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Erie County Dept. of Health Warning Fans Who Plan on Attending the Miami Game


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45 minutes ago, billspro said:


In Canada the tests are required to have a minimum of 90% sensitivity and 95% specificity. I’m sure most of them are better than that. Those are very accurate numbers for a medical test. 
 

I didn’t say anything incorrect. All I said is the COVID test is a snapshot in time. If you have tested positive before and it is now negative that means you have immunity (this can be partial or full). If you test negative you are likely negative at that moment. You could have had it previously or you could still get it. If you get exposed to any virus you can get it multiple times. Whether you have had a previous exposure or a vaccine hopefully it will be much less severe the second/third/fourth time etc. False negative exist, it’s probably around 5%.  You were the one that said 99%, I just said 99% would be very good. Anything over 90% is actually good for a medical test and it improves when you factor symptoms in. 

 

5 hours ago, billspro said:


This is true. It’s statistically insignificant. 

 

2 hours ago, billspro said:


Of course people with a false negative can spread it. If you have a false negative it means your positive. It just doesn’t happen frequently enough to worry about. Unless the goal is to bring COVID transmission to 0%, which does not seem realistic to me. 
 

You can get any disease more than once. You can also get COVID if you have a vaccine to it. It just means your immune system will be more prepared and you are more likely to be asymptomatic. This is basic immunology and if you haven’t taken a course you shouldn’t talk about COVID online imo.

 

You said that false positives were statistically insignificant which I supplied a ton of data to counter and you continue to just say it without any evidence at all. I never said 99%, I said at 99% it would still be awful and the china test had somewhere between 93% and 60% depending. You were the one that made claim to it and then edited your post. Perhaps it was missing context, which is fine.

Simply put: The data suggests there is reason to believe tests are inaccurate to a very statistically significant level, meaning that just because you tested negative does not mean you don't have it and just because you tested positive and now tested negative does not mean that you had it. Additionally, previously having COVID does not mean you are immune. There is very likely a statistically significant portion of the population that think they are immune because they had a false positive COVID test and later had a false one. There is likewise  very likely a statistically significant portion of the population that has had a false negative and has infected others.

I'm not saying this to change behavior, it's just the facts based on the data that exists. Do with it what you will.

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31 minutes ago, billspro said:


That’s all correct. The article doesn’t say anything about when a COVID test can pick the disease. Which would likely be in the presymptomatic phase before the symptomatic phase. So it should be earlier than 12 days. 

 

So if you get a test at day 12, and it takes 24 hrs to return results which is super-good timing...you can leave 1 day early?  🎉🎈

 

If you look at the linked article, 12 days is 97.5% of the eventual positives, 14 days is 99%.  That's where 14 days came from  🤷‍♂️

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22 minutes ago, BullBuchanan said:

You said that false positives were statistically insignificant which I supplied a ton of data to counter and you continue to just say it without any evidence at all. I never said 99%, I said at 99% it would still be awful and the china test had somewhere between 93% and 60% depending. You were the one that made claim to it and then edited your post. Perhaps it was missing context, which is fine.

Simply put: The data suggests there is reason to believe tests are inaccurate to a very statistically significant level, meaning that just because you tested negative does not mean you don't have it and just because you tested positive and now tested negative does not mean that you had it. Additionally, previously having COVID does not mean you are immune. There is very likely a statistically significant portion of the population that think they are immune because they had a false positive COVID test and later had a false one. There is likewise  very likely a statistically significant portion of the population that has had a false negative and has infected others.

I'm not saying this to change behavior, it's just the facts based on the data that exists. Do with it what you will.

 

Not to butt in but (see what I did there?) there's a distinction that may be worth noting between the sensitivity measured by the test developer and the observed "false negative" rate in clinical use. 

 

The measured sensitivity during test development asks "if you give me 100 known positive samples, how many of them does my test correctly identify?"   This is the number which @billspro mentions as required to be >95% for approval in Canada, and for covid-19 RT-PCR is closer to 98-99% for most of the major test companies' covid tests).

The negative tests observed on patients who eventually have clinical symptoms/test positive, are a different kettle of fish - they have to do with factors I mentioned elsewhere including the quality of the swab taken, whether the virus is in the upper respiratory tract or has moved elsewhere, time elapsed between sample collection and testing, days since exposure.  These have little to do with the quality of the test. 

 

Tieing this back to the OP and subsequent, the key take home point is a negative test at one point in time does not take the place of a quarantine, because a negative test on a given day post-travel does not mean one has not been infected and won't eventually test positive or develop symptoms.   Thus the quarantine thing.

 

3 hours ago, SlimShady'sSpaceForce said:

If you had it,  you should have Antibodies which can be verified.  If you donate blood at the Red Cross they will test for Antibodies  

Kind of like a free test.  After a period of time you no longer spread it. 

 

I do not believe a negative test says you were ever exposed to it.  It just means you don't have it.

If Hap tells me I am wrong, I will believe her as she is in the field of medicine

 

That is correct.   A negative diagnostic RT-PCR test for covid-19 says you don't have enough Sars-CoV-19 RNA to detect in whatever area was tested (usually nasopharynx, upper respiratory - sometimes nose or saliva) at the moment. 

 

It says nothing whatsoever about prior exposure to covid-19 or about immunity to covid-19.

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26 minutes ago, Hapless Bills Fan said:

 

Not to butt in but (see what I did there?) there's a distinction that may be worth noting between the sensitivity measured by the test developer and the observed "false negative" rate in clinical use. 

 

The measured sensitivity during test development asks "if you give me 100 known positive samples, how many of them does my test correctly identify?"   This is the number which @billspro mentions as required to be >95% for approval in Canada, and for covid-19 RT-PCR is closer to 98-99% for most of the major test companies' covid tests).

The negative tests observed on patients who eventually have clinical symptoms/test positive, are a different kettle of fish - they have to do with factors I mentioned elsewhere including the quality of the swab taken, whether the virus is in the upper respiratory tract or has moved elsewhere, time elapsed between sample collection and testing, days since exposure.  These have little to do with the quality of the test. 

 

Tieing this back to the OP and subsequent, the key take home point is a negative test at one point in time does not take the place of a quarantine, because a negative test on a given day post-travel does not mean one has not been infected and won't eventually test positive or develop symptoms.   Thus the quarantine thing.

 

 

That is correct.   A negative diagnostic RT-PCR test for covid-19 says you don't have enough Sars-CoV-19 RNA to detect in whatever area was tested (usually nasopharynx, upper respiratory - sometimes nose or saliva) at the moment. 

 

It says nothing whatsoever about prior exposure to covid-19 or about immunity to covid-19.

That's certainly great info. Thanks.

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8 hours ago, Mr. WEO said:

 

Like Canada?  No foreign nationals allowed in. 

 

Miami-Dade, in a state that doesn't have any quarantine policy, is now the county with the second highest number of Covid positives in the country. 

 

 

They have 4 airports in Canada accepting foreign flights,Toronto,Vancouver Montreal and Calgary.

 

They have confirmed cases in Brampton and Toronto traced to people getting off said flights and not quarantining.

 

They don't want the truth out about who is spreading it.

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10 hours ago, Hapless Bills Fan said:

Like it or not, the 14 day quarantine is NYS law, so, Fair.

 

Unstated but a point is that pretty sure NY would like to see Erie and adjacent counties where most of the fans are from, drop to a positivity rate of 0.5% with no active cluster outbreaks to have fans at the game (this is a guess based on messing with the Georgia Tech Covid Probability tool). 

 

Go to Miami, party up, come home with the Covid-19 and share, won’t help that goal.

Did the legislature pass a law? Or is this an executive fiat?

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9 minutes ago, Chaos said:

Did the legislature pass a law? Or is this an executive fiat?

 

It is an executive order.  I leave it to the lawyers in the group to explain whether or not EOs have the force of law and the legal perspective on the difference.

Or not, since said discussion is probably beyond the scope of the group.

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3 hours ago, Gugny said:

 

My apologies.  I am also essential, but my company won't allow any travel to "bad states," without doing the 14-day quarantine when returning to New York.  I thought they were following the NYS rules/guidelines, but it seems that they're company guidelines.

 

Be well.

 

 

 

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1 minute ago, Hapless Bills Fan said:

 

It is an executive order.  I leave it to the lawyers in the group to explain whether or not EOs have the force of law and the legal perspective on the difference.

Or not, since said discussion is probably beyond the scope of the group.

I don't live in NY. Not sure I have any reason to think NY decision makers are smarter than MO. decision makers.  Seems like different states have different opinions on the balance of freedom/liberty/safety. Not sure any one opinion on that balance is the "correct" one. 

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Just now, Chaos said:

I don't live in NY. Not sure I have any reason to think NY decision makers are smarter than MO. decision makers.  Seems like different states have different opinions on the balance of freedom/liberty/safety. Not sure any one opinion on that balance is the "correct" one. 

 

Well, living in MO I have a strong opinion on that one, but “Somewhere Else, Not Here” is the place to discuss it.

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9 hours ago, Mr Info said:


My parents, who live in NY recently returned from a trip to MN. However, they connected from MSP to BUF through the Detroit airport. MN was on NYS restricted list but MI was not. When my parents filled out the NYS paper form (they are not esavvy) they indicated MI as their point of entry. This was true and they were not trying to be sneaky. That resulted in no quarantine on their re-entry to NY. 

Had a very similar situation 

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14 minutes ago, Hapless Bills Fan said:

 

It is an executive order.  I leave it to the lawyers in the group to explain whether or not EOs have the force of law and the legal perspective on the difference.

Or not, since said discussion is probably beyond the scope of the group.

hold my beer...

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23 minutes ago, ItsAhardKnoxLife said:

I'm just worried about who's deciding how long necessary is...

 

20 minutes ago, Mr. WEO said:

 

 

It's the Governor.  This isn't mysterious.

Technically it's the people living in the state. People have refused to follow the rules since day 1, and that's probably why we've had more cases than any other country in the world, and it's dragged on far longer here than most places.

Eradicate the threat, and everyone gets their normal back. It seems pretty simple to me.

1 minute ago, Gilchrist2020 said:

I like discussion of all topics and I know how to do it with respect. 

 

Clearly.

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1 minute ago, buffalojedwardo said:

For all of you worried about covid. I own/operate a high volume ice cream shop in a busy tourist area of Florida. We didn't wear masks and came into contact with thousands of people a day. No covid outbreak amongst our 28 person staff. 

Stay safe, you may have an outbreak of overly opinionated WNYers down your way this weekend to tell you how you're killing grandma!

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5 minutes ago, BullBuchanan said:

 

Technically it's the people living in the state. People have refused to follow the rules since day 1, and that's probably why we've had more cases than any other country in the world, and it's dragged on far longer here than most places.

Eradicate the threat, and everyone gets their normal back. It seems pretty simple to me.

Clearly.

 

 

What's dragged on?  NYS under 1% for 38 days.  People here are, overall, doing ok---even allowing for the kooks who say no one this has mattered at all...

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4 minutes ago, buffalojedwardo said:

For all of you worried about covid. I own/operate a high volume ice cream shop in a busy tourist area of Florida. We didn't wear masks and came into contact with thousands of people a day. No covid outbreak amongst our 28 person staff. 

 

 

Superhuman!!!

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3 minutes ago, Gilchrist2020 said:

I'm about to be banned again any second bc Hapless is a total mental midget w an authoritarian attitude 

 

screenshot this for when fiat fiat currency is failed later this year or Q1 2021 and full digital currency begins. 

 

This is happening while this whole fake pandemic operation occurs 

 

And those were 6 such promising posts to start a career.  We will never know your true potential for posting greatness.  Your posting career dies to young.

 

Gilchrist202, we hardly knew ye......

 

RIP

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2 minutes ago, Gilchrist2020 said:

80-90% of people on this board have ZERO clue what is coming. And they smugly suppress any differing view. 

 

Get ready bc it's coming and it's not gonna be pretty

Yep

Who is behind this?  Chinese?  Russians?  Trump?  Patriots?

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48 minutes ago, buffalojedwardo said:

For all of you worried about covid. I own/operate a high volume ice cream shop in a busy tourist area of Florida. We didn't wear masks and came into contact with thousands of people a day. No covid outbreak amongst our 28 person staff. 

Why no masks?

1000 people a day dying from this.

 

Seems like a very minor inconvenience.  The risk/reward seems like such a no brainer.

 

Then again Daboll calling designed runs for Josh when we are up 21 at home is also a risk/reward no brainer, and he seems to disagree with me too.

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5 minutes ago, Da webster guy said:

Why no masks?

1000 people a day dying from this.

 

Seems like a very minor inconvenience.  The risk/reward seems like such a no brainer.

 

Then again Daboll calling designed runs for Josh when we are up 21 at home is also a risk/reward no brainer, and he seems to disagree with me too.

Because my staff is largely school age kids and they can't wear one without fiddling it constantly. Also the masks might stop a droplet or two but ultimately don't give you the protection you think they do. 

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8 minutes ago, buffalojedwardo said:

Because my staff is largely school age kids and they can't wear one without fiddling it constantly. Also the masks might stop a droplet or two but ultimately don't give you the protection you think they do. 

 

Oh, Lordy.  Must we?  We must, I see. 

 

https://www.pbs.org/video/how-well-do-masks-work-ke2qje/

 

Anyone else think the Schlieren demonstration dude in this video looks like Brandon Beane?

 

Somehow in areas where masks are required and enforced, the school aged kids (and others) figure it out pretty quick.  The ice cream stands around here, employees wear 'em.

 

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5 minutes ago, buffalojedwardo said:

Because my staff is largely school age kids and they can't wear one without fiddling it constantly. Also the masks might stop a droplet or two but ultimately don't give you the protection you think they do. 


I say this as respectfully as possible: from the perspective of a physician and scientist, it is this type of common thought that has led to legitimately tens of thousands of needless deaths in America.
 

Some degree of disease and death was inescapable with this virus. Your business specifically may or may not have indirectly contributed to the death toll (you actually have no idea), but there is no question that people who have thought just like you are unfortunately responsible for a massive amount of morbidity and mortality.

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46 minutes ago, Hapless Bills Fan said:

 

Oh, Lordy.  Must we?  We must, I see. 

 

https://www.pbs.org/video/how-well-do-masks-work-ke2qje/

 

Anyone else think the Schlieren demonstration dude in this video looks like Brandon Beane?

 

Somehow in areas where masks are required and enforced, the school aged kids (and others) figure it out pretty quick.  The ice cream stands around here, employees wear 'em.

 

I agree with much of the video. Also the Beane doppleganger. I bought 600 dollars worth of copper infused, washable, masks when we shut down the month of April for the staff upon return. It took some time to get used to but I found it impossible to trust them to wear masks responsibly. Touching your mask and then touching money and handing it back to the customer is counterproductive. We found other measures to insure the safety of our guests and staff.  Its a walk up establishment with drive thru style windows and air curtains. 

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