Competition Between Respiratory Viruses May Hold Off a 'Tripledemic' This Winter (science.org) 88
sciencehabit shares a report from Science Magazine: Triple threat. Tripledemic. A viral perfect storm. These frightening phrases have dominated recent headlines as some health officials, clinicians, and scientists forecast that SARS-CoV-2, influenza, and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) could surge at the same time in Northern Hemisphere locales that have relaxed masking, social distancing, and other COVID-19 precautions. But a growing body of epidemiological and laboratory evidence offers some reassurance: SARS-CoV-2 and other respiratory viruses often "interfere" with each other. Although waves of each virus may stress emergency rooms and intensive care units, the small clique of researchers who study these viral collisions say there is little chance the trio will peak together and collectively crash hospital systems the way COVID-19 did at the pandemic's start.
"Flu and other respiratory viruses and SARS-CoV-2 just don't get along very well together," says virologist Richard Webby, an influenza researcher at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital. "It's unlikely that they will circulate widely at the same time." "One virus tends to bully the others," adds epidemiologist Ben Cowling at the University of Hong Kong School of Public Health. During the surge of the highly transmissible Omicron variant of SARS-CoV-2 in Hong Kong in March, Cowling found that other respiratory viruses "disappeared ... and they came back again in April." When a respiratory virus sweeps through a community, interferons can broadly raise the body's defenses and temporarily erect a populationwide immune barrier against subsequent viruses that target the respiratory system. "Basically, every virus triggers the interferon response to some extent, and every virus is susceptible to it," says immunologist Ellen Foxman at Yale University, who has been exploring interference between SARS-CoV-2 and other viruses in a laboratory model of the human airway. Rhinoviruses, which cause common colds, can trip up influenza A (the most prevalent flu virus). RSV can bump rhinoviruses and human metapneumoviruses. Influenza A can thwart its distant cousin influenza B. "There are a lot of major health implications from viral interference," says Guy Boivin, a virologist at Laval University who co-authored a review (PDF) on viral interference earlier this year.
Now, viral interference researchers are closely watching the newest respiratory virus to circle the globe. "What interactions could SARS-CoV-2 have with other viruses?" Murcia asks. "To this day, there are no robust epidemiological data." For one thing, the widespread social distancing and mask wearing in many countries meant there was little chance to see interference in action. "There was almost no circulation of other respiratory viruses during the first 3 years of the pandemic," Boivin says. Also, SARS-CoV-2 has many defenses against interferons, including preventing their production, which might affect its interactions with other viruses. Still, Foxman has published evidence that, in her organoid model, rhinovirus can interfere with SARS-CoV-2. And Boivin's team has reported (PDF) that influenza A and SARS-CoV-2 each can block the other in cell studies.
"Flu and other respiratory viruses and SARS-CoV-2 just don't get along very well together," says virologist Richard Webby, an influenza researcher at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital. "It's unlikely that they will circulate widely at the same time." "One virus tends to bully the others," adds epidemiologist Ben Cowling at the University of Hong Kong School of Public Health. During the surge of the highly transmissible Omicron variant of SARS-CoV-2 in Hong Kong in March, Cowling found that other respiratory viruses "disappeared ... and they came back again in April." When a respiratory virus sweeps through a community, interferons can broadly raise the body's defenses and temporarily erect a populationwide immune barrier against subsequent viruses that target the respiratory system. "Basically, every virus triggers the interferon response to some extent, and every virus is susceptible to it," says immunologist Ellen Foxman at Yale University, who has been exploring interference between SARS-CoV-2 and other viruses in a laboratory model of the human airway. Rhinoviruses, which cause common colds, can trip up influenza A (the most prevalent flu virus). RSV can bump rhinoviruses and human metapneumoviruses. Influenza A can thwart its distant cousin influenza B. "There are a lot of major health implications from viral interference," says Guy Boivin, a virologist at Laval University who co-authored a review (PDF) on viral interference earlier this year.
Now, viral interference researchers are closely watching the newest respiratory virus to circle the globe. "What interactions could SARS-CoV-2 have with other viruses?" Murcia asks. "To this day, there are no robust epidemiological data." For one thing, the widespread social distancing and mask wearing in many countries meant there was little chance to see interference in action. "There was almost no circulation of other respiratory viruses during the first 3 years of the pandemic," Boivin says. Also, SARS-CoV-2 has many defenses against interferons, including preventing their production, which might affect its interactions with other viruses. Still, Foxman has published evidence that, in her organoid model, rhinovirus can interfere with SARS-CoV-2. And Boivin's team has reported (PDF) that influenza A and SARS-CoV-2 each can block the other in cell studies.
Re:Pandemic fetishism (Score:4, Insightful)
If you're not concerned about your fellow humans, then what are you afraid of?
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If your'e fat, sick, very old, and afraid of you own shadow then by all means possible isolate yourself as much a possible. You'll be doing yourself and the rest of us a favor
All of that stuff increases your risk of death or complications, but otherwise healthy people are suffering severe effects. But by all means, go out and get Covid a bunch of times and let us know how that goes for you.
Also, if you're a coward, troll, or too stupid to keep track of this stuff, you're the one who should be isolated... from Slashdot
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All of that stuff increases your risk of death or complications, but otherwise healthy people are suffering severe effects. But by all means, go out and get Covid a bunch of times and let us know how that goes for you.
Going out and getting covid a bunch of times is exactly what the world is doing and will keep on doing far into the distant future. In the process most won't even realize it's even happening.
It's one thing to take reasonable action to prevent exposure to an avoidable harm. It's quite another to without compensating benefits expend time and effort in a futile attempt to prevent exposure to a fundamentally unavoidable one.
Sars2 is one of the most infectious respiratory viruses known to man. There is no chance of stopping it. Everyone is being repeatedly (re)exposed to it throughout their lifetime and there is nothing constructive anyone can do about it. It is known from serological surveys the vast majority of people who think they successfully avoided covid didn't.
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All of that stuff increases your risk of death or complications, but otherwise healthy people are suffering severe effects. But by all means, go out and get Covid a bunch of times and let us know how that goes for you.
Going out and getting covid a bunch of times is exactly what the world is doing and will keep on doing far into the distant future. In the process most won't even realize it's even happening.
It's one thing to take reasonable action to prevent exposure to an avoidable harm. It's quite another to without compensating benefits expend time and effort in a futile attempt to prevent exposure to a fundamentally unavoidable one.
Sars2 is one of the most infectious respiratory viruses known to man. There is no cha
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This is slashdot and Covid is a hot button issue.
Stop being reasonable and making sense. You'll get voted off the island.
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It is known from serological surveys the vast majority of people who think they successfully avoided covid didn't.
It's also known that the more times you get it, the greater the chance you'll suffer significant effects, so it's in your best interest to reduce the number of infections.
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You have probably been exposed and contracted Covid a number of times.
Almost certainly, yes. I'm pretty sure I got it super early, actually.
You just did not realize it because you are asymptomatic and have five boosters.
I was not at all asymptomatic, and I do realize it. You're talking out of the wrong hole again, like literally always. Are you getting paid to run this troll patrol or is your life just that sad and empty, like your arguments?
But we all know you do not care about Covid
Who, all of you who work in the Chinese troll farm?
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It's also known that the more times you get it, the greater the chance you'll suffer significant effects, so it's in your best interest to reduce the number of infections.
There is nothing about actual risks being communicated in these statements only abstract concepts. It's true people are being symptomatically reinfected. It's also true people can be reinfected and suffer worse outcomes or die. This is true of many viruses and many things.
My risk of being run over by a vehicle is higher if I venture outside. Is it therefore in my best interest not to venture outside?
The best one can reasonably hope for by employing NPIs is to delay reinfection. What is the real world i
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Your logic is also applicable to jay-walking. The more you do it the greater the danger of getting mowed down. And yet....
Re: Pandemic fetishism (Score:1)
Can you please cite data for your claptrap, thatâ(TM)s not how disease works. If you get exposed, you are much more likely to have immunity for the next cycle. You donâ(TM)t get increasingly weak from catching the flu or any other virus.
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It is known from serological surveys the vast majority of people who think they successfully avoided covid didn't.
And yet every time one of these surveys comes out, it seems like they drew all of their conclusions from sampling a subset of the population that isn't even remotely representative... Unless you live in whatever bubble the people doing it inhabit. These surveys always seem to be based on people who frequent certain medical establishments, or who get certain blood tests, which a lot of people honestly don't.
Its been a long time since I've heard anything about a serological survey based on actually going ou
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Notice you could not / would not refute any of my claims about who actually dies
I'm not wasting time on your false dipshittery, and you didn't provide any evidence for your claims so there's nothing specific to refute. Run along, brave guy.
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I'm not wasting time on your false dipshittery, and you didn't provide any evidence for your claims so there's nothing specific to refute. Run along, brave guy.
Suck a dick: https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/arti... [cdc.gov]
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Suck a dick: https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/arti [cdc.gov]...
Wow, you didn't read this fucking report at all, did you? "One limitation of our study is that we used a convenience sample of COVID-19 cases collected by the TDH, which led to collection biases. For our comorbidity analysis, we excluded cases without any comorbidity information, which led to selection bias"
And oh look at the principal chart in this "chart-based study" that you imagine shows that young people aren't dying, there's no data in your study for people under 21, what a fuckup you are, just like
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Having his guns taken away.
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Yay, I finally got my Troll mod badge! Took way too long, though, several HOURS. The Slashdot nannies are really falling down on the job. However, I heard that several tens of thousands of techies are suddenly finding themselves with a lot of time on their hands, so maybe we can restore The Narrative Brigade to its former levels of efficiency.
YES to censorship.
NO to free thinking.
Speech is violence.
Not speaking is also violence.
EVERYTHING is violence.
Re:Pandemic fetishism (Score:4, Informative)
Well, it could be.
Until about 2 years ago, flu season was by no means newsworthy. We had a couple sick people, some needed more care than others, most just stayed home. A couple of patients had to be taken to ICUs, but that was something we could handle.
The last 2 years, with all the lockdowns in place, flu season was canceled. No flu cases, but that was a really good thing since our hospitals were reaching their breaking point with covid cases putting a pretty heavy strain on ICU units, bringing them to the brink of breaking, and some even had to shuffle patients to other hospitals because they were above capacity, with patients on the hospital corridors because there simply was no room left.
Now let's combine this, with Covid putting a high basic load on ICUs and the return of flu season because nobody gives a fuck about distance recommendations anymore.
You think that's gonna be newsworthy?
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Until about 2 years ago, flu season was by no means newsworthy. We had a couple sick people, some needed more care than others, most just stayed home. A couple of patients had to be taken to ICUs, but that was something we could handle.
One can easily Google news articles of overwhelmed hospitals nearly every year from the flu. Over the past few decades the total real number of hospital beds in the US declined by ~500k while at the same time the population grew substantially as it aged and regressed in terms of diet, exercise, obesity and diabetes.
What we could handle is decreasing all the time for the simple reason bean counters want to maximize profit.
The last 2 years, with all the lockdowns in place, flu season was canceled. No flu cases, but that was a really good thing since our hospitals were reaching their breaking point with covid cases putting a pretty heavy strain on ICU units, bringing them to the brink of breaking, and some even had to shuffle patients to other hospitals because they were above capacity, with patients on the hospital corridors because there simply was no room left.
In some places over narrow windows of time it was certainly true hospitals were under
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I have resisted the urge to mod you down, but with your trolling or plain stupidity, it is hard.
You're either a troll or very misinformed and acting like you know what you are talking about.
ICU's are overwhelmed in my country, especially the children's ones, Covid is still killing people and now so is the flu and a hell of a lot of children are going to the emergency and waiting hours to see a Doctor. And where I am, there was barely a lockdown and the kids stayed in school and they're still getting sick no
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Here in Canada, generally the hospitals have been overloaded with small town emergency rooms needing to close to lack of personal at times, people waiting for hours just to get triaged, huge backlogs for important things like cancer surgery and one hell of a lot of personal, mostly nurses, burning out and quitting. In my Province (BC) there's also more people dying from Covid as during all but the peaks of the pandemic.
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Here in Canada...
Didn't you recently fire 5% of staff for refusing to vaccinate (while already having natural immunity) in a system that was pre-COVID running at 120% capacity? What make you think THIS flu season is what caused the emergency?
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I have resisted the urge to mod you down, but with your trolling or plain stupidity, it is hard. You're either a troll or very misinformed and acting like you know what you are talking about.
Derisive commentary serves no constructive purpose. If you disagree it is possible to communicate what you believe is wrong without being disagreeable.
ICU's are overwhelmed in my country, especially the children's ones
Not from covid they are not. Other respiratory diseases (e.g. RSV) are doing that in many areas. Severity of the RSV outbreaks are a direct result of NPIs employed to delay covid infections.
Covid is still killing people and now so is the flu
This is obviously true.
a hell of a lot of children are going to the emergency and waiting hours to see a Doctor.
Again my comments in regards to ICU were specific to covid nothing else. You seem to be making orthogonal statements rather than refuting even
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As a reminder there is no mod on this site for I disagree, I dislike this person or this persons facts are wrong. If you are unable to follow the rules of this site please refrain from moderation.
See following references for all points made.
One can easily Google news articles of overwhelmed hospitals nearly every year from the flu.
https://time.com/5107984/hospi... [time.com]
https://www.latimes.com/local/... [latimes.com]
https://www.upi.com/Top_News/U... [upi.com]
https://www.daytondailynews.co... [daytondailynews.com]
https://www.texastribune.org/2... [texastribune.org]
https://www.nytimes.com/2000/0... [nytimes.com]
Over the past few decades the total real number of hospital beds in the US declined by ~500k
https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/... [cdc.gov]
Not only did the hospitals lose countless billions of dollars laying off staff the public
https://www.fiercehealthcare.c... [fiercehealthcare.com]
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Re: Pandemic fetishism (Score:1)
Can you please cite a single large hospital system in the US that was continuously overwhelmed. Because most hospitals had to lay off nurses and doctors in the âoemiddleâ of the pandemic and then laid off another cycle with forced mask and vaccine mandates.
In the EU, sure, even a hot day can overwhelm a hospital.
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Well, it could be.
We have clear before and after data - how people reacted to a bad flu season historically and how they do now. What you are seeing now are reactions of people who REALLY liked lockdowns wanting to get back to these by any means possible.
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What is now "long covid symptoms" used to be called number of things: "cabin fever", "chronic fatigue syndrome", "chronic chest wall syndrome" and number of other unexplained symptoms/conditions. Nowadays, if you mentioned link to covid in the paper, the research grants will pour in. The academia is rotten. It is not fetishism. It is greed, fraud, vanity and incompetence.
Yes, yes. It's all a big conspiracy. It runs so deep even covid is involved by damaging the lungs [hopkinsmedicine.org], the kidneys [hopkinsmedicine.org], and even the heart [hopkinsmedicine.org], conditions which are completely undetectable and so fall into "chronic fatigue syndrome".
Apparently the medical communities vow to save lives shouldn't be adhered to in your world. Please let them know if you ever get seriously sick or injured you don't wany treatment of any kind. You know, so you don't promote their greed, fraud, vanity, and incompetence. Wouldn't want you
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That sounds scary. For my part, I think I'll keep the denialism going. Life's easier without worries.
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Abnormally intense flu seasons have been reported on since way before Covid-19. Presumably you date that as the beginning of "pandemic fetishism", but infectious disease outbreaks always were, and always will be, newsworthy.
Re: Pandemic fetishism (Score:1)
Actually, locking up people for 3 years and making half the population into germophobes has created a great bed for regular viruses like flu, cold and coronavirus to target a population that has now a lacking immune response.
Hospitals and pediatricians are already seeing a massive wave of children that are severely ill with classic childhood diseases because they werenâ(TM)t allowed to build up an immune system for going on 3 years. The effect of this unnecessary lockdown and mask mandates that at best
I placed my bet (Score:4, Funny)
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The problem is that while individually your immune system will, when fighting one likely block the others, it doesn't mean different people won't be fighting different diseases at the same time.
COVID will hit one person who while recovering from it not get RSV or the flu. Meanwhile someone else gets the flu and not COVID or RSV. Etc. But then all three circulate even if only one affects anyone, and now you have all 3 kinds of people needing to go to hospital, flooding it
Three Stooges Syndrome (Score:4, Informative)
Twitter is hoping for something similar (Score:2)
Critical malfunctions will prevent hackers stealing personal information
NOT PANDEMIC, IT'S A TRIPPEDEMIV!! 1! (Score:1)
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Obligatory and prescient: https://www.theonion.com/fuck-... [theonion.com]
From the article (Score:2)
"researchers who study these viral collisions say there is little chance the trio will peak together and collectively crash hospital systems"
Stay healthy, my friends.
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I loved the various Superman vs doomsday movies and comics, too.
Re:From the article (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm going to stay healthy by disregarding each and every article pushing fear
What fear? Show one article pushing "fear".
Apparently informing people is now considered pushing "fear". Here's what we'll do, the next time a hurricane is moving toward one of the southern coasts it won't be mentioned. Don't want to push out "fear" of an insignificant bit of wind and rain. Same with any snowstorms for those in the northern part. No need to tell people to take precautions or even be aware a storm is coming. The "fear" would be too great for the population to bear.
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So then you agree when weather reports says "it's a perfect storm" of systems coming together which will drop X inches of rain or X feet of snow, it's fear mongering. Got it. Never again can any words which describe a situation be used because snowflakes such as yourself might flee in panic because of word choice.
Just like having to wear a mask for an insignificant part of one's day to help prevent the spread of a virus which so far has killed an extra 1.3 million people in two years. It's a travesty to t
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I look forward to you receiving your Herman Cain award
A small clique (Score:1)
Re: A small clique (Score:2)
It may - or it may not (Score:2)
From one of the articles linked:
Still, interference isn’t a sure thing when multiple viruses are circulating. A household survey of 2117 people in Nicaragua, for example, found both flu and COVID-19 cases peaked at the same time in February, suggesting “limited viral interference,” the researchers concluded in a preprint. “I think of interference as a small push,” says Aubree Gordon, the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, researcher who led the study with colleagues from Nicaragua’s Ministry of Health. “It depends on population immunity and when that virus last circulated and flu and COVID vaccination rates.”
So there may be appreciable, little, or no effect of one virus on another. What I find interesting is the effect of "flu and Covid vaccination rates" - I wish they had either specified what those effects are, or said that they simply don't know. Assuming that avoiding a Covid infection or minimizing its effects is the top priority, I'd like to know if getting the flu shot a few weeks after my Covid shot was good or bad.
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Assuming that avoiding a Covid infection or minimizing its effects is the top priority, I'd like to know if getting the flu shot a few weeks after my Covid shot was good or bad.
Depends, did they target the right strains this year? I haven't checked yet, so I actually don't know. I've never got the flu shot before, but as I am getting older, I am starting to think about it. I am sick right now, covid test negative, so I might have a flu already. There was one minor episode of vomiting, and I still have muscle aches and sore throat. My lady is also sick with apparently the same thing.
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Assuming that avoiding a Covid infection or minimizing its effects is the top priority, I'd like to know if getting the flu shot a few weeks after my Covid shot was good or bad.
Depends, did they target the right strains this year? I haven't checked yet, so I actually don't know.
Flu took a big dive in terms of genetic diversity during the first two flu seasons during the COVID pandemic, between the masking, the social distancing, the elevated vaccination rate, the steep reduction in foreign travel, and viral interference. H1N1 was nearly wiped off the map, and Influenza B/Yamagata *was* wiped off the map.
I would expect targeting to be closer than average, then. Unfortunately, last season, it was a bad mismatch (thirty-odd-percent effectiveness, with some early estimates suggestin
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But then, people lose immunity to these viruses and the waves of infections come in.
You don't lose immunity to a virus. You lose immunity to a specific strain of a virus. It's why the flu shot changes each year. It's a different strain so your body needs the extra boost to fight it if by chance you do become infected.
We knew all that already. We just chose to ignore the consequences.
When you say ignore the consequences, you mean people who didn't want to wear a mask and died from contracting covid? Peop
immune system overdrive (Score:3)
what i heard from someone who has experience with infections is that the human body immune system goes into such complete fanatical overdrive when first detecting any infection that any *new* infection is obliterated. what Richard Webby is saying seems to concur with that [simplistic] perspective.
what the person also told me is, if you *do* get more than one infection at a time, it's because you're dying (basically). your body - including your entire immune system - is shutting down.
the bit that's new to me is that Foxman's team appears to be saying that the actual *viruses themselves* tend to clobber other viruses, which is really very interesting.
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what i heard from someone who has experience with infections is that the human body immune system goes into such complete fanatical overdrive when first detecting any infection that any *new* infection is obliterated. what Richard Webby is saying seems to concur with that [simplistic] perspective. what the person also told me is, if you *do* get more than one infection at a time, it's because you're dying (basically). your body - including your entire immune system - is shutting down.
the bit that's new to me is that Foxman's team appears to be saying that the actual *viruses themselves* tend to clobber other viruses, which is really very interesting.
I don't think that any of the expressed concern involves any specific individual acquiring multiple respiratory illnesses at the same time. The concern is that there are three circulating widely at once, tripling the exposure. You'll only get sick with one, but odds of encountering something is higher.
Think of it sort of like wildfires and simultaneous flood season. Sure, you're probably not going to get a fire the same day you get a flood, but you've still got two major issues that might wipe out your
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I don't think that any of the expressed concern involves any specific individual acquiring multiple respiratory illnesses at the same time.
While it's believed to be unusual to date, you can get flu and covid at the same time [frontiersin.org] (for example) and there's no particular reason to believe otherwise. There was a lot of mask use through the last two flu seasons, and masks are more effective at stopping flu than covid, so the incidence of influenza infection was decreased.
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what i heard from someone who has experience with infections is that the human body immune system goes into such complete fanatical overdrive when first detecting any infection that any *new* infection is obliterated. what Richard Webby is saying seems to concur with that [simplistic] perspective.
what the person also told me is, if you *do* get more than one infection at a time, it's because you're dying (basically). your body - including your entire immune system - is shutting down.
the bit that's new to me is that Foxman's team appears to be saying that the actual *viruses themselves* tend to clobber other viruses, which is really very interesting.
I suspect that's mostly right, a lot of the reason you feel sick isn't the infection itself, it's the immune response. So once you are sick it's probably difficult to get a secondary infection.
But that would also suggest you can get infected with both COVID and the flu as long as both infections really take off at the same time.
If that model is right (the general immune response making new infections really difficult) it suggests that if you've just had an exposure to COVID or another virus you might be abl
Re: immune system overdrive (Score:2)
Multiple infections at one time are possible... (Score:3)
A part of the "competition between viruses" that may be more relevant than the "interaction between viruses" for the situation at ICUs is the competition for the limited number of individuals with compromised immune systems - and that number does not change depending on how may different kinds of viruses circulate.
Leprosy (Score:2)
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That's the most interesting comment I've seen all week.
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It read in a book about the plague, that it was responsible for chasing leprosy out of Europe in the same way.
Yes, when you kill half the population and people are further spread out and not interacting with one another, infections tend to go down. In the same way that social distancing helps prevent the spread of viruses to others.
The Simpsons 3 Stooges Syndrome.. (Score:1)
Kick up the fear machine (Score:1)
RSV is no joke (Score:2)
Entering my second week with what i am pretty sure is the RSV. Have no energy, its hard to breathe and go up stairs, when before this I was perfectly fine and healthy.
Its pretty nasty. I find I am sleeping most days immediately when i get home from work. No appetite at all, and for the first 5 days i had these chain lightning headaches and fevers. Its not fun at all. Thought it was a head cold at first but its been dragging.
Fear industrial complex (Score:2)
Let's throw around buzzwords like "Tripledemic" to get the masses all excited and scared and easily controlable. "Dance, monkey, dance! And do it all on one foot". And this was something that was going on long before Covid. Terrorism was a big win for the fear machine, and we had other panics thrown around scince the 1970s and before, but the 21st century is when it really got going. And people bring out their most fascist tendencies to fight the big boobymen and monster others into submission with more rul