't include that info, and I point out to her that going from 1 case to 3 is a 200% increase, and that doctors have been recording all kinds of wacky shit as Covid related when it isn't.

I told her about that doctor who posted the fake "I'm sorry but it's too late for the vaccine" story a month or so ago. When I showed her how quickly that story was spread, and then how quickly it disappeared after some people proved the doctor was full of shit, my mom's poor mind was blown.
 
Florida is sunny (more vitamin D), warm and humid year round, so Covid should never be much of an issue there or in similar climates regardless of vaccine status.
Won't bet on that. Covid does tear through India.
 
Here's a gem from a Florida news outlet. It is kind of like asking in an orchid "can you find an orange to pick?" when someone propositions that in Florida of all places, that Covid "really isn't that bad", when virtually every news outlet is running stories quoting the hospital staff and state staff about the outrageous out of control growth of Covid.

"
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla.COVID-19 cases have filled so many Florida hospital beds that ambulance services and fire departments are straining to respond to emergencies.

In St. Petersburg, some patients wait inside ambulances for up to an hour before hospitals can admit them — a process that usually takes about 15 minutes, Pinellas County Administrator Barry Burton said.

While ambulances sit outside emergency rooms, they are essentially off the grid.

“They’re not available to take another call, which forces the fire department on scene at an accident or something to take that transport. That’s caused quite a backlog for the system.”

On Tuesday, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported the state has surpassed 20,000 for its 7-day average of new cases, a day after the federal agency misreported numbers given by the Florida Department of Health by combining data from the last three days into two.

Hospitalizations rose by more than 1,100 on Tuesday to 14,787 patients with COVID-19, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. More than 47% of ICU beds were taken by about 3,000 coronavirus patients. That number has nearly tripled in the last three weeks."
 
It is kind of like asking in an orchid "can you find an orange to pick?"
CONFIRMED: Menotaur does not know a grove of oranges from a flower.
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And this from the Sentinel in Orlando: (keep in mind treatments now with the expertise that has come have increased the chances of saving someone dramatically): Doesn't sound like it is going swell in Florida by anyone's account other than the author of this thread.


COVID-19 hospitalizations surged past 15,000 in Florida on Tuesday with more than 3,000 people requiring intensive care, setting another record as pandemic-related patients continue to fill beds, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

The federal agency reported 15,169 inpatient beds in use for COVID-19 in Florida, representing about 27% of patients at the 231 hospitals that reported data.
HHS showed 3,050 intensive-care beds in use for COVID-19 patients, making up 47% of total ICU beds at reporting hospitals.

The steep rise in COVID patients is putting a strain on some Central Florida hospitals. Brevard County’s three hospital systems are over capacity, the county’s Emergency Director John Scott said on Monday. Hospitals there are implementing surge plans that include the cancellation of elective surgeries and converting regular hospital space into COVID-19 units.

Orlando Health, which operates 12 hospitals and emergency rooms, was caring for 662 in-house positive COVID patients on Tuesday, 119 of whom are in the hospital’s intensive-care unit, hospital officials said. About 9.5% of ICU beds were available at the system’s flagship Orlando Regional Medical Center for the week of July 29, according to the latest data from Health and Human Services.
“Orlando Health is maintaining adequate bed capacity and PPE across our network as we continue to schedule and safely perform necessary medical procedures,” said Kena Lewis, a hospital spokesperson.
HCA is monitoring bed capacity, staffing and supplies at its five Orlando-area hospitals, which include Osceola Regional Medical Center, Oviedo Medical Center and Central Florida Regional Hospital in Sanford,
“We also have access to additional resources ready to deploy through the support of HCA Healthcare and our local, state and federal partners,” said Trip Farmer, a spokesperson for HCA Healthcare’s North Florida Division.
AdventHealth, Central Florida’s largest hospital system, moved to “black status” on July 30, meaning it is postponing non-emergency medical procedures. On Thursday — when it last reported admissions — hospital officials reported 1,350 COVID-19 patients across the system, topping the previous week’s numbers by about 300.
Statistics provided by the Florida Hospital Association display a steep climb in COVID-19 hospital admissions that took off after the Fourth of July holiday. Florida’s surge occurred as the highly transmissible delta variant became the dominant strain of the virus.
The FHA reported 14,787 COVID-19 hospitalizations on Tuesday, slightly less than Health and Human Services. That number is up 1,173 from the group’s Monday report and is 145% higher than last year’s peak on July 23, 2020.
 
Here are the deaths and everything else for you.
Wow, 122 out of 27,000 didn't survive it, talk about man-made panic. More people probably die in Florida every year from household accidents with electrical appliances than that.

And that's why they aren't putting the death counts in the scare-em articles, even people bad at math can see through that.
 
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