• IP addresses are NOT logged in this forum so there's no point asking. Please note that this forum is full of homophobes, racists, lunatics, schizophrenics & absolute nut jobs with a smattering of geniuses, Chinese chauvinists, Moderate Muslims and last but not least a couple of "know-it-alls" constantly sprouting their dubious wisdom. If you believe that content generated by unsavory characters might cause you offense PLEASE LEAVE NOW! Sammyboy Admin and Staff are not responsible for your hurt feelings should you choose to read any of the content here.

    The OTHER forum is HERE so please stop asking.

Scientists: Israel proves every developed country can subdue COVID with vaccines.

shockshiok

Alfrescian
Loyal
Singapore very slow in comparison.

https://www.timesofisrael.com/scien...loped-country-can-subdue-covid-with-vaccines/

Scientists: Israel proves every developed country can subdue COVID with vaccines
Prof. Dan Yamin says hospitals became safe from meltdown once 50% of over-60s were vaccinated, even with highly infectious variants


By NATHAN JEFFAY 20 April 2021, 7:05 pm 0

Prominent scientists say the transformation of Israel from a COVID-19 hotspot to a vaccination success story underlines that any developed country can subdue the virus.

They estimate that a relatively small number of vaccinations are needed to take a country out of crisis mode. The moment that half of the population aged 60-plus is inoculated, authorities can expect a dramatic drop in cases and hospitals are safe from being overwhelmed, they conclude.

An Israeli man cuts through a huge face mask as Israelis celebrate the end of the outdoor mask mandate, in Jerusalem, April 18, 2021. (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90)
Prominent scientists say the transformation of Israel from a COVID-19 hotspot to a vaccination success story underlines that any developed country can subdue the virus.
They estimate that a relatively small number of vaccinations are needed to take a country out of crisis mode. The moment that half of the population aged 60-plus is inoculated, authorities can expect a dramatic drop in cases and hospitals are safe from being overwhelmed, they conclude.

The claims come from authors of a detailed report, published as a peer-reviewed article in the journal Cell Reports Medicine, on just how dire a COVID situation Israel faced in the early weeks of the vaccination campaign, especially as the new, highly infectious British variant was on the rampage.


Israel was facing a range of factors that made the situation here particularly difficult, and if it succeeded despite all of this, and we could achieve a rapid decline in cases, then any developed country can,” Prof. Dan Yamin of Tel Aviv University told The Times of Israel.

F210311YS20-1-640x400.jpg

An Israeli man receives a COVID-19 shot at a vaccination center in Jerusalem, on March 11, 2021. (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90)
He said that most other Western countries are in a better situation as they embark, or prepare to embark, on their vaccination programs, and therefore can be particularly confident upon seeing Israel’s infection, hospitalization, and death rates hit rock bottom.

His data suggests that vaccines quickly saved “hundreds of lives” in Israel, and his statistical analysis shows that the health service was swiftly protected from meltdown as a critical mass of 60-plus received vaccines.

WhatsApp-Image-2020-09-02-at-15.26.26-300x480.jpeg

Prof Dan Yamin of Tel Aviv University (Moshe Baderashi)
“The message to the world, especially European countries, the US and developed countries in Asia, is that if you reach 50% coverage among adults over 60 you will see a dramatic decline in severe cases and can ensure you will avoid hospitals being overwhelmed,” he said.

Yamin thinks that vaccines can and should reach countries beyond the developed world, but limited his comments to Western countries as others don’t have infrastructure for distributing and administering vaccines that would make a comparison with Israel relevant.

The study, reported by The Times of Israel in February before it was peer-reviewed, is based on data from some 300,000 coronavirus tests conducted by health authorities. Data from these tests gave a clear picture of how, just as the vaccination drive was gathering pace, the extra-infectious British variant spread rapidly across Israel.

The research found that it has proved 45 percent more transmissible than the regular coronavirus in Israel, and that in just two months after first arriving in the country, it came to account for 95% of coronavirus cases — which is believed to be higher than in most countries apart from the UK.

Yamin, head of Tel Aviv University’s Laboratory for Epidemic Modeling and Analysis, noted that in addition to contending with the hazards of this variant, Israel was among the nations with the highest levels of new infections as vaccination got underway.

“As well as facing an extra-transmissive variant, Israel is a highly transmissive environment,” he said. “This is the case because there is densely concentrated housing, big young populations where asymptomatic infections are common and ‘silent epidemics’ are possible, and because of large household sizes.

“When you remember that most infection takes place in households, the challenges that Israel faced are clearer.”

Untitled-4-640x400.jpg

A health care worker takes coronavirus test samples of Israelis in a drive through complex in northern Israel, March 4, 2021. (David Cohen/Flash90)
He said that vaccines in Israel quickly overcame the multiple challenges that the country was facing, and prevented the British variant from getting a foothold among the vulnerable 60-plus age group, which was already getting vaccinated as it arrived.

Yamin’s research, co-authored with Prof. Ariel Munitz and Prof. Moti Gerlitz of Tel Aviv University’s Department of Clinical Microbiology and Immunology at the Sackler Faculty of Medicine, indicates that as the British variant spread fast among under-60s in January, it actually started to decline among the elderly by the middle of the month.

Had it made inroads among the 60-plus, this could have accelerated the pandemic in the age group most likely to respond badly to the virus.

The new research gives encouragement to Western countries that as they vaccinate, “their curve of infection will break,” said Yamin.
 

nirvarq

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
Why SG 60K infected no one died no one in critical conditions and none of the banglas workers have any serious sickness or symptoms and all the boomers in SG and that's a lot of them all np ?! (We have only 30 so call 'covid related' deaths 1.5 years and more than 90% are imported and already dying)

What Covid, what flu and what Pandemic for SG ?!
 

capamerica

Alfrescian
Loyal
This is fake news. Look at Israel. No more masks, social distancing, safety measures. People are happy, enjoying their lives again,

Who wants that? How dare Israel and Joe Biden vaccinate so many people?

We want businesses closed, and people to die, that is the point of the Pandemic.

Disgusting.

As I have said many times the Jews always are one step ahead if there is a natural disaster meteorite hits the earth etc the Zionists will find a way to survive
 

Leongsam

High Order Twit / Low SES subject
Admin
Asset
South Africa proves that no vaccines are needed.

Both countries have less than 2 deaths per million.


Screen Shot 2021-04-25 at 1.46.48 PM.png
 

TuckFrump

Alfrescian
Loyal
South Africa proves that no vaccines are needed.

Both countries have less than 2 deaths per million.


View attachment 108940

https://www.medpagetoday.com/special-reports/exclusives/92230


In Israel, Life Gets Closer to 'Normal'
— But one of the most successful COVID vaccine campaigns in the world may be tough to replicate
by Jennifer Henderson, Enterprise & Investigative Writer, MedPage Today April 22, 2021

share to facebook
share to twitter
share to linkedin

email article
A syringe draws from a vial labeled: COVID-19 VACCINE with the Israeli flag over a background of covid-19 viruses

Countries around the world are looking to Israel as a model of how vaccination could bring a return to "normal," but whether it can be replicated remains unknown.
With 57% of its population fully vaccinated, the country may have already reached herd immunity if those who have contracted and recovered from COVID-19 are included in its protected group.
Cases have fallen from a peak of more than 8,000 a day, on average, in mid-January to just a few hundred per day, with only about 250 people currently hospitalized and 160 seriously ill. With the help of a vaccine passport system, Israelis are going back to gyms, restaurants, stadiums, and theaters. The country has also lifted an outdoor mask mandate, and inked new deals with Pfizer and Moderna for booster shots as more variants emerge.

Some of the factors that have helped Israel speed the vaccination process may prove difficult to emulate, but there are measures the U.S. -- and other countries with slower vaccine uptake -- could turn to, experts said.
The Israeli government has taken certain actions that have made it different from other places, Dorit Reiss, PhD, professor of law at UC Hastings College of Law in San Francisco, told MedPage Today. In January, the government signed an initial deal with Pfizer in which the company would deliver vaccines early in exchange for sharing aggregated data on its inoculations.
Israel is an ideal place for mining vaccination data because its healthcare system consists of a small number of large HMOs, and most people are a part of it, Reiss said. The necessary infrastructure is already in place for conveniently distributing vaccines and maintaining data on inoculations. That's far different the decentralized U.S. system, she said.

Many people in the U.S. have had to travel a long way to get the COVID-19 vaccine, Reiss said. In Israel, if someone has to travel half an hour to get to a doctor, it's highly unusual.
Israel's small geography and population of just about nine million has helped, said Vardit Ravitsky, PhD, professor of bioethics at the University of Montreal. But beyond geographic accessibility, "the organization of the healthcare system was suitable for this type of delivery," she said.
"Everything was centralized and clearly delivered," Ravitsky said. "The rollout was fast and furious."
Israel had priority groups for vaccination, but was also flexible when it came to getting vaccines into as many arms as possible, she said. If there were a few leftover doses on certain days at certain locations, they would be given to anyone.
The benefits of reaching herd immunity are not only about preventing hospitalizations and deaths; they're also about stopping the emergence of new variants, Ravitsky said. Through its data-sharing agreement with Israel, Pfizer will study those potential benefits at certain vaccination milestones.

To date, the benefits have seemed vast. Though there have been reports of the B.1.617 -- or "double mutant" -- Indian variant in Israel, the country has reported some vaccine efficacy against it. A study in the New England Journal of Medicine showed that two doses of the Pfizer vaccine -- in this nationwide, mass vaccination setting -- reduced cases by 94%.
Reiss said Israel's "green pass" or vaccine passport may have provided marginal help when it comes to vaccination rates, but that there are other things that may prove more useful in the U.S., such as better data collection and greater efforts to bring vaccines directly to people, she said.
Aimee Afable, PhD, MPH, of SUNY Downstate Health Sciences University's School of Public Health, concurred, citing the public health tenet of bringing care to where people are.
"We could apply that to vaccination," Afable said. "I still don't see it happening" because of barriers like people not having time to wait on line at vaccination sites, or not having access to the technology needed to sign up for appointments.

The concerns about a slower rollout are real, she said.
"The more you're allowing the virus to spread in a population and also within the host, the more likely the virus can mutate," Afable said. "Low levels of vaccination will contribute to a higher likelihood of mutation and more variants."
Given the significantly higher levels of full vaccination in Israel -- compared to about 25% in the U.S. -- there are more possibilities for the virus to mutate in the U.S., she said.
Additionally, Afable said, the slower a country is with vaccination, the less effective vaccines will end up being. Recently, there have been more positive cases in people who have been fully vaccinated. (Even a small study out of Israel noted the potential for breakthrough infections, especially as a result of new variants.)
Though Afable said she doesn't know if the U.S. will ever move toward universal healthcare, she said she believes more centralized electronic medical records could help to address some of the challenges of low uptake the U.S. is facing.
"With better data, those things can be much more easily identified," Afable said, "and then remedied."
 

TuckFrump

Alfrescian
Loyal

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-56868383

Covid-19: Israel records no daily deaths for the first time in 10 months
Published1 day ago
Share
Related Topics
A teenager receives a vaccination against the coronavirus disease
IMAGE COPYRIGHTREUTERS
image captionIsrael has the highest vaccination rate in the world
Israel has recorded no new daily Covid-19 deaths for the first time in 10 months, as the country pushes ahead with its speedy vaccination drive.
The country's coronavirus death toll remained unchanged at 6,346 on Thursday, health ministry data showed.
The last time Israel reported zero Covid-19 deaths was at the end of June last year, after lockdown measures curbed a first wave of infections.
Israel's outbreak has eased after hitting its peak in January this year.
The Israeli government started to relax lockdown restrictions a month later as vaccinations against Covid-19 were rolled out more widely.
Israel has the highest vaccination rate in the world. On Thursday, the country reached the milestone of five million Covid-19 vaccinations.

Chart showing vaccine doses per 100 people in countries where the population is over one million

1px transparent line

The health ministry said more than 53% of the country's population of about nine million people had received two doses of vaccine.
"This is a tremendous achievement for the health system and Israeli citizens. Together we are eradicating the coronavirus," Health Minister Yuli Edelstein tweeted on Friday.
Last week Eyal Leshem, a director at Israel's largest hospital, the Sheba Medical Center, said the country may be close to reaching "herd immunity".
Herd immunity happens when enough of a population has protection against an infection, thus stopping it from spreading.
World Health Organization (WHO) experts have estimated that at least 65%-70% of a population need vaccination coverage before herd immunity is reached.
Mr Leshem said herd immunity was the "only explanation" for Israel's continued fall in cases as more restrictions were lifted.

"There is a continuous decline despite returning to near normalcy," he said.
"This tells us that even if a person is infected, most people they meet walking around won't be infected by them."
bar chart: cases falling and mobility rising in Israel

1px transparent line

Israel began its vaccination campaign last December and since then, it has been the leading nation globally for the number of doses per head of population.
The country has so far relied on only the two-shot vaccine developed by Pfizer and BioNTech. In February, Israel's health ministry said studies revealed the risk of illness from the virus had dropped 95.8% among people who have had both doses of the Pfizer vaccine.
The country is preparing to start vaccinating children aged 12-15 as soon as the US Food and Drugs Administration, a regulator, approves vaccine use for people in that age bracket.
But while Israel has surged ahead with its vaccination programme, the Palestinian territories have lagged behind.

In March, the Palestinians received the first shipment of about 60,000 vaccines doses under the international Covax vaccine-sharing scheme.
 

TuckFrump

Alfrescian
Loyal
Coronavirus in Israel: 38 new cases, 0.5% of tests return positive
By JERUSALEM POST STAFF
APRIL 25, 2021 10:04
Email Twitter Facebook fb-messenger

Some 38 new cases of the novel coronavirus were reported in Israel on Saturday, with 0.5% of tests returning positive, according to a Sunday morning update by the Health Ministry.

Of those infected, 153 were in serious condition and 91 were on ventilators. The death toll stood at 6,350.
 

capamerica

Alfrescian
Loyal

Tell me, how does it feel to be so bad at just about everything? Fail again.

1 Case per 100,000

https://www.jpost.com/health-scienc...link-between-vaccine-myocarditis-cases-666237

About one in 100,000 people who received the Pfizer coronavirus vaccine suffered from myocarditis – an inflammation of the heart muscle – a preliminary report redacted by the committee of experts tasked by the Health Ministry to monitor the inoculation’s side effect has found, Channel 12 reported on Friday.

The researchers also stressed that more research is needed to confirm the connection between the vaccine and the phenomena.
 

capamerica

Alfrescian
Loyal
South Africa proves that no vaccines are needed.

Both countries have less than 2 deaths per million.


View attachment 108940

Wrong. Again. Still waiting for you to be correct even once, as we see the Jews get on with it

Jews win everytime

https://www.bignewsnetwork.com/news/268962355/israel-no-new-covid-cases-recorded-thursday

Israel: No New COVID Cases Recorded Thursday
Voice of America
24th April 2021, 19:35 GMT+10


Israel's health ministry said Friday that no COVID deaths were recorded on Thursday. It was the first day in 10 months that the ministry did not register any COVID deaths.
The last time no new cases were recorded in the Middle Eastern country was June 29.

Israel has been a world leader in inoculating its population against the coronavirus.
More than 5 million Israelis, a little under 58% of the population, have received both doses of the vaccines.
Meanwhile, India said Saturday that it had recorded 346,786 new COVID cases in the previous 24-hour period. The South Asian nation has reported record-breaking tolls of new cases for several days. At the same time, India's hospitals are scrambling to provide oxygen for the COVID patients who are struggling to breathe.
The Biden administration's top medical adviser on the pandemic, Dr. Anthony Fauci, said Friday the U.S. is attempting to help India contain its coronavirus surge by providing technical support and assistance.
"It is a dire situation that we're trying to help in any way we can," Fauci said at the regularly held White House coronavirus briefing.
The Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center reported early Saturday that there are 145.6 million global COVID-19 infections. The U.S. remains at the top of the list as the country with the most infections at almost 32 million. India is second on the list with more than 16.6 million cases, followed by Brazil with 14.2 million.
A U.S. health panel has recommended ending a pause on the use of the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine, despite evidence that it is linked to rare cases of blood clots.
The advisers to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or the CDC, said Friday that use of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine should be resumed in the U.S. after regulators had paused it last week to review reports of rare but severe blood clots in a handful of Americans who had received the shot.
The panel voted 10-4 for the resumption of the vaccine, arguing that the benefits of the vaccine outweigh the risks.
Seventy-seven inmates at an Iowa maximum security prison for men received overdoses of the Pfizer COVID vaccine earlier this week.
The prisoners at the Iowa State Penitentiary at Fort Madison were reported to have received doses that were six times the amount normally used.
"The large majority of inmates continue to have very minor symptoms consistent with those that receive the recommended dose of the vaccine," Cord Overton, a spokesperson for the Iowa Department of Corrections told the Des Moines Register newspaper in an email.
Two members of the prison's nursing staff, who administered the vaccines, have been placed on leave as the incident is investigated.
Pope Francis met with a group of poor people Friday who were getting their coronavirus vaccinations, which had been donated by the Vatican.
As the group gathered in the Paul VI audience hall at the Vatican to receive their second dose of the 600 available doses, the pope greeted them and volunteers helping with the vaccinations.
 

TuckFrump

Alfrescian
Loyal
Top