Covid-19 Diary : Sunday 28 November, 2021

A lengthy diary entry today.  You can probably guess why.

But first, it is possibly right around the two year mark since the first official Covid case.  Or maybe not – there may have been earlier cases that have not yet been acknowledged by the Chinese as being Covid cases, because they would interfere with their narrative that, no matter what/where/how/when the virus appeared, it absolutely was nothing to do with their germ warfare (sorry, “virus research”) labs in Wuhan.

As the linked article points out, even though the Chinese tested over 80,000 animals to try and find any sort of link between the virus in the wild, in animals; and the virus as it was being caught by people in Wuhan, they failed.  But, notwithstanding those extraordinary efforts, and their utter failure, China would still prefer us to believe that the virus came from an animal.

As an interesting coincidence, it is also close to a year since the Delta variant first started appearing in India, in early December 2020.  And now, for the second anniversary, our virus gift seems to be the Omicron variant.  When I wrote Thursday’s diary entry, it barely got a two paragraph mention, with no-one really being quite certain how serious or alarming the variant might be.

The Omicron Variant

Probably there hasn’t been a lot of new discoveries between Thursday and Sunday, but in the intervening time, the entire world (and the stock market) has shifted to panic mode, notwithstanding the lack of evidence suggesting panic is necessary.  Many countries have banned travel from many of the southern African countries.  Israel has slammed the door shut and isn’t allowing anyone into its country at all for the next couple of weeks – although this may perhaps be a case of “closing the stable door after the horse has bolted” because it has already detected an in-country case.

The US took a more leisurely approach, although only a few hours on Friday separated Dr Fauci saying it was too soon to decide if any travel restrictions were required and the Administration then announcing a travel ban, but not to take effect until Monday, and with Americans exempted.  That’s about as stupid a “ban” as is possible – three days of uncontrolled travel (there’s not even heightened monitoring of arriving African passengers at present), followed by allowing Americans to come and go without restriction.  Other countries, when they erect a ban, do so quickly and without exception, even if it means stranding their people inconveniently around the world.  There are NZers and Australians who have been wanting to return home for 18 months or more, and still not yet succeeded.

Actually, most travel bans tend to be ineffective, because there is a well-known loophole.  If you are in a banned country, you simply travel to a country which still allows you to enter, then change flights and fly from that country to your ultimate destination.

Let’s quickly look at what has happened since Thursday with the omicron variant.  To start with the nonsensical, there’s been lots of speculation about why WHO skipped two of the letters in the Greek alphabet.  The first skipped letter was “Nu” – it sounding too much like “new”, apparently.  And as for the letter after that, “Xi”, ummm, WHO tells us it is a common last name and goodness only knows WHO wouldn’t want to give offense to anyone with that last name, especially Mr Xi Jinping….  (Although, you’d think, if Xi truly is a common last name, there would be less offense taken, even by hypersensitive souls such as Mr Xi – it is like calling a virus variant the Smith variant.)

As for the variant now known as Omicron, and also referred to as B.1.1.529, it was first discovered way back on November 11, in Botswana.  It was probably “in the wild” for an unknown time prior to then, and it has rapidly risen to now be the dominant strain in South Africa, particularly in the Gauteng Province (where Jo’burg and Pretoria are located) :

This chart vividly shows the rapid rise, and, more to the point, the much faster rise than with earlier variants.  That, combined with what scientists have inferred by the changes to the virus, cause the experts to believe it is much more infectious than the Delta variant.  Opinions differ as to how much more infectious, ranging from maybe 50% more to maybe 500% more.

So, that is the first alarming thing – the new Omicron variant is more infectious.

Now for the second point.  Some of the changes in the Omicron variant seem likely to be designed to avoid the mRNA vaccines that are out there at present – they are changes to the “spike” protein which is the distinguishing feature the mRNA vaccines target.  So it is thought the virus might now be able to circumvent some or much or even all the protection provided by the mRNA vaccines in their present form.  That would be alarming, but only for a short while.  The mRNA vaccine developers are already pretty much done with developing a different version of their vaccine, before the testing to determine whether or not the virus can indeed “escape” the protection of the present forms of the vaccines has been completed.  Testing the current vaccine effectiveness is likely to take a couple of weeks, more or less.

It seems that to get a new version mRNA vaccine approved, all that would be needed is a very brief “safety trial” with perhaps a couple of dozen people in a four – six week trial, and with the new form of vaccine being manufactured while the trial was being conducted, bulk quantities would be available almost as soon as approval was secured.  Another commentary suggested about three months from when work starts to when it begins appearing at local clinics.

So perhaps there might be some weeks of difficulty and new case growth until the new vaccine formula appeared, and then more weeks while the new vaccine was distributed and dispensed, but this would be a short term inconvenience, not a new fact of life for the ongoing future.

A related positive point is that because most treatment drugs are not focused on the spike characteristic, they probably will continue to be essentially as effective against the Omicron variant as they are against earlier variants.  So hang on to your stockpiled ivermectin.

The third point is a total unknown at this point.  There is not yet any understanding as to if the new variant is more or less deadly than the preceding variants.  The good news is there is absolutely no evolutionary pressure on the virus to become more deadly.  If anything, the less deadly it is, the better the virus can propagate itself, and it already seems that, at least in the early stages, an Omicron infection is not as severe or symptomatic as a Delta or other variant infection (this of course makes it easier for people to be unknowingly infected and pass the virus on to more people).

While there’s always a random chance that something terrible might be lurking in all the new changes to the virus that the Omicron variant has, currently, there is no reason to fear the worst, and some suggestion that, if anything, the Omicron variant might be slightly less deadly.

So, with those points understood, what is the actual reality of any impactful threat to us and the world?  The first point here is to note that stopping flights from Africa may help slow the spread of the new variant, but will not stop it.  There’s every good chance the variant is already in the US and in most other countries, too.  We in the US will be among the last to know, because the health authorities here are surprisingly incurious about knowing what virus variants are active among our population; we don’t test virus samples from infected people as often as in other countries.

But slowing is a worthy objective – it we have to get through perhaps three or four months until new vaccines are plentiful, and with the case numbers potentially doubling maybe every 5 days in a worst case scenario, any degree of slowing down starts to really make a difference.

Some countries are also re-introducing lock-downs to a greater or lesser extent.  These will absolutely not stop the virus spreading – if New Zealand was unable to get itself free of the Delta variant after a single case got into the wild, there’s no way countries with less observed/enforced lockdowns can hope to succeed against a more infectious variant.  But, same as with travel restrictions or bans, lockdowns can slow the rate of virus growth, which is good.  Plus, in your personal case, the more you isolate yourself, the less you are personally at risk.

Masks will continue to be helpful.

Omicron Summary

To summarize the preceding discussion :

1.  The Omicron variant seems to be more infectious than the Delta and other variants.

2.  It is probable that current vaccines – particularly the mRNA ones from Pfizer and Moderna – will be less effective against the Omicron variant, but if this is shown to be so, the mRNA “recipe” can be tweaked to create an updated vaccine, a process taking about three months from start of project to start of vaccine availability.

3.  Ivermectin and most other treatments that aren’t focused on immune response will likely continue to be as effective as they are at present.

4.  We don’t know, but at present there is no reason to expect the Omicron variant to be any deadlier than its predecessor variants.

5.  Masks still work.  Fresh air flows and social distancing will keep the aerosolized virus away from you, and avoiding crowds helps you beat the odds of being infected.

6.  The Omicron variant has already been detected in many countries, and is being identified in more every day.  It is probably already in the US, and if it isn’t, it almost surely will be within a week or two, even with the African travel ban.

7.  The big concern has to be the potential for a new surge in cases that might overwhelm our already stretched healthcare system.  If there are any medical procedures you’ve been deferring, perhaps quickly get them seen to now if your healthcare provider is not yet over-committed to urgent care needs.

Ultimately, this is not a good development, but it is not an “end of the world as we know it” development, either.  I talk some more about this and what to do below in the extra content section.

Current Numbers

Estonia rose one place in the minor country list.

In the major country list, the US dropped two places, while the Netherlands rose two and both France and the UK rose one.

There were no changes in the death list.  And, as always, lots of changes in the activity last week list.

Europe suffered a milder 8% rise in new cases for the last week, with 2.5 million new cases reported.  France rose 61%, Portugal 38%, and Luxembourg, Norway and Italy all went up 25%.  Germany went up 19%, and the UK went up only 6%.  Romania continues to enjoy dropping case numbers, with another 30% drop, and its death numbers are also starting to follow suit, with a 32% drop in deaths, too.  Slovenia went down 26%, Ukraine dropped 23%, Estonia 21% and Austria 11%.

In North America, Canada had a mild 5% rise in cases, and Mexico a stronger 19% rise.  I can’t start to guess about the US, which hasn’t had a “real” number reported since Tuesday (due to Thanksgiving) but at that point, it was reporting an 11% rise.

Botswana, where the Omicron variant was first spotted, had a 38% drop in cases for the week, with an extraordinarily low case rate of 192 cases per million people.  But South Africa, where the variant is taking hold, gives us a hint about what might be about to spread elsewhere in the world, with a 250% rise in new cases, although even after that massive jump, it was reporting only 229 cases per million.

The world as a whole saw a 1% drop in cases.

Top Case Rates Minor (population under 10 million) Countries (cases per million)

Rank One Week Ago Today
1 Montenegro (246,361) Montenegro (249,727)
2 Seychelles Seychelles
3 Andorra Andorra (215,809)
4 Gibraltar (205,481) Gibraltar (213,172)
5 Georgia (204,157) Georgia (210,799)
6 Slovenia Slovenia
7 Lithuania Lithuania
8 San Marino San Marino
9 Maldives Estonia
10 Estonia (163,718) Maldives (165,120)

 

Top Case Rates Major (population over 10 million) Countries (cases per million)

Rank One Week Ago Today
1 Czech Republic (185,841) Czech Republic (197,734)
2 USA (145,620) Netherlands (151,242)
3 UK (143,980) UK (148,373)
4 Netherlands (142,097) USA (147,122)
5 Belgium Belgium (145,930)
6 Sweden Sweden
7 Argentina France
8 France Argentina
9 Portugal Portugal
10 Spain Spain
11 Brazil Brazil
12 Turkey (100,137) Turkey (102,155)

 

Top Death Rate Major Countries (deaths per million)

Rank One Week Ago Today
1 Peru  (5,976) Peru  (5,981)
2 Czech Republic (2,988) Czech Republic (3,058)
3 Romania (2,884) Romania (2,953)
4 Brazil (2,854) Brazil (2,861)
5 Argentina (2,543) Argentina (2,545)
6 Colombia Colombia
7 USA (2,378) USA (2,395)
8 Belgium (2,279) Belgium (2,302)
9 Mexico (2,236) Mexico (2,246)
10 Italy (2,207) Italy (2,215)

 

Top Rates in New Cases Reported in the Last Week (new cases per million) for Countries over one million population

Rank One Week Ago Today
1 Slovenia  10,838 Czech Rep  11,871
2 Austria  10,681 Slovakia  10,583
3 Czech Rep Austria  9,547
4 Slovakia Netherlands
5 Netherlands Belgium
6 Croatia Croatia
7 Belgium Slovenia
8 Georgia Hungary
9 Hungary Georgia
10 Ireland Ireland
11 Denmark Denmark
12 Greece  4,544 Germany  4,809

 

Preparing for the Omicron (or any other) Variant

I have been thinking about my own virus strategy, particularly in light of the new Omicron variant appearing.  It ups the odds for all of us that we may be exposed and infected.  One common thread in many of the emails you send me is telling of how either you, personally, or someone close to you, has become infected with the virus, even though you’ve been extremely careful and cautious – limiting your risk and exposure every possible way.

This is not altogether surprising.  A bit like being on the battlefield, no matter what you do, you can only reduce your odds, you can never completely eliminate the risk.

And so my thinking has moved on from avoiding the virus to instead preparing for it and being ready to do battle with it when it tries to invade.  Sure, I’m still being prudent with the risks I accept, but I’m also slightly more relaxed, because of the defensive position I’m creating.

In anticipation of a possible virus attack, I’m taking multi-vitamins every day and augmenting that with extra Vitamin D3.

If I feel I’ve been in a higher risk situation, I’ll use an iodine-povidone type mouthwash, ideally both before and after being in such situations (the classic original Listerine is apparently a good formulation).  I might also take some propolis (capsule or throat spray) and definitely some quercetin phytosome with a meal – important to note, this is different to regular quercetin and has a much stronger level of bio-availability (I’ve linked to the version I’ve bought from Amazon).

If I think I’m infected, I’ll follow the Prevention and Early Outpatient procedures here.

Most important :  I have already stockpiled everything I need.  You should do the same.  Time is of the essence in combatting the virus, it is extremely important to start these treatments in a timely manner.  The last thing you want to have to do, as you get increasingly unwell, is to be desperately trying to source the treatments you need.

I Am Not a Doctor, But….

It seems the telling of every possible virus-related woe always ends up with the same slavish repetition at the end – “so that’s all the more reason to be vaccinated/boostered”.  The irony of the advice – “the vaccines aren’t controlling the virus, so the solution is for more vaccinating” is never commented on.

I fear that many people might think “Well, fair enough, can’t hurt and might help” and so dutifully troop to be vaccinated, and again, and again, whenever it is recommended or required.

Maybe multiple doses of the vaccine do change it from being ineffective to effective.  But multiple vaccinations also layer more and more risks and opportunities for side-effects from the vaccine as well.  Two things to consider.

First, here’s an interesting but complicated article in the NEJM.  It explains that when you take a vaccine, the body responds to the vaccine by creating antibodies, not just to the vaccine, but also to the vaccine-created antibodies, and in some cases, those antibodies end up being very similar to the original virus.  There’s a careful balancing act required so the body doesn’t get too carried away with too much response to the vaccine – that is a major reason why vaccine doses are set as low as possible.

But the thing about a third booster dose is it shoots the level of the vaccine-created antibodies sky-high.  That is something the authorities are boasting about with delight.  But do they not realize there is such a thing as too many vaccine-created antibodies?  The article worries about this, although it is important to put the article and its concerns in context – this is a theoretical discussion rather than the results of a clinical study.

Because of the role of the virus and potentially the anti-antibodies in connecting with ACE2 receptors, and because there are ACE2 receptors in our veins and heart as well as lungs, there is a concern the body’s natural response to the unnatural antibodies might be why we’re seeing a strange and marked increase in heart problems in otherwise perfectly healthy people.

This article points out there have been thousands of unexplained heart attacks in the UK in less than a year – something that has been happening subsequent to the vaccination campaign.  Possibly related?

I’m not saying the vaccine is worse than the virus.  But I most definitely am saying that taking the vaccines are not without measurable consequence, and that’s a truth that people who presumably know enough to understand it are being very careful to obscure.  We have a right to “informed consent” prior to accepting the vaccine, and we’re not being given full and fair information.

Merck’s new molnupiravir anti-Covid drug was originally hailed as miraculous; to me, the most miraculous part was how Merck was able to charge so much for it and have governments around the world lined up, eager to pay ridiculous prices for a thinly researched mutagenic drug.

But now Merck is conceding that molnupiravir is not quite as good as it had first hoped.

This is a text book example of “getting ahead of the bad news”.  The bad news Merck is hoping to get ahead of?  Perhaps molnupiravir is worse than nothing at all, depending on what outcomes you are measuring, according to an independent look at the latest tranche of trial results.

We wonder if Merck will adjust its $712 price down now?  With a manufacturing cost of $20, it can certainly afford to do so.  Probably a lot will depend on how Pfizer prices its own version of a treatment pill.

Here’s an article looking at the respective benefits of vaccine induced or natural post-infection immunity.  It uses the delightful phrase “evidence is growing” (that natural immunity is good, and maybe better than vaccine immunity).

The evidence isn’t really growing.  The evidence has been obvious and expected, right from the get-go.  What is growing however is the slow but sure fight-back against the drug companies and their propaganda that would have us believe their experimental mRNA drugs represent the best possible protection and strategy in the fight against Covid.

Ivermectin and other Existing Treatments

One of the best known and longest existing drugs we have is aspirin.  It is so safe that Costco sells it in bulk 500 pill containers.  And, as you know, aspirin is good for so many things, including protecting against heart disease.  Except that, all of a sudden, our precious medical experts have done a 180° U-turn and now tell us aspirin is bad for our heart, increasing the risk of heart failure by slightly over 25%.

How is it possible for a drug to swing from “really good” to “really bad”.  Aspirin is still aspirin.  You and I – we are still we, aren’t we.  What has changed?

My point is that if doctors can disagree and be so wrong on something that seems not too contentious, well-known, and well-researched, what other things are they getting wrong, too?  Do we trust Doctor A or Doctor B?  Go for best of three?  Best of five?  Doctors might be knowledgeable, but they are not always right.

Vaccine News

Novavax is hoping to get a free ride on the Omicron bus.  Its progress with its promising Covid vaccine has slowed pretty much to a total halt, as best can be seen from the outside, but now it is saying it is re-designing its vaccine to protect against Omicron.  That might rekindle some interest and urgency at the FDA – I certainly hope so.  It remains my wish that my “booster” jab be a Novavax product (or one of the other new vaccines being developed), even though its vaccine is also focused narrowly on the spike protein.

This article claims that major vaccines are 40% less effective against Omicron.  One wonders whether that is “40% less on day one” or “40% less effective after six months”?  In other words, it is a meaningless number.  But, glass half full, that means the present vaccines still retain 60% of whatever effectiveness they have, which is far from a disaster.

Timings And Numbers

Here’s a look at how countries and continents are doing with booster dose levels.

As the world panics about the omicron variant, The Economist seeks to reassure us that the virus will “fade away” in 2022. If only one could feel confident about their prediction.

Shortages

Never mind the release of oil from the US oil strategic reserve – amusingly announced just before oil prices plunged, but not because of the announcement of the strategic reserve depletion (prices rose the day of the announcement itself), but in reaction to the Omicron variant (is it too late to cancel the strategic reserve release?).  You know things are getting truly serious when Canada taps into its strategic reserve.

But, no, in Canada’s case, we’re not talking oil.  We’re talking something much more important; who knew that Canada keeps a huge reserve of maple syrup for emergencies. Canada is releasing 50 million pounds from its maple syrup reserve to alleviate a global shortage (cynics would say “to profit from sky high prices”).

Virus?  What Virus?

As I started off saying, the Omicron variant is generating a level of unreasoning panic that doesn’t seem altogether justified, based on what we know so far.  But try telling that to a politician.  The governor of New York has already declared a state of emergency, even though there isn’t yet a single Omicron case in her entire state (that we know of).

Please stay happy and healthy; all going well, I’ll be back again on Thursday.

 

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