• @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    20419 hours ago

    Yes, the old strategy of overwhelming the hospital system with mouth breathers.

    Amazing strategy, Raisinhead.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      1
      edit-2
      6 hours ago

      Shit — This week — I have a relative that had to wait 3 days in the ER to be transferred to a bigger hospital. The big hospital didn’t have a bed.

      The hospital system in America has been overwhelmed for over a month and a half straight now.

      Anymore stress beyond the current quademic (and whatever the unknown illness is — have we figured that out yet?) and we will have to bring back keeping people outside and firing up the refrigerator trucks again.

      these damn jackals

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      1519 hours ago

      Hospitals should be able to refuse patients who get diseases that are preventable with vaccines. Problem solved.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        15 hours ago

        apparently its more contagious than most viruses, they will probably to try to prevent them from going into the hospital

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          13 hours ago

          They’ll definitely want to put them in no contact rooms, but it’s not like those rooms are plentiful.

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            English
            1
            edit-2
            2 hours ago

            and ANti-maskers, distance, and vaxxer will throw a huge fit and fight the staff, like they did with covid, causing many to leave the industry.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        5118 hours ago

        No. For multiple reasons:

        • Vaccines are not 100% effective. They reduce the likelihood of infection if you are exposed. The whole point of trying to get everyone vaccinated is to reduce the infection rate so that there’s less likely to be an outbreak. With a vaccinated population, the virus can’t spread fast enough to maintain a pool of infected people to keep spreading it. But that doesn’t mean nobody gets sick.
        • Vaccines are not as effective on some people. There’s a range of effectiveness.
        • Not everyone can get vaccinated. People with certain allergies or compromised immune systems in particular.
        • Some parts of the population have higher risk factors than others and when they get sick it can be much more serious. Usually the very old and the very young. And again, people with compromised immune systems, or other conditions that complicate the illness.
        • Kids whose parents refuse to get them vaccinated are put at elevated risk through no fault of their own.

        I could probably keep going, but hopefully you get the idea why that’s just not a viable approach.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          09 hours ago

          If they have the vaccine and it doesn’t work, then fine. But if they refuse it without being one of the small groups of people with a diagnosed and documented reason to not get it, then they should stay home and tough it out.

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              English
              08 hours ago

              Which part? The part where your wife told you she was allergic based on zero actual evidence and when you got pressed on it you panicked and resorted to expletives?

              🤡

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        3419 hours ago

        That’s unfortunately an extremely slippery slope.

        If vaccines (or lack thereof) are enough to refuse “service”, why treat lung cancer in smokers? What about type 2 diabetes?

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          -213 hours ago

          Sure, those too. They can sue big tobacco and big sugar for the money to pay for those treatments.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          -317 hours ago

          According to this study, smoking costs our economy ~0.88% of our GDP. That works out to in the ballpark of $600 per capita. Would you change your opinion if you had $600 sitting in front of you? I disagree that it’s a slippery slope, anti-vax, smokers, and overeaters cost a lot of money, and the rest of us foot the bill.

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            1214 hours ago

            You might as well argue that healthy people are a drag since care in old age is so expensive.

            See, I’m German. We have a solidarity based health insurance (mostly). I’m a young, reasonably healthy guy with a reasonably high income. All in all I pay 840€ every month (that’s the maximum amount), even though I cost next to nothing. And I’m okay with that.

            Yes, smoking is bad and I don’t like smokers. But denying them healthcare is deeply deeply inhumane. And in Germany even unconstitutional.

          • @BlindChina
            link
            1515 hours ago

            One of my children is not vaccinated against measles. In addition, although she is vaccinated against whooping cough, she in fact has had whooping cough. I talk about it a lot. You see my child has a compromised immune system and the measles vaccine is a live vaccine so giving her that vaccine could in fact kill her. And the dead vaccines are not terribly effective for her. The end result is I am very pro-vaccine because I rely on other people’s vaccines to keep my child safe. But when a policy is put in place to deny those who are not vaccinated, it affects children like mine who simply can’t be vaccinated. You can say well, those with medical exemptions can still get treatment. Except as soon as there’s a medical exemption, all the anti-vaccine people jump in and claim a medical exemption, and then no one believes medical exemptions and children like mine are at risk. Even worse, some doctors may refuse to give medical exemptions thinking that everybody is lying in order to get an exemption.

            Children do not choose whether or not to be vaccinated. So are you not going to treat an innocent 2-year-old because their parents are idiots? Do we put toddlers to death for the sins of their parents?

            What about a family who can’t vaccinate their 2-year-old because the grandmother lives with them and is immunocompromised once again measles is a live vaccine and you are not supposed to have it if anyone in the house is immunocompromised. So the child certainly can receive the vaccine and would not qualify for an exemption but it would endanger another person in the family.

            The question is where do we draw the line? Who do we let die for poor choices? Just those who make the choices? Or their family members? What do we consider a poor choice? Is not vaccinating your child if it could kill your parent a poor choice? It’s a hard choice, but is it a poor choice? I’d rather not play God and have absolutes.

            I would love to see vaccine mandates put in place with all children required to get a vaccine unless a doctor says otherwise and leave that on the doctor’s shoulders to make medical decisions. What I would not like to see is life and death decisions made based on our judgment call of whether someone is smart, or has made smart choices.

      • @ryrybang
        link
        514 hours ago

        Hospitals should be able to refuse RFK Jr and his immediate family.

      • @SlopppyEngineer
        link
        518 hours ago

        They perhaps don’t need to. The staff in hospitals only got a few token coins as reward for the previous pandemic, and didn’t get much raise or better working conditions since then. People are already walking away because overworked and underpaid. It’s likely a lot of them just quit when a new pandemic would start and the hospitals can barely function.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          112 hours ago

          Nurses at the hospital my spouse works for get like 160k for a regular floor nurse working a day time shift. So, I dunno about them being paid “tokens” whomever told you that probably isn’t a nurse. Of course, the rate varies by city. Do they still have nurses in red states?

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            English
            15 hours ago

            nurses can earn bank depending where they are, travelling nurses can make bank from what ive heard. i think doctors can make alot in some red states, depending on the specialty.

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              English
              13 hours ago

              Travel nurses during Covid made unbelievable bank. I know one nurse who was working the system and pulled in almost 500k for two years by manipulating the overtime system. I can’t blame them, they are totally oblivious at the system level and definitely don’t promote talented managers.

              It’s funny when I hear all that nonsense about nurses not making money, since I’m so close to it and know better. Sure, some places pay crap, but most metropolitan areas pay out big—or have ways to work it. The hospital I know the most about also is considered the worst in the state. It’s actually got a reputation where people go to die. There are so many deaths on the floor and no one does anything about it. Totally preventable too. Wrong meds, skipped meds, patients being ignored or totally forgotten. It’s a fucking mess.

              • @[email protected]
                link
                fedilink
                English
                1
                edit-2
                2 hours ago

                i heard doctors made over a 1mill+ just flying into a desolate red area that drove all its doctor, he only needed to be there like 3 times a week.

                nurses make as much as doctors, and even more in some cases. it made sense when i was in a retail job had a recently hired with me shopper, said he wanted to be a nurse. that last part, seems more like negligence and mismangment by the hospital or network. It was wierd how the nurse that has been in the news charged for someone elses death was in fact the hospitals fault for not staffing more nurses. i tried to get the CLS(for hospitals) but i found out required a grad school certification which i dont qualify, and i heard they made decent money 100k+, definitely not nurse level income though. instead i tried to pursue biotech.