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Because covid is over and no one dies of it any more and because it's a cold covid deaths in England have settled into a nicely predictable 100-200 deaths a week other than in winter when they go up to 300-400 per week. Because it's a cold, no one dies of it now and it's over
Because covid is over and no one dies of it any more and because it's a cold covid deaths in England have settled into a nicely predictable 100-200 deaths a week other than in winter when they go up to 300-400 per week. Because it's a cold, no one dies of it now and it's over
“Because covid is over and no one dies of it any more and because it's a cold covid deaths in England have settled into a nicely predictable 100-200 deaths a week other than in winter when they go up to 300-400 per week. Because it's a cold, no one dies of it now and it's over”
·x.com·
Because covid is over and no one dies of it any more and because it's a cold covid deaths in England have settled into a nicely predictable 100-200 deaths a week other than in winter when they go up to 300-400 per week. Because it's a cold, no one dies of it now and it's over
A is circulating (unfortunately spread and amplified by a famous virologist) claiming that is now like influenza.
A is circulating (unfortunately spread and amplified by a famous virologist) claiming that is now like influenza.

In 2024, the facts are clear: COVID far outpaced flu in infections, hospitalizations, and deaths.

COVID also carries the added burden of long COVID, a far more complex, multi-system condition than the long-term effects seen with flu.

COVID is not like the flu. It never was!

·x.com·
A is circulating (unfortunately spread and amplified by a famous virologist) claiming that is now like influenza.
COVID can cause new health problems even 3 years after infection, study finds: 'We don’t know what’s going to happen at 10 years'
COVID can cause new health problems even 3 years after infection, study finds: 'We don’t know what’s going to happen at 10 years'
“People are developing new-onset disease as the result of an infection that they had three years ago,” says Dr. Ziyad Al-Aly, a clinical epidemiologist at Washington University in St. Louis and lead author of the study. ‘It challenges the notion that these viruses are sort of self-contained or that after the acute first phase, they become inconsequential.’”
·fortune.com·
COVID can cause new health problems even 3 years after infection, study finds: 'We don’t know what’s going to happen at 10 years'