MikeDamone
Well-known poster
Hospital officials wonder why no one gives a fuck.
https://www.seattletimes.com/seattl...leaders-wonder-why-fewer-people-seem-to-care/
Here’s a tip, you lied to us and jerked us around for 2 + years. Some of us saw your bullshit day 1 (Like me and Race). Now the masses have realized you’re full of shit and aren’t going to play along. Fuck off.
I’m sure the CoronaBros and their leader Herr Dazzler are still all in though.
And that has hospital officials showing some frustration as they fear Washingtonians might not fully understand the burden on public health.
Yes, most people are not getting as sick as they were during past peaks, Cassie Sauer, president of the Washington State Hospital Association, said in a Monday news briefing. And doctors and scientists have a better understanding of the disease now, as well as better access to antiviral drugs. Vaccination rates are also higher and new variants have, so far, been less severe.
That doesn’t mean people aren’t dying from COVID or suffering from long-term symptoms, hospital leaders said.
“It’s all the same stuff we’ve been doing all along. … And yet the community’s not feeling that at this point,” said Dr. David Carlson, chief physician officer at Tacoma-based MultiCare. “I don’t have a magic understanding of why that is other than there is just this enormous amount of fatigue, and COVID is not continually the story on the news todaying of why that is other than there is just this enormous amount of fatigue, and COVID is not continually the story on the news today.”[/i]
https://www.seattletimes.com/seattl...leaders-wonder-why-fewer-people-seem-to-care/
Here’s a tip, you lied to us and jerked us around for 2 + years. Some of us saw your bullshit day 1 (Like me and Race). Now the masses have realized you’re full of shit and aren’t going to play along. Fuck off.
I’m sure the CoronaBros and their leader Herr Dazzler are still all in though.
And that has hospital officials showing some frustration as they fear Washingtonians might not fully understand the burden on public health.
Yes, most people are not getting as sick as they were during past peaks, Cassie Sauer, president of the Washington State Hospital Association, said in a Monday news briefing. And doctors and scientists have a better understanding of the disease now, as well as better access to antiviral drugs. Vaccination rates are also higher and new variants have, so far, been less severe.
That doesn’t mean people aren’t dying from COVID or suffering from long-term symptoms, hospital leaders said.
“It’s all the same stuff we’ve been doing all along. … And yet the community’s not feeling that at this point,” said Dr. David Carlson, chief physician officer at Tacoma-based MultiCare. “I don’t have a magic understanding of why that is other than there is just this enormous amount of fatigue, and COVID is not continually the story on the news todaying of why that is other than there is just this enormous amount of fatigue, and COVID is not continually the story on the news today.”[/i]
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