Sigma_Orionis wrote:I am sorry if I sound insensitive. But, for the life of me, I can't understand why it's so hard for a lot of people in developed countries to get vaccinated. The US is not alone in that. I've read that both Germany and Austria have a lot of problems getting people to do so. There's world wide pandemic. To me, it's a no brainer.
pumpkinpi wrote:Sigma_Orionis wrote:I am sorry if I sound insensitive. But, for the life of me, I can't understand why it's so hard for a lot of people in developed countries to get vaccinated. The US is not alone in that. I've read that both Germany and Austria have a lot of problems getting people to do so. There's world wide pandemic. To me, it's a no brainer.
That's not insensitive. Do you mean hard as in actually hard to get one, or hard as in refusing to get one?
It's hard for some people to take time off work, arrange for child care or transportation, etc. to get a vaccine. It also can be hard to get information about where and when the vaccines are available, with limited internet access. Those of us who have access to all of the above don't understand why it's hard for people who don't--that's our privilege.
The people who refuse to--blame Trump, Fox News, and the republicans.
Rommie wrote:I think a lot of it has to do with how we were so good at eradicating diseases, that people no longer remember what it's like to deal with them. And there's just so much misinformation out there that sounds scientific and plays to our irrational fears- my cousin up thread apparently got delayed getting vaccinated because she's breastfeeding, so what if she gave something to her baby?! I was thinking about this recently when I heard a lot of people still hesitant are worried about "long term side effects"- which sounds reasonable at its face until you read more and realize it's not actually a thing to worry about.
As sigma said, it's not just a USA thing. That's what's so insidious about it. But it also shows a fraying trust in our public institutions that is not just limited to the USA, no matter how much we seem to almost hope we're an exception.
Btw, just read a staggering statistic that they estimate 1% of all people in Germany have coronavirus right now. That's a pretty shocking number, considering in many regions you need to wear N95 masks just to go grocery shopping.
lady_*nix wrote:Omicron: for now, for where I'm living, I'm willing to take transit and do errands *with a KN95 mask*, see vaccinated friends in person one-on-one, and visit my parents. But no unmasked anything in public, and no gatherings of more than 3 people. And we'll see how things go as the cases pick up here.
pumpkinpi wrote:I thought I posed this already but maybe I closed before I hit submit, or maybe it's in a different thread. Anywhooo....
My brother in law has covid. He's fully vaccinated, but was scheduled to get his booster tomorrow. He works in an elementary school and they have had a lot of cases. Fortunately he's doing well so far. Worse than a bad cold but already getting better.
So now the waiting game begins. My sister and niece are boosted, but my nephew isn't yet because it hasn't been 6 months. They are testing every day. But this could mean that my dad won't get to be with them for Christmas--he'll be all alone. That just breaks my heart. Goddamn pandemic.
Sigma_Orionis wrote:Sorry to hear that. Hope it's a light case of Covid
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