Holidays during COVID-19 | Alberta.ca

what are the covid laws in alberta

what are the covid laws in alberta - win

I'm 25, make 16.24/hr in Edmonton, Alberta, and have written the world's most boring MD

Background: I am a 25 year old Starbucks barista. I was working full-time until fairly recently (Novemberish) as the rising cases in my city & my own health issues led to a really good talk with my boss. I have reduced my hours by 50% - enough to keep my health insurance, but enough to qualify for the Canada Recovery Benefit, an extra $900 every two weeks. This is for my own peace of mind as I really cannot afford to get COVID, especially as I am chronically ill.
I’d like to make note of two things -
I am one of those weirdos who has taken COVID seriously since it hit the news in January. My spouse and I had masks and sanitizer before it was cool, lol. As a result, I have not and do not go out much except to work. I do not see other people (the exception being this week as you will read.) I do pop into retail stores still as Canada Post is absolutely swamped with packages so I avoid trying to buy online.
In this diary I am battling with a Crohn’s flare. I promise the exhaustion and joint aches are because of that, not because of COVID! Funnily enough, I do credit my Crohn’s for my ease with COVID-19 restrictions and lockdowns. Being that I was hospitalized for a long time as a teen, I find it easy to be isolated and stay isolated. I know a lot of people struggle with that.
Onto the good stuff…
The Positives
Income: 16.24/hourly. I was promoted since my last diary and am now a certified trainer!
CRB: $1800/monthly. I am so incredibly thankful that I have this failsafe.
Student loans: I am back in school with more emergency management and communications classes. I applied for just enough of a student loan to pay the tuition and no more. Starbucks gives $1,000 of tuition reimbursement if you pass your classes which I can pay back onto my student loans and basically covers the cost of my classes this semester.
The Negatives
Rent/Utilities/Condo Fees: a flat $1050 monthly to S. The bills come out of his account and this is the number we landed on.
Internet: $42.50 (my half - all bills are my half. S works for the city government in waste management and makes $63,000~ a year. He has no debts except his car loan & the mortgage.)
Phone: $58.21 monthly for 13GB and unlimited texts and calls. I own my phone outright.
NYT: $14.28 for the news, Cooking, and the crossword.
Spotify: $4.99 monthly. Canadian baristas do not get the free Spotify perk. :(
Headspace: $0 monthly. We do at least get this!
Car insurance: $197.41 monthly. This is with a 9 year clean driving record, a reduced rate because of my grades, and the fact that identifying as a woman also lessens the price. And it’s still $2400 a year. Kill me. I own my car outright though.
Google Photos: $2.79/monthly.
Health insurance: $39/check to cover S and I, dental and medical. I am also on S’s so we have full coverage.
Debts & Assets:
Student loans: I have $8,000 in provincial loans and $11,000 in federal loans. They are on pause as I am in school but I was paying $215 a month towards them. I know I qualify for repayment assistance but the goddamn NSLSC will never pick up the phone.
Car: It is a 13-year-old SUV and worth maybe $2,000. I will drive that thing until it dies.
Savings: I have approximately $1500 in a TFSA. I have about $750 in Starbucks stock (not technically a savings, it was my grant this year + my own contributions, 1% from my paycheck.) I am also enrolled in their retirement plan. No idea how much is in that as I can only access the website on the work computer and never remember to do that. I have $150 in stocks because I thought I was going to be Jordan Belfort or something, idk.
Tips: I hoard all of my tip money in a little jar hidden somewhere in my home. It is at about $475.
I have no other debt.
Day One - Tuesday
7:50: S kisses me goodbye and leaves for work. I snuggle back in.
8:10: M, my male cat, is tapping my face for breakfast. Ignored.
8:24: He tries again and I get up. Lately I have been noticing the time 8:24 a lot. I told S and he said he’s been noticing 10:42 a lot. So we have decided those are our angel numbers. M is no angel though despite waking me up at this time.
8:40: Everyone is fed and I make my coffee and let out the dog, K. Oh yeah… the dog… he was an accident. We did not intend on getting a dog. It is a long story. I love him to bits.
9:15: Finish my coffee and go upstairs to have a snuggle with Z, our female cat. She is so warm. I was intending on going out to buy M’s wet food today but it is snowing something fierce and I hate driving in the snow so I resign myself to staying indoors. I would also normally take K on a walk at this time but he had knee surgery this past year and the cold and snow really bother it, so we will do some indoor play and puzzles to keep him occupied (he is a corgi and is a monster without stimulation. Again, DID NOT INTEND ON THE DOG.)
10:00: Write these entries and tidy up our spare room. We turned it into a nap/cat/yoga den as we were, obviously, not having any visitors. However, my sister-in-law is pregnant and is coming down tonight for an advanced ultrasound as there is a tentative abnormality with the baby. Because her town has had 0 cases thus far - congratulations to them, honestly - and the outpatient clinic is the one two minutes from our neighbourhood, we decided it was OK for her to stay with us. She will drive down tonight and leave right after her appointment tomorrow. 12:30: Did some cleaning, cereal eating, bed-making, what have you. I go to take the garbage out to our complex dumpster in my tshirt and notice it’s not as bad as I thought despite the snow. So I gear up and take out K.
1:15: I’m so glad I did - he was so happy! Usually he starts limping within a few minutes if the cold is bothering him but he was putting his head and belly into the snow drifts so I know he was having a good time. The cold and the walk have wiped me out though. I eat a clementine and lay under my heated blanket for a nap with Z and K (M likes to watch the snow upstairs.)
4:15: K snores himself awake and barks at himself so I wake up too. Z looks annoyed and wanders upstairs. Three animals is quite the zoo.
Check my phone and see my SIL asked if I could leave a dinner for her in the fridge, if I was making something? She left later than intended and won’t be here until 9 so dinner options will be limited. I tell her I haven’t been feeling well and S is at a union meeting tonight (why the union is doing in person meetings, I don’t know.) but it is pasta Tuesday at Boston Pizza… she readily agrees. I place an order for ravioli for myself and fettuccine for her. S will get fed at his meeting. My SIL says she will leave me cash for her half even though I try to tell her not to. Hopefully she forgets. (27.98 delivery, I’m going to leave a cash tip of $10 taped to the door for coming in the snow.)
6:30: I have enough of an appetite to eat my ravioli but only get through four pieces. I put it away to eat it later and feed the animals. I give K his puzzle bowl and he gives me a look of despair.
8:00: Ding! Crossword and mood log notifications go off. I get about halfway through the crossword when my SIL gets here.
10:30: We have a catch-up and exchange Christmas gifts as we couldn’t go up North for the holidays. Then I head to bed. I do my skincare and jade roll out a pinched nerve in my jaw - feels so good. Finish my crossword and then bed.
Daily Total: $39.98
Day Two - Wednesday
8:24: Right on time, the tiny beasts request food. SIL is already gone. She left me a $20, argh! I put it in my tip jar as I took from there to leave the cash tip but I wish she hadn’t. Babies are let out and fed.
9:30: Manage a bowl of cereal. Feel exhausted. It’s -31C out so we play indoor fetch. Putter around the house.
10:30: Go upstairs and do my skincare and fill out my journal as I couldn’t last night. I bought a daily Moleskine planner but use it as more of a journal. I put on a Yoga by Adrienne video as I won’t be walking K. I work today so I stretch.
12:30: I lay down with K after some more fetch (I told you the exhaustion is real in this diary.)
2:00: My alarm goes off. I eat mashed potatoes and drink some water, then go upstairs to find M and Z cuddling in my vanity chair. I perch on the edge - because they refuse to move! - and do some makeup. I change into my personal uniform of all black (hides the stains) and set out.
5:00: I have my first break. I got $3 in tips from last week (lol) so I use it to buy a croissant. I’m gonna claim this as a +.82 because the croissant was only 2.18.
7:00: I only manage half of my pasta on my break, which is unusual for me. I drink a mint tea to settle my stomach.
9:15: It was so dead we managed to finish everything super quickly. I take home some expired oat bars as they’re the only Starbucks snack S can eat.
9:30: Home and greet everyone. S lets out K and goes upstairs to get ready for bed. I do my “closing tasks.” This is something I picked up from the TikTok account domesticblisters, who is a licensed therapist. She has this concept of care tasks, and what tasks you should do to help set yourself up for success every night - even if it’s just to survive the day. It really resonated with me and is something I have done every night since November with a few exceptions! I start my closing tasks after I finish my nightly crossword.
Every night, I fill up all the waters in the house (ours, animals, the Keurig, etc.) I get to Sink Zero, which might mean loading the dishwasher and running it, or washing all the dishes in the sink. I disinfect the sink and scrub the stove, then disinfect the counters and the dining table. I do a Swiffer of the floor (K brings in lots of pawprints and salt from outside.) I pick up any garbage/recycling/things that don’t belong downstairs. It is so nice to come down every morning to a clean main floor and sets the mood for the day. And it only takes me 20ish minutes.
10:00: Done my tasks, give everyone a little treat for not walking on the wet floor - they’ve learned quickly that if they wait they get a treat - and head upstairs. Journal, do my skincare, floss, brush, and head to bed. Listen to Temple Rain on Headspace.
Daily Total: +$20.82
Day Three - Thursday
8:00: I can already tell today is a bad stomach day. Luckily my boss texted me and asked if I wanted to give up my shift as it was going to be super dead with the impending snowstorm and deep freeze. I readily agree and doze off for a few minutes before M bites me hard enough to get me up.
9:00: Everyone is fed, let out. I drink coffee. K is being a major snugglebug. It is snowing like crazy out but I have to go do some errands.
12:00: I stop bumming around and gear up to go outside. It’s still snowing. Ugh, Alberta.
First stop is to get gas. I have a quarter of a tank left. Remember in April when gas was like, 50c a litre? It’s 1.06 today. Also, fellow Canadians, the Esso Speedpass app is a godsend. Not having to touch any buttons on the pump has been so helpful. 45.93
Next I head to the grocery store to get milk, chicken, and cereal. I also end up getting soup, a new bubble bath, a replacement of my body wash, and a new leave-in conditioner. 27.66 (my half)
Third stop is the pet store. I grab a flat of M’s wet food. At the checkout the cashier asks if I want to donate some canned food to the local rescue as they just picked up nearly 100 kittens. That suckers me and I say yes. I also note that they’re accepting old blankets/comforters, as we just switched our duvet out, and the old one is fluffy and perfect for furbabies. 32.29 (my half)
Lastly, I go to Canadian Tire to pick up an online order I placed. It was paid for last week. It’s a gift wrap storage bin as we accumulated a bunch of rolls last year and the cats keep scratching it. Canadian Tire is fun because they have these lockers they place your order in now, and give you a pin to pick it up, so I don’t even interact with anyone. In and out.
2:00: Home and everything sanitized and put away. I wipe down my phone and watch and throw my gloves in the washer as they’re looking kind of grimy. Have a rest with K.
5:00: We play fetch and S comes home. K runs around like crazy. I go upstairs and work on a paper.
7:00: I have an appetite! I manage about 6 pieces of ravioli and some yogurt. S makes chicken wings for himself.
8:00: Go upstairs to finish off my paper and get my steps in. M is whining at me so we play with his favourite toy, a piece of twine. I do my crossword, drag the twine, and do my steps at the same time. It’s called multitasking. I make a lemon ginger tea. It’s disgusting but I drink it all as I’ve heard it has great benefits for your stomach. Does anyone else just not like tea? I’ve tried tons - thanks to Teavana at work - but I’m really only a real Indian cha girl.
9:30: I finish my steps, do my closing tasks, take a melatonin, do my skincare, and head to bed. Goodnight world.
Daily Total: 105.88
Day Four - Friday
7:45: Everyone is being very loud and banging around this morning.
8:20: Feed the zoo, let out K. It is snowing again and it is a vicious -27C outside. I have my coffee.
9:30: Realize my paper is due today. It’s mostly finished so I don’t fret. Eat cereal and start a load of laundry, and then vacuum.
10:30: Get distracted looking up refurbished Apple Pencils. I don’t need one, I don’t need one… I click out of the page. Then reopen it. Then exit it again and watch TikToks instead.
11:00: I pluck my eyebrows - something I’ve done on my own for about 7 years now. I wonder how much money that’s saved me. I put on snail essence but don’t do a full skincare routine as I intend on a shower. I do a full hair treatment with a desi hair oil. I wrap it up in a bun and get to work on finishing my paper.
1:00: Finish and submit. I air fry pork buns for lunch. My stomach feels way better today. Maybe the tea made some points…
3:00: Finished my shower. My natural curl has come back in full force. I used to have tiny ringlets as a kid and they vanished with age. Then I saw a TikTok (again, lol) which essentially said: if you’re not white, why are you using white hair products? I switched to desi & black hair products a month ago and the difference has been crazy.
5:30: S is home and K is immediately crazy. I really miss our walks. I decide to corral him momentarily in the bathroom and hide his kibble around the main floor so he can do his sniffari for dinner. He loved this game!
7:00: I try to build a Notion dashboard. This is too hard. I eat some more ravioli. Sorry for my five-year-old diet in this. It’s a bowel rest diet.
8:00: Crossword, steps, and M play time.
9:30: Closing tasks! Then bed.
Daily total: $0
Day Five - Saturday
7:45: Woken up by the usual ruckus.
8:30: Blah, blah, blah. Have my coffee. Make an egg sandwich because Saturdays are chaos and I need the protein.
9:30: Do my skincare, makeup, and hair while a nervous pit opens up in my stomach. Not only is it a cool -35C out, but Saturdays are terrible at work. I’m not a crier and have never cried at any place of employment until Saturdays @ the Siren. It’s gotten worse during the pandemic as people crave normalcy and to them, getting their coffee every Saturday is normal. But they refuse to treat us with any decency. It’s hard when you are treated as expendable so that white-collar WFH/SFH families can berate you over how long their $40 order takes. (I work in a very wealthy area.)
Also, if I am put in the drive-thru window, I will be very grumpy about it.
1:00: I was put on bar, which is a lot of responsibility on a Saturday. I buy a butter croissant and drink a mint tea on my break. 2.38
3:00: Someone yells at me about the bathrooms being closed.
3:30: I eat the last of my pasta at lunch and have a blacktea lemonade.
5:00: Someone returns a drink twice for not being the right shade of pink. She tries a third time and I politely tell her another store can make the moment right, since we clearly can’t. I hate Saturdays.
5:30: Free and covered in syrup, milk, and a mango dragonfruit that exploded at my feet. I take a hot shower and decide my day is done, so I do my skincare and remove my makeup and contacts.
8:00: S finishes gaming with his brother and I make a stir-fry sans veggies for dinner.
9:30: Closing tasks, except no mopping because the ground is frozen so K hasn’t brought in any tracks. I floss, jade roll, and fall asleep.
Daily Total: 2.38
Day Six - Sunday
8:24: M pats me awake.
9:00: I apologize for this being the most boring Money Diary of all time. Coffee and toast for breakfast.
12:00: Bummed around all morning but did a vacuum and started a load of laundry. Tomorrow is our weekly “reset” day so I don’t have much to do today. I work at 5 PM.
I research photobooks on Shutterfly. I have 30,000 photos sitting in my Google Drive and a backup hard drive. It’s serving me no use so I want to go through them, make photobooks, and delete the rest off of my computer (keeping them in their backups.) They’re currently 50% off but it would take me a long time to do seven years’ worth of books so I can’t (and won’t) pull the trigger now, but I also know Shutterfly and vistaprint host many sales, so I’m not too fussed.
2:00: We have a Zoom call with S’s family to do a late Christmas opening together. The kids (and adults!) love their gifts. We talk about the cold and about the new niece or nephew on the way.
4:30: I go upstairs and get dressed for work. S is driving me so I don’t have to worry about starting my car in the cold. It is supposed to reach -41C.
5:30: I forgot it was Superbowl Sunday. Our store is located next to the turnoff into the plaza so we try and count how many Ubers are coming in for food pickups but get bored of that. Somehow I get water on the ceiling.
7:00: I eat an “expired” croissant and drink a mint tea on my break. A woman comes through drive-thru for just a cookie. She says she didn’t know there was a Starbucks here so she had to settle for another coffee chain’s iced coffee, and then drove by and saw us. I tell her to wait and come back with a free iced coffee because no one should be subjected to the other chain’s. To my surprise she bursts into tears. A very wholesome interaction.
8:30: It’s so dead my supervisor lets the other closer go home because we’re basically done for the night and he lives 40 minutes from the store.
9:30: I leave with my coffee bean markout and another “expired” croissant, as well as a blacktea lemonade for S. We wait to make sure my supervisor’s car starts as she drives a ten-year-old minivan that recently got rear-ended, and it didn’t start last night apparently, so she had to wait for her husband to come boost her as everyone had left. She flashes her lights at us and we leave. S wants McDonald’s but I don’t so he orders and pays for just himself.
10:30: Done closing tasks. I had some soup for dinner. Bed time.
Daily Total: $0
Day Seven - Monday
8:00: I did not sleep well. M bites me and I grumble at him and hide under the covers. S gets up and feeds the animals instead.
8:45: Everyone is waiting for me to come downstairs. Being a pet mom is like being a celebrity.
9:30: Coffee and my croissant from last night for breakfast.
10:30: It’s reset day. Every Monday I clean out the fridge, dust/clean the appliances and cupboards, wash the sheets, do a major vacuum (we do small vacuums during the week but I have a Bissell Crosswave and use it every week to suck up the oodles of pet hair.) and refill canisters. I also do some self care tasks like a serious eyebrow groom, a hair oil, an Aztec face mask, clipping all my nails/painting my toenails, and in the shower I shave my legs for the week. The animals also get a spa day. We check toenails and brush them out.
Then the week is nicely set up and we don’t have to worry about this stuff until next Monday!
S is braving the weather to go to the grocery store. He comes back with a full haul as there was quite a bit of discounted meat. We put it in the freezer. 48.33 (my half)
2:30: I finish the main floor items and go upstairs to find S and the cats in the nap den bed. I decide to crawl in too and we have a major cuddle nap. K isn’t allowed upstairs so the cats have a space away from him, but we spend a lot of time downstairs with him, so I don’t feel too bad.
4:30: Up from the nap and do the upstairs chores, and then a shower. I break halfway to have some soup.
7:00: House is clean, I am clean, and animals are clean! S and I make Cajun rice for dinner. I do my steps and crossword puzzle.
9:30: Closing tasks, lights out!
Daily Total: 48.33
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Covid-19 Update for February 8: 269 new cases, 314 recoveries, 5 deaths + Transition to Step 1 Restrictions

Data is taken from the Covid-19 portal and today's media availability by Dr Deena Hinshaw. Dr Hinshaw's next availability will be tomorrow.
There are currently enhanced measures in effect for the province of Alberta. This link provides a quick summary of which ones are in effect for the province. Alberta is currently on Step 1. The target for Step 2 will be at least 3 weeks from Step 1's launch (earliest date: March 1) and has a minimum requirement of <450 hospitalizations.
Top line numbers:
Value Current Change Total
Total cases +269 127,036
Active cases 6,196 -46
Cases with "Unknown source" 886 (34.9%) in last 7 days -62 (-1.3%)
Tests +6,208 (~4.33% positive) 3,250,517
People tested +1,570 1,775,475 (~406,194/million)
Hospitalizations 432 -2/-10 based on yesterday's post/portal data 5,564 (+13)
ICU 76 -5 902 (+4)
Deaths +1 (net change) 1,710
Recoveries +314 119,130
Recoveries and Deaths
Age Bracket New Recoveries Total Recoveries New Deaths Total Deaths
<1 +2 656 +0 0
1-4 +7 3,761 +0 0
5-9 +12 5,237 +0 0
10-19 +38 14,033 +0 0
20-29 +54 22,524 +0 8
30-39 +55 23,021 +0 8
40-49 +56 19,074 +1 22
50-59 +32 14,280 +0 56
60-69 +30 8,691 +1 171
70-79 +13 3,993 -2 334
80+ +14 3,817 +1 1,106
Unknown +1 43 +0 1
Vaccinations
Value Change Total
Vaccinations +1,973 120,357 (~27,535/million)
Albertans with 2 vaccinations +1,943 28,991 (~6,633/million)
Reported UK and South Africa Variants
  • The value is updated by Alberta Health twice a week
  • Last update: February 5
  • Today, Dr Hinshaw reported 96 total B.1.1.7 variant cases have been detected (a mix of new and historical cases). I expect this will be reflected in the portal data below in the near future
Variant Change since last update (February 2) Cases
United Kingdom (B.1.1.7) +21 71
South Africa (B.1.351) +0 7
Effective Reproductive Number (R, or Rt)
  • The value is updated by Alberta Health on Mondays
  • Last update: February 8
  • What % the confidence interval represents isn't stated
Zone R Value (Confidence interval) Change since last week
Province-wide 0.87 (0.83-0.90) +0.04
Edmonton 0.82 (0.76-0.89) +0.08
Calgary 0.82 (0.77-0.87) -0.01
Rest of Province 0.96 (0.90-1.03) +0.06
Spatial distribution of people tested, cases, and deaths:
  • All other values are compared with respect to yesterday
  • As noted above, it appears 4 previous deaths are no longer being considered Covid related
Zone Active Cases People Tested Total New Cases Total New Deaths Total
Calgary 2,463 (-45) +677 718,295 +108 48,836 -1 532
Central 689 (-5) +190 158,482 +33 9,247 +0 97
Edmonton 1,870 (-19) +423 588,276 +72 52,211 +2 890
North 834 (+20) +131 167,021 +43 10,587 +0 117
South 319 (+1) +55 109,546 +11 6,028 +0 74
Unknown 21 (+2) +94 33,855 +2 127 +0 0
Spatial distribution of cases for select cities and regions (cities proper for Calgary and Edmonton):
City/Municipality Total Active Recovered Deaths
Edmonton 42,590 (+65) 1,472 (-15) 40,373 (+76) 745 (+4)
Calgary 41,051 (+94) 2,097 (-49) 38,478 (+144) 476 (-1)
Red Deer 2,040 (+17) 276 (+1) 1,742 (+16) 22 (+0)
Lethbridge 1,812 (+7) 177 (+2) 1,622 (+5) 13 (+0)
Fort McMurray 1,719 (+2) 59 (-5) 1,657 (+7) 3 (+0)
Brooks 1,365 (+1) 5 (+1) 1,346 (+0) 14 (+0)
Grande Prairie 1,271 (+12) 166 (+11) 1,084 (+1) 21 (+0)
High River 680 (+0) 5 (+0) 669 (+0) 6 (+0)
Mackenzie county 585 (+1) 52 (+1) 518 (+0) 15 (+0)
Medicine Hat 534 (+2) 14 (+1) 506 (+1) 14 (+0)
Cardston county 514 (+1) 66 (+0) 441 (+1) 7 (+0)
I.D. No 9 (Banff) 444 (+1) 43 (+1) 401 (+0) 0
Wheatland county 235 (+1) 7 (+1) 228 (+0) 0
Warner county 157 (+0) 1 (+0) 154 (+0) 2 (+0)
Wood Buffalo municipality 131 (+0) 5 (+0) 126 (+0) 0
Rest of Alberta 31,908 (+65) 1,751 (+4) 29,785 (+63) 372 (-2)
Other municipalities with 10+ active cases is given at this link
Schools with outbreaks are listed online.
Quick numbers (change since Feb 5):
  • 154 school are on alert (2-4 active cases) (-2)
  • 33 schools are on outbreak with 5-9 active cases (+6)
  • 7 schools are on outbreak with over 10 active cases (+0)
Spatial distribution of hospital usage (change as of yesterday's post):
  • Hospitalization zone are where the patient is receiving care, not zone of residence
Zone Hospitalized ICU
Calgary 151 (+1) 32 (-2)
Edmonton 161 (-8) 23 (-2)
Central 33 (+1) 4 (+0)
South 31 (-3) 10 (+0)
North 53 (+7) 7 (-1)
Statements by Dr Hinshaw
Updates to Online Provincial Status Map
  • The map as been removed from this link. Active cases and case rates can still be seen
  • Regional changes are still possible, but removing map as all current restrictions are province wide
Cases
  • 313 schools (~13%) have active cases (844 total since Jan 11)
Variants
  • 46 cases of the B.1.1.7 variant are not linked to travel
  • No spread in schools
  • Continued wide testing of cases. Most, if not all, cases are tested for variants...in fact, today, capacity to screen exceeds case load
Step 1 Easing
  • As noted Friday, an additional easing has occurred with limited group physical activity for young people are allowed
  • Considerations made for mental health and physical health of children
  • Given lower transmission in children and continued decline of school aged cases, it was decided to allow for stage 1
  • This will still require physical distance, group size limit, and masking
  • Considered evidence from Alberta and worldwide
  • Message for parents, children, and trainers: It is vital that all measures are followed at all times
  • Knows many Albertans are looking forward to activities. However, you must still follow all measures
Steps Forward
  • Too soon to talk of Step 2
  • 3 week gap is meant to monitor all factors to ensure there isn't a rise in transmission
  • Important now as variants are being seen
  • Few "risk free" actions and public health measures are effective ways to protect Albertans and healthcare system
  • Families must consider what they are comfortable with
Regarding Rule Breakers
  • There have been recent events in some faith gatherings suggesting some people are not taking it seriously
  • These are mandatory restrictions and not optional
  • In Alberta, great efforts have been made to allow faith groups to meet safely
  • Those who are not are breaking the law
Q&A - Vaccines
  • Why are there no details about Stage 1B for vaccines (75+)?: Understands frustration with not knowing details of vaccine roll out. Looking at how to efficiently provide vaccine. At this point, there are sudden changes in vaccine supply and have been focused on amending current plans
Q&A - Variants
  • Do you think variants will be dominant strain in Alberta?: Depends on Albertans. <0.5% of daily cases are variants with many historical cases currently being logged. Concerned about rate of community spread, but still able to identify the chains of transmission to other cases. Pursuing containment of variant right now with enhanced measures and have dedicated experienced contact tracers. Not inevitable for it to take over, but will requires Albertans to buy in
  • Are there variant cases associated with meat processing plants?: Not to her knowledge
  • Severe outcomes regarding variants?: Some cases have been admitted to hospital. Knows AHS has applied same protocol to variant. Not clear if further restrictions are required, but AHS is applying lessons learned from previous outbreaks
  • Level of concern regarding variants?: Monitors variant and overall cases. If variant spreads more widely, it will affect Covid cases. Am concerned about numbers being seen, but also grateful for lab work to be able to capture cases so quickly. Wants to highlight this aggressive testing when comparing to other provinces
Q&A - Step 1
  • What prompted youth sport easing (AHS reports it was feedback based)?: Decisions have been made with harms of Covid and restrictions. Evidence was presented on children's overall health and led to reconsideration
  • Do you regret announcing the change on a weekend?: Unfortunate it wasn't provided earlier in advanced. Realizes it can be inconvenient and expensive (and apologies for it)
  • Can we go from Step 1 to 3?: Plan is to take each step one at a time. Will continue to see if adjustments need to be made. Wants to emphasize that hospitalization isn't the only metric that is being used. For example, lots of cases but low hospitalization may result in no change in step of easing or even rolling back
Additional information will be logged below:
submitted by kirant to alberta [link] [comments]

Covid-19 Update for February 4: 582 new cases (421 today), 580 recoveries, 13 deaths

Data is taken from the Covid-19 portal and today's media availability by Dr Deena Hinshaw. Dr Hinshaw's next availability will be Monday.
There are currently enhanced measures in effect for the province of Alberta. This link provides a quick summary of which ones are in effect for the province. Alberta is currently on "Early Steps", with the goal of reaching Step 1 on February 8th.
Top line numbers:
Value Current Change Total
Total cases +582 125,672
- From today +421
- From yesterday +161
Active cases 6,588 -11
Cases with "Unknown source" 1,066 (36.7%) in last 7 days +159 (+4.2%)
Tests +17,778 (~3.27% positive) 3,213,391
- From today +11,512 (~3.66% positive)
- From yesterday +6,266 (~2.57% positive)
People tested +4,391 1,765,546 (~403,923/million)
Hospitalizations 517 -22/-30 based on yesterday's post/portal data 5,495 (+17)
ICU 93 -1/-2 based on yesterday's post/portal data 885 (+2)
Deaths +13 1,684
Recoveries +580 117,400
Recoveries and Deaths
Age Bracket New Recoveries Total Recoveries New Deaths Total Deaths
<1 +3 646 +0 0
1-4 +19 3,702 +0 0
5-9 +29 5,146 +0 0
10-19 +80 13,774 +0 0
20-29 +88 22,258 +0 8
30-39 +91 22,702 +0 8
40-49 +92 18,812 +1 20
50-59 +68 14,078 +1 54
60-69 +46 8,556 +2 170
70-79 +27 3,926 +3 332
80+ +37 3,760 +6 1,091
Unknown +0 40 +0 1
Vaccinations
Value Change Total
Vaccinations +3,047 112,388 (~25,712/million)
Albertans with 2 vaccinations +2,824 21,794 (~4,986/million)
Reported UK and South Africa Variants
  • The value is updated by Alberta Health twice a week
  • Last update: February 2
  • Today, Dr Hinsahw reported there have been 68 known variant cases. All 11 new cases are B.1.1.7
Variant Change since last update (January 29) Cases
United Kingdom (B.1.1.7) +19 50
South Africa (B.1.351) +1 7
Effective Reproductive Number (R, or Rt)
  • The value is updated by Alberta Health on Mondays
  • Last update: February 1
  • What % the confidence interval represents isn't stated
Zone R Value (Confidence interval) Change since last week
Province-wide 0.83 (0.81-0.87) +0.02
Edmonton 0.74 (0.70-0.80) -0.07
Calgary 0.83 (0.80-0.89) +0.00
Rest of Province 0.90 (0.85-0.96) +0.13
Spatial distribution of people tested, cases, and deaths:
  • All other values are compared with respect to yesterday
Zone Active Cases People Tested Total New Cases Total New Deaths Total
Calgary 2,710 (-7) +1,701 714,488 +242 48,312 +5 526
Central 645 (+14) +437 157,250 +51 9,052 +2 94
Edmonton 2,117 (-30) +1,223 585,465 +181 51,887 +5 876
North 811 (+16) +524 165,919 +82 10,362 +0 115
South 288 (-2) +340 109,073 +28 5,934 +1 74
Unknown 17 (-2) +166 33,351 -2 125 +0 0
Spatial distribution of cases for select cities and regions (cities proper for Calgary and Edmonton):
City/Municipality Total Active Recovered Deaths
Edmonton 42,319 (+143) 1,685 (-27) 39,904 (+168) 730 (+2)
Calgary 40,606 (+188) 2,329 (+4) 37,807 (+179) 470 (+5)
Red Deer 1,926 (+17) 206 (+10) 1,699 (+6) 21 (+1)
Lethbridge 1,754 (+10) 147 (+5) 1,594 (+5) 13 (+0)
Fort McMurray 1,702 (+7) 65 (-3) 1,634 (+10) 3 (+0)
Brooks 1,363 (+1) 2 (+1) 1,347 (+0) 14 (+0)
Grande Prairie 1,216 (+15) 136 (+0) 1,059 (+15) 21 (+0)
High River 677 (+0) 3 (-4) 668 (+4) 6 (+0)
Mackenzie county 570 (+10) 44 (+7) 511 (+3) 15 (+0)
Medicine Hat 527 (-1) 10 (-1) 503 (+0) 14 (+0)
Cardston county 504 (+11) 70 (+3) 427 (+7) 7 (+1)
I.D. No 9 (Banff) 443 (+3) 44 (+2) 399 (+1) 0
Wheatland county 234 (+1) 9 (-1) 225 (+2) 0
Warner county 157 (-1) 1 (-2) 154 (+1) 2 (+0)
Wood Buffalo municipality 131 (+0) 7 (+0) 124 (+0) 0
Rest of Alberta 31,543 (+178) 1,830 (-5) 29,345 (+179) 368 (+4)
Other municipalities with 10+ active cases is given at this link
Schools with outbreaks are listed online.
Quick numbers (changes since yesterday):
  • 152 school are on alert (2-4 active cases) (+6)
  • 24 schools are on outbreak with 5-9 active cases (+0)
  • 6 schools are on outbreak with over 10 active cases (+1)
Spatial distribution of hospital usage (change as of yesterday's post):
  • Hospitalization zone are where the patient is receiving care, not zone of residence
Zone Hospitalized ICU
Calgary 169 (-8) 38 (-1)
Edmonton 215 (-8) 32 (-3)
Central 38 (-8) 7 (+2)
South 36 (+0) 8 (+0)
North 59 (+2) 8 (+1)
Statements by Dr Hinshaw
Alert of Phone Fraud
  • AHS has received reports of some people 75+ receiving calls saying they can book Covid-19 immunization for a fee. This is a scam
  • Vaccine will be free of charge - no provider will ever ask for payment
  • Please hang up immediately and report to non-emergency line of local law enforcement
Cases
  • Due to a technical issue, ~6,000 tests were not included online yesterday
  • Issue was resolved and included today
  • 304 schools (~13%) have active cases with 763 cases combined
Variants
  • 68 variant cases. Of 11 new cases (All UK variant), 7 have no known travel link. Investigation underway.
  • Two new cases that are travel related may have exposed two additional schools in Calgary Zone. Individuals followed protocol
  • In the previous schools with potential exposure to variant, no spread has been detected
  • Accessing literature to determine if additional changes are needed
Vaccine Safety/Variant Implications
  • Continue to monitor adverse evens. No significant increase in severity of reactions
  • 53 severe reactions were reported, on par with pneumococcal vaccination
  • 11 were allergic reactions and are under consultation with allergist
  • Other reactions: swollen lymph nodes, rash, diarrhea, vomiting
  • Current stats indicates vaccines are safe and outweighs risk
  • Health Canada reviewing additional vaccine candidates
  • Encourages immunization for all Albertans
Variant Implications on Vaccines
  • Evidence still emerging on vaccine's effectiveness on variants and much we don't know
  • Early results suggest current vaccines may be somewhat less effective against some new variants for preventing all symptoms of Covid-19
  • Even against variants, they appear to be extremely effective at reducing severe cases, hospitalization, and deaths
Q&A - Variant Outbreaks
  • Why did it take weeks for parents to be alerted to a variant case?: One case did take a while for it to get screened. Thinks timeline is important: at end of December, learned of concern regarding the variant. It's remarkable to ramp up to such quick detection. Wasn't able to rapidly screen when case first came in. Time frame will be improved going forward now
  • Followup: Are families now in quarantine following protocol?: School contacts would have completed 14 day quarantine as they didn't live with cases. Being offered testing as a precaution
  • Update on Daycare variant outbreak?: Can identify it is in Edmonton Zone. All have been contacted. Additional testing underway
Q&A - Variant Protocol, Relaunch, and Projections
  • Is it fair to say UK variant is in the community?: Has had community spread since first small number of cases not associated with travel. Currently able to test almost every positive case for variants to determine level of spread. Has been able to limit spread to date with interventions that are in place
  • Would variants delay Feb 8 relaunch?: No hard number. Would need to see increased transmission rate, which hasn't happened. Good thing that we're detecting cases so we can prevent their spread
  • Response to Ontario's variant projections?: Will need to be cautious going forward and will be looking at case rates to access restrictions. Measure that already exist for Covid are also effective at reducing variant's impact
  • (Dr Hinshaw also took exception to the reporter claiming that Alberta has more variant cases than Ontario. Alberta is testing almost all positive cases and hoping to expand further. She argues that it is more accurate to suggest Alberta has detected more cases)
  • Should rules with be changed because of these variants?: Notes that all returning traveller will required to be tested (once at arrival, then at day 10). Has also introduced tougher isolation protocol for home isolation
Q&A - Other
  • Previous Chief Medical Officer has been critical of relaunch plans. Response?: No one right way through pandemic and a variety of perspectives. Neighbouring provinces have roughly similar per capita rates and have similar frameworks. Wants to look at experiences in other regions. A small step forward doesn't mean a full reopening and will be evaluated over 3 weeks
  • Would you consider restarting asymptomatic testing/rapid testing in schools?: Looking at expanding use of rapid testing...specifically, congregate settings (they are useful primarily for symptomatic individuals). Accessing feasibility of options
  • Details from conversations with gym and fitness owners?: Heard about how difficult restrictions have been, especially in fitness. Has also spoken to small business owners. Best chance at opening them will be to show how each step has kept trend of cases/hospitalization downwards
Additional information will be logged below:
submitted by kirant to alberta [link] [comments]

FluroTech Provides Executive Update on Program Advancements

Flurotech
TSX: $TEST | OTCQB: $FLURF
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DAcqwoeyhM0&t=282s
They're developing a way to rapidly test for COVID19 using saliva at entry ways of stadiums, airports, offices, etc. (2,500 tests per hour, individual results in 5 minutes). News just released this morning: https://www.globenewswire.com/news-release/2021/02/03/2169027/0/en/FluroTech-Provides-Executive-Update-on-Program-Advancements.html
CALGARY, Alberta, Feb. 03, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Flurotech Ltd. (TSX: $TEST) | (OTCQB: $FLURF) (“FluroTech” or the “Company”), a leading developer of spectroscopy-based technology, together with FluroTest, LLC (“FluroTest”), a first-mover in surge-scale rapid antigen testing for the detection of COVID-19 and other pathogens, today announced that it is actively working and achieving major milestones as the Company prepares its application for emergency use authorization (“EUA”) with the FDA.
Key activity includes:
Clinical Trial
FluroTest is in daily discussions with a major U.S. based healthcare system and finalizing plans to conduct clinical trials. FluroTest intends to complete a comprehensive and large-scale clinical trial to obtain the requisite data on its systems performance for EUA consideration. The company will update the market as appropriate.
“Team excitement and enthusiasm are running high this week,” said Bill Phelan, CEO of FluroTest. “The opportunity to secure such a renowned clinical trial partner is an essential part of our plan to earn public trust and secure major contracts. As we take steps to formalize this mass trial engagement, our vision is to ultimately prove the efficacy of our system, which our proof-of-concept work has shown to be ‘unlike any other.’ This past week we saw Bill Gates calling for the development of a ‘mega test’ to help manage the next pandemic -- but following what I believe will be a highly successful clinical validation, our aim is to make a major impact on the one we’re currently living in.”
Amalgamation
FluroTech has accelerated the financial, regulatory and legal due diligence to complete the transaction with FluroTest shareholders to obtain 95% of the interest in FluroTest. This amalgamation is subject to TSXV conditions and approvals. FluroTech is working to ensure this process is carried out in the most efficient manner possible and will update the market as appropriate.
“After speaking with our major shareholders, we remain committed to complete the amalgamation with FluroTest in the quickest and most economical way possible. We are working closely with the TSX Venture Exchange to figure out exactly what that will look like, and I’m pleased to say that we’re all aligned and committed to this goal.” said Danny Dalla-Longa, CEO of FluroTech
“Since completing the financing we have been able to accelerate all of our plans, and as a major shareholder and CEO of FluroTest, I look forward to completing the amalgamation process and moving forward to commercialization as a single entity,” said Bill Phelan, CEO of FluroTest.
SARS-Cov-2 Variants
FluroTest has been informed by its biologics supplier that the reagent pair it utilizes has been shown to detect the variant strains first emerging in the U.K. and in South Africa. FluroTest targets the nucleocapsid protein on the SARS-Cov-2 coronavirus and a majority of the mutations appearing to date are of the spike protein.The Company continues to monitor the situation closely and does not anticipate efficacy concerns with the variants that have occurred thus far.
“In light of the recent news circulating about new variants, vaccine efficacy and the adoption of mass scale rapid testing we believe that we are entering the market at an opportune time,” Dalla-Longa continued. “To date, I haven’t seen another feasible point-of-entry testing solution and we aim to fill that gap for our customers large and small. After clinicals, we’re in for a game changer.”
About FluroTech (TSXV: TEST) (OTCQB: FLURF)
The goal of FluroTech’s research and technology is to develop detection methods which are sensitive, specific, and easy-to-use. By combining FluroTech’s proprietary spectroscopy-based technology with laboratory robotics automation and cloud computing, FluroTech, through the application of its technology and investment in Flurotest, has created a unique solution addressing the current and future pandemics. Using technology that was first developed at the University of Calgary, the FluroTest SARS-CoV-2 test is designed to identify patients with active virus infection; this is not necessarily the case for most of the currently approved tests that are meant to identify patients with SARS-CoV-2 nucleic acid. FluroTech’s laboratory is led by Dr. Elmar Prenner, the original developer of the technology. Dr. Prenner serves as senior science advisor of FluroTech and brings over 28 years of expertise in fluorescence spectroscopy. To learn more, visit FluroTech.com
About FluroTest LLC
FluroTest, a first-mover in surge-scale rapid antigen testing for the detection of SARS-CoV2 and other pathogens, is developing a pandemic defense and economic recovery system purpose-built for businesses and special-needs populations requiring fast and highly efficient testing for significant numbers of people. Unlike individual or low-throughput tests, FluroTest’s system is designed to be well-suited for high-traffic, high-risk pandemic environments including schools and colleges, hospitals and large healthcare facilities, athletic stadiums and performance venues, airline and cruise ship terminals, corporate campuses, shopping centers, manufacturing facilities, transportation and distribution hubs, and other large business and retail locations. Created to support executive business continuity efforts, the system combines and leverages the disciplines of robotics automation, biochemistry, fluorescence detection and cloud computing -- processing thousands of tests per hour while delivering accurate, digitally verifiable results to a test taker’s mobile device within 5 minutes. To learn more, visit FluroTest.com
For all investor inquiries:
MarketSmart Communications Inc.
1-877-261-4466
[email protected]
For general inquiries:
[email protected]
Cautionary Statement Regarding Forward-Looking Information
This news release contains "forward-looking information" within the meaning of Canadian securities legislation. Forward-looking information generally refers to information about an issuer’s business, capital, technology or operations that is prospective in nature, and includes future-oriented financial information about the issuer’s prospective financial performance or financial position. The forward-looking information in this news release includes disclosure about the ability of the Company’s testing devices to accurately and quickly detect COVID-19 and to process large numbers of samples in short time frames, the benefits of and demand for the Company’s testing devices, its efforts to obtain approval of the FDA and Health Canada, its potential partnership with a major U.S. based healthcare system and finalizing plans to conduct clinical trials and its intent to amalgamate with FluroTest Systems Ltd which owns a 95% interest in FluorTest LLC. The Company made certain material assumptions, including but not limited to prevailing market conditions and general business, economic, competitive, political and social uncertainties, the ability to obtain FDA and Health Canada approvals, the demand for its COVID-19 testing devices and their ability to perform as expected, its potential partnership with a major U.S. based healthcare system and finalizing plans to conduct clinical trials and its intent to amalgamate with FluroTest Systems Ltd which owns a 95% interest in FluorTest LLC and to obtain the regulatory approvals required in connection with the same, to develop the forward-looking information in this news release. There can be no assurance that such statements will prove to be accurate, as actual results and future events could differ materially from those anticipated in such statements. Accordingly, readers should not place undue reliance on forward-looking statements.
Actual results may vary from the forward-looking information in this news release due to certain material risk factors described in the Corporation’s Annual Information Form under the heading “Risk Factors”, the failure to develop and commercialize its testing devices in a timely manner or at all, the failure to recognize the anticipated benefits from the devices, the failure to obtain FDA or Health Canada approval for its products, the risk that regulatory approvals will not be received and the risk that changing circumstances will result in the decrease in demand for FluroTest’s products. The Company cautions that the foregoing list of material risk factors and assumptions is not exhaustive.
The Company assumes no obligation to update or revise the forward-looking information in this news release, unless it is required to do so under Canadian securities legislation.
Neither the TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in the policies of the TSX Venture Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy of this release.
This news release does not constitute an offer to sell or a solicitation of an offer to buy any of the securities. The securities described herein have not been and will not be registered under the United States Securities Act of 1933, as amended, or the securities laws of any state and may not be offered or sold within the United States or to or for the benefit or account of U.S. persons, absent such registration or an applicable exemption from such registration requirements.
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THE TIMES (Full Article) - Jordan Peterson on his depression, drug dependency and Russian rehab hell

THE TIMES (Full Article) - Jordan Peterson on his depression, drug dependency and Russian rehab hell
INTERVIEW

Jordan Peterson on his depression, drug dependency and Russian rehab hell

The superstar psychologist, scourge of snowflakes, and his daughter, Mikhaila, explain how he unravelled — and their bizarre journey to find a cure


https://preview.redd.it/4wodzb3gqze61.jpg?width=1180&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=3baa7140b4c222de64a15d823e3eb008c0fd7928
📷 Jordan Peterson
SHALAN AND PAUL FOR THE SUNDAY TIMES MAGAZINE
Interview by Decca Aitkenhead
Saturday January 30 2021, 6.00pm GMT, The Sunday Times

I thought this was going to be a normal interview with Jordan Peterson. After speaking with him at length, and with his daughter for even longer, I no longer have any idea what it is. I don’t know if this is a story about drug dependency, or doctors, or Peterson family dynamics — or a parable about toxic masculinity. Whatever else it is, it’s very strange.
Peterson, a clinical psychologist, is a conservative superstar of the culture wars. Born and raised in Alberta by a librarian and a teacher, he spent the first three decades of his career in relative academic obscurity, churning out papers and maintaining a small clinical practice. All that changed in 2016 when he challenged, on free-speech grounds, a new Canadian law he argued would legally compel him to use transgender people’s preferred pronouns. Practically overnight the Toronto professor became a YouTube sensation, posting videos and lectures attacking identity politics and political correctness, and dispensing bracing advice about how to be a real man. His 2018 self-help bestseller, 12 Rules for Life: An Antidote to Chaos, has made him arguably the world’s most famous — and certainly its most controversial — public intellectual.
For three tumultuous years wherever Peterson went uproar and adoration followed. His explosive confrontation with Cathy Newman on Channel 4 News in 2018 resulted in the network calling in security experts after some of his supporters posted abuse and threats online. To the millions of young men who idolise him, the erudite, unflappable 58-year-old is a kind of fantasy father figure. Life is tough, he warns them; they need to stop whining, tidy their room, stand up straight and deal with it. He accuses the “neo-Marxist radical left” of trying to “feminise” men, and defends traditional masculine dominance. According to Peterson men represent “order”. To his critics he represents the respectable face of reactionary misogyny, and a dangerous gateway drug to online alt-right radicalisation.

https://preview.redd.it/3cgcgt0xqze61.jpg?width=1180&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=1d21ce6ba9887c16eabaf34196f1f69499a45a42
📷 Jordan Peterson and his daughter, Mikhaila - SHALAN & PAUL FOR THE SUNDAY TIMES MAGAZINE
If his rise to fame was dramatic, what has happened since he disappeared from public view 18 months ago sounds fantastical — in his daughter’s words it is “like a horror movie”. A movie in which her father gets hooked on benzodiazepines, becomes suicidal, is hospitalised for his own safety and then diagnosed with schizophrenia. Against his doctors’ advice she flies him to Russia to be placed in an induced coma. He emerges delirious, unable to walk, and ricochets from one rehab centre to another, ending up in a Serbian clinic where he contracts Covid-19. Back home in Canada at last, from where he speaks to me earlier this month, he breaks down in floods of tears and has to leave the room. When I ask if he feels angry with himself for taking benzodiazepines, his daughter jumps in, arms waving — “Hold on, hold on!” — and tries to bring the interview to a close.

https://preview.redd.it/n7wyzc0jrze61.jpg?width=1180&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=214eaa905ec12e980c6b6027417fde8a7e22e4a1
📷 Russian roulette: Jordan and Mikhaila in Moscow, where he tried an unorthodox form of drugs detox@MIKHAILAPETERSON / INSTAGRAM
If this was a movie, its director would unquestionably be the 28-year-old Mikhaila Peterson, CEO of her father’s company. She and her Russian husband appear to have assumed full charge of his affairs, so before I am allowed to speak to him I must first talk to her. Unrecognisable from the ordinary-looking brunette from photos just a few years ago, Mikhaila today is a glossy, pouting Barbie blonde, and talks with the zealous, spiky conviction of a President Trump press spokeswoman.
According to her website she has suffered from juvenile rheumatoid arthritis, an autoimmune disorder, since early childhood, which necessitated a hip and ankle replacement at 17. Other symptoms — chronic fatigue, depression, OCD, nose bleeds, restless legs, brain fog, itchy skin, the list goes on — forced her to drop out of university, “and it finally occurred to me that whatever was happening was likely going to end in my death, and rather soon. After almost 20 years, the medical community still had no answers for me.” So she decided to cure herself.
In 2015 Mikhaila began to experiment with food elimination. Starting with gluten, she removed one food group after another from her diet, until for the past three years she has eaten literally nothing but red meat — almost exclusively beef — and salt. This has, she claims, cured everything. She now makes podcasts and blogs about her “lion diet”.
Needless to say the medical profession does not endorse this diet. Nevertheless, in 2018 her father adopted it and within months declared it had cured his depression, anxiety, psoriasis, snoring, gingivitis, gastric reflux, even the floaters in his right eye. He stopped taking the SSRI antidepressants that he had been on for 14 years. He was, he proclaimed, “intellectually at my best”.

https://preview.redd.it/qxxxbxqhsze61.jpg?width=1180&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=75bb2723888632e7abe91b83063fb8f52b99f01b
📷 Delivering a lecture in Ljubljana, Slovenia, on his 12 Rules for Life book tour in 2018 REX
Like every medical autodidact I’ve ever met, Mikhaila rattles off pharmacological jargon at 100 miles an hour, sweeping from one outlandish tale to another with breathless melodrama that becomes increasingly exhausting to follow. She wants to give me the “nitty-gritty nasty details” of the past 18 months herself, “because Dad is still not fully recovered, and he’s still extremely prone to anxiety, so any recounting of the story knocks him out for a couple of days”. After 80 minutes on Zoom, the one thing of which I’m certain is that, were I as close to death as she assures me her father repeatedly was, this is not the person I would entrust with saving my life.
The problems all began, according to Mikhaila, in October 2016. By then she, her husband and her father were consuming only meat and greens — the full lion diet would come later — and ate a stew that contained apple cider, to which all three had a violent “sodium metabisulphite response. It was really awful — but it hit him hardest. He couldn’t stand up without blacking out. He had this impending sense of doom. He wasn’t sleeping.” Peterson himself has said he didn’t sleep for 25 days, a claim that has been widely disputed, given that the longest period of sleeplessness recorded is 11 days. Mikhaila brushes this away impatiently. “He was in really bad shape, right.”
Peterson had plenty of reasons to be unsettled. His book 12 Rules would be coming out a year later; his job at the University of Toronto was in jeopardy due to the transgender pronoun controversy. “So that was incredibly stressful,” Mikhaila agrees. “And then just going from not being known to being known was stressful. But our entire family agrees, the main problem here was this weird health thing.” They consulted doctors, “who didn’t really know what was going on”, until the family GP prescribed “a really low dose of benzodiazepine”, the family of sedative drugs that includes Valium. It seemed to help. “And we were, like, OK, whatever.”

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📷 Peterson’s wife, Tammy, was diagnosed with a rare form of kidney cancer in early 2019DANIEL HAMBURY / STELLA PICTURES
By early 2019 Peterson was a household name, his book a global bestseller, when disaster struck. His wife of 30 years, Tammy, was diagnosed with kidney cancer. “We did a whole bunch of research and it was this extremely rare cancer that is extremely deadly.” Tammy suffered all kinds of surgical complications, and Peterson spent months at her hospital bedside, terrified she would die. That summer his doctor raised his benzodiazepine dose, but instead of soothing him it seemed only to make matters worse. “Dad started to get super-weird. It manifested as extreme anxiety, and suicidality.”
On another psychiatrist’s advice he quit the drug and started taking ketamine, but cold turkey sent him into benzodiazepine withdrawal. Another psychiatrist, a family friend, told him to resume the benzodiazepine and check into a rehab clinic to help wean him back off it slowly. After six weeks in rehab in Connecticut he was in a worse state than ever, still on the benzodiazepine plus now additional drugs, unable to stop pacing or writhing with agitation. Frightened he would kill himself, Peterson transferred to a public hospital in Toronto in November, where he was diagnosed with schizophrenia.
The hospital wanted to treat him with electroconvulsive therapy, but Mikhaila and her family were having none of it. “It’s not like we’re uneducated in these things, right?” she says. “We kept telling them, no, the problem was his medication. But they wouldn’t listen to us. So we started calling rehab clinics around the world. We rang 57 of them. And this one place in Russia was, like, ‘Yeah, we do detox.’ So we thought, what do we do? It’s got to be dangerous because no one else will do it. But my family agreed, let’s give it a shot.”
The Toronto doctors “were not OK with it. We had to sign papers taking responsibility for whatever happened. And they were annoyed about it enough that they wouldn’t give us his discharge papers. Which is not even legal, right? It was a complete mess.”
In January last year, with the help of her husband, a nurse and a security guard, Mikhaila put Peterson on a private plane to Moscow. The clinic there was more familiar with detoxing patients from opiates than benzodiazepines; they took one look at Peterson and said he’d been deliberately poisoned. “And I was, like, no, it’s the meds!” To complicate matters further, the clinic intubated him for undiagnosed pneumonia. Did she feel her father was in safe hands? “Well, my husband was translating everything, which was terrifying. But the clinic looked really modern. It didn’t look sketchy.”
The medics administered propofol, the drug that killed Michael Jackson, to induce an eight-day coma, during which they “did something called plasmapheresis, which takes your blood and cleans it. Benzodiazepines have such a long half-life, there’s a theory that maybe some of the withdrawal is because you still have benzodiazepines in you. So the plasmapheresis got rid of everything.”
When Peterson regained consciousness, it became clear that they were not out of the woods yet. “He was catatonic. Really, really bad. And then he was delirious. He thought my husband was his old roommate. Oh, it was horrible.” Did she panic? “Yeah! I lost a whole bunch of hair. I’ve never been that stressed in my entire life. We’d brought Dad here and it was, like, what did the detox do? Was it too hard on his brain? I thought, I’m f***ed if this goes badly. The entire world is going to blame me, because who brings somebody to detox from these medications in Russia? It’s, like, this is really bad.”
Peterson was transferred to a public hospital near Moscow, “for people with severe head trauma, basically. It was like a Soviet-era hospital from a movie. But it was full of really — thank God — really, really, really, really skilled doctors. So I went the next day, and Dad was back!”
The doctors had put him on new drugs; he was alert. By now it was February and Peterson had no memory of anything since mid-December. He had even forgotten how to type. Over eight days he learnt to walk again, and was then transferred to another clinic to convalesce. In late February his family flew him to Florida, rented a house in Palm Beach, hired nurses and thought he would recover. But ten days later all the old symptoms came back. Unable to stop moving, in pain, Peterson was suicidal again. “And I was, like, what is going on?”
Mikhaila contacted a clinic in Serbia — “this, like, top-of-the-world private hospital” — and flew her father to Belgrade, where he was diagnosed with akathisia, a condition of restlessness classically linked to benzodiazepine withdrawal. Finally Mikhaila had found doctors who corroborated her own theory. They prescribed further sedatives and antidepressants and an opiate; her father seemed “stoned” but “at least started to relax”. Father and daughter released a podcast, updating fans on his recovery. And then Serbia went into lockdown, so she moved into her father’s clinic with her husband, their nanny and three-year-old daughter — and all five of them promptly contracted Covid.
By now my head is spinning. The blizzard of obscure pharmaceutical terminology keeps on coming, as Mikhaila reels off the names of more antibiotics and antidepressants and antipsychotics prescribed to her father, recounting her objections to this one and that one until it all becomes a blur.
The long and the short of it is that late last year Peterson flew home to Canada. His akathisia — the intense agitation and restlessness that makes him suicidal — has improved significantly but not disappeared. No one can understand why it still plagues him. He still isn’t free of meds. Having gone through several more doctors in Toronto, Mikhaila is currently corresponding online with “thousands” of akathisia sufferers, who are “telling me what worked for them”.

https://preview.redd.it/59w7xgazsze61.jpg?width=1180&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=f6caf0bc3c486a4c744e335709097953e61f9251
📷 Christmas Day, 2020, in Toronto. Clockwise from left: Jordan, Mikhaila and husband Andrey, Julian (Jordan’s son) with son Elliott and wife Jillian, Tammy with granddaughter Scarlett ---- ELLIANA ALLON
Has she ever, I wonder, felt perceived by the medical profession as the problem? “Completely, yes. Hundred per cent. I’ve been problematic for a while.” She starts to laugh. “I’m pretty pushy when I think something is wrong.” She doesn’t have any actual medical training, though, I point out. Doesn’t she worry about the responsibility she has assumed for her father’s treatment? “But because of my experience of being ill, I’ve done a lot of research. There’s this trust people have of doctors that I don’t have. Because doctors are just people, right?”
This opinion is not uncommon in North America, where surprising numbers regard YouTube as a viable substitute for medical school. Whatever your opinion of Peterson, however, his scrupulous deference to scientific data is indisputable. His public image is defined by scholarly precision; “There’s no evidence for that,” is practically his catchphrase.
I am dying to ask him why he submitted to this medical circus, orchestrated by his daughter against his doctor’s orders, when we speak the following day. But at the end of this long and often bewildering account from his daughter, I still can’t tell if her father will be cogent or incoherent. I don’t know what to expect. And Mikhaila will, of course, be monitoring our conversation.
Peterson is as impeccably groomed, composed and meticulously courteous as ever when he appears on Zoom a day later. He looks gaunt and pale, though, and I’m struck by an overwhelming sense of his vulnerability.
As the professor is famously data-driven, I ask what medical evidence was so compelling that it persuaded him to detox in Moscow. He looks slightly blank. “I don’t remember anything. From December 16 of 2019 to February 5, 2020,” he says, “I don’t remember anything at all.” He reassures me that he did, nonetheless, consent to being treated in Moscow, so again I ask why.
“Well, I went to the best treatment clinic in North America. And all they did was make it worse. So we were out of options. The judgment of my family was that I was likely going to die in Toronto.” Why would he put his life in the hands of his family and not the medical profession? “I had put myself in the hands of the medical profession. And the consequence of that was that I was going to die,” he repeats blankly. “So it wasn’t that [the evidence from Moscow] was compelling. It was that we were out of other options.”
I’m curious about the extent to which his mental health was troubling him in the months and years leading up to the crisis. On his book tour he’d delivered a different lecture each night at 160 cities in 200 days, addressing crowds of many thousands. Feted as a psychological authority in possession of all the answers — busy dispensing advice to fans about their mental health — how worried was he about his own? “Well, I don’t think it’s a mental health issue. I think it’s a physical health issue. I have an autoimmune disorder of some sort, and much depression is autoimmune in nature.”
Now I’m confused all over again. Throughout all his medical ordeals there wasn’t ever a formal diagnosis of an autoimmune disorder, was there? “Yeah, there was,” Mikhaila jumps in. “In Russia and in Serbia. Fibromyalgia.” That isn’t an autoimmune condition, is it? “I mean,” Peterson says vaguely, “these sort of autoimmune conditions aren’t very well understood — and fibromyalgia is a good example of that. It’s terra incognita.”
Then he starts talking instead about post-traumatic stress disorder. “One of the markers for post-traumatic stress disorder is derealisation. Like when the things around you don’t seem real. And I was in a constant state of derealisation from October 2016 till …” — he checks the day’s date with a mirthless chuckle — “January 12th of 2021.”
Being Jordan Peterson, he explains, has involved five years of untold pressure. “I was at the epicentre of this incredible controversy, and there were journalists around me constantly, and students demonstrating. It’s really emotionally hard to be attacked publicly like that. And that happened to me continually for, like, three years.” In 2017, 200 of his colleagues “signed a petition at the University of Toronto to have me removed from my tenured position. And my faculty association forwarded that to the administration without even notifying me.” When he gave a talk at Queen’s University in Kingston, Ontario, “protesters were banging on the windows. It was like a zombie attack. They arrested a woman who was carrying a garotte, for God’s sake! And I was harassed directly after the demonstration by a small coterie of insane protesters who were in my face for two blocks, three blocks, yelling and screaming.”
Was it frightening? “I guess I’d have to say yes, definitely. I was concerned for my family. I was concerned for my reputation. I was concerned for my occupation. And other things were happening. The Canadian equivalent of the Inland Revenue service was after me, making my life miserable, for something they admitted was a mistake three months later, but they were just torturing me to death. The college of psychologists that I belonged to was after me because one of my clients had put forth a whole sequence of specious allegations. So that was extraordinarily stressful.”
He was — and remains — intensely frustrated that journalists keep casting his work as “fundamentally political”. “I really don’t like upsetting people,” he says. “I’m a clinical psychologist, it’s in my nature to help people. I’m not interested in generating controversy. I’ve been trying to help people [understand] that they need a profound meaning in their life because their lives are difficult.”
His fans’ enthusiasm for his tough-love message quite unravels him. “The response has been continually amazing. I don’t know what to make of it. What should I think of the fact that I have 600 million views on YouTube?” He certainly thinks about it a lot; he references his viewing figures repeatedly, with a kind of awestruck wonder. “So it’s the scale of exposure that’s — well, I mean, it’s not unparalleled, because there is no shortage of famous people, but it’s certainly unparalleled for me! I mean, when all this hit me I was already 55 or something. I’d laboured under relative obscurity. But now I’ve had this incredible view into the suffering of thousands and thousands of people, and I can’t go out without people coming up to me. And they’re usually quite emotional, and I’m …” His voice trembles, then cracks.
“You don’t have conversations like that, that often, outside of the clinical sphere. So part of what’s overwhelming to me is how it’s direct evidence of how little encouragement so many people get.” His face crumples into tears. “They’re starving …” He breaks down. “Sorry,” he sobs, “I haven’t done an interview for a long time.” He gets up to leave and returns a minute later carrying a towel to dry his eyes.
“And things just fell apart insanely with [his wife] Tammy. Every day was life and death and crisis for five months. The doctors said, ‘Well, she’s contracted this cancer that’s so rare there’s virtually no literature on it, and the one-year fatality rate is 100 per cent.’ So endless nights sleeping on the floor in emergency, and continual surgical complications.” He looks shellshocked. “So I took the benzodiazepines.”
Those drugs are notoriously addictive, I point out; he had surely heard enough horror stories about housewives hooked on Valium in the 1960s to be wary? “No, I really didn’t give it a second thought. They were prescribed and I just took them.”
Maybe they really were the cause of all his problems. The more he talks, though, the more I wonder whether toxic masculinity might have been a culprit, too. His family history of depression might tell us something about the price to be paid for his bootstrap philosophy; that when life became excruciatingly stressful, Peterson’s stand up, man up, suck it up mentality didn’t work. At the very point when the most famous public intellectual on the planet was preaching a regime of order and self-discipline, he was privately in chaos. Parallels with Donald Trump come to mind; another unhappy man closed off from his emotions, projecting strong man mythology while hunkered down in a bunker with his family against the world.
Peterson’s critics will undoubtedly point out that he built an entire intellectual philosophy upon the principle that life is all about pain and suffering; that the strong, manly response is to square one’s shoulders and battle through it, not to take drugs to numb the pain. “No, I’ve never said that. Look, if you’re a viable clinician you encourage people to take psychiatric medication when it’s appropriate. What I really encourage in people is to understand that it isn’t useful to allow your suffering to make you resentful. And, believe me, I’ve had plenty of temptation to become resentful about what’s happened to me in the last two years.”
When I watched the podcast he made last June with Mikhaila in Belgrade, I tell him, I thought he looked angry, and wondered who or what he was angry with. “Well, pain will make you angry.” Is any part of Peterson angry with himself for taking benzodiazepines? He hesitates. “I wouldn’t say angry. But it’s not like I failed to see the irony. That was another thing that continues to make it difficult to stomach. You know, should I have known better? Possibly.”
Mikhaila interrupts sharply. “Well …” but he continues. “I mean, I did do my thesis on alcoholism.” She raises her voice and waves her arms. “This is — hold up, hold up! You had a side-effect from a medication. Should you have known better that benzodiazepines can cause akathisia in people who take SSRIs?” “No,” Peterson defers. Enunciating each word, she spells out: “This. Wasn’t. A. Benzodiazepine. Dependency. Problem. This was an akathisia side-effect from psych meds.” Her father nods. “Right. Yes, that’s right.” Mikhaila checks the time. “We have to wrap up.” He glances up. “I’m doing OK, by the way.” “Yeah, yeah, I know. But still.” Is he absolutely sure, I try once more, that what he experienced wasn’t an understandable response to intolerable stress? “There’s no way akathisia is that,” Mikhaila snaps.
Peterson’s wife is making a miraculous recovery from cancer. His greatest source of stress right now is “fear that the akathisia will come back. It’s unbearable. And there’s always this sense that you could stop it, if you just exercised enough willpower. So it’s humiliating as well.” Does it generate a self-punishing voice in his head, accusing him of being weak? “Yes, definitely.” He worries that akathisia must look like weakness to everyone else too. “It’s certainly how it appears. Grotesque, for sure.”
He suffered akathisia for 26 days in November, and five in December — “and those episodes would last five to seven hours.” So far in January he has suffered none, “but I can feel it lurking”. Every morning he takes a 90-minute sauna, scrubs himself in the shower for 20 minutes, walks for between two and four hours, “and then I can begin to have something resembling a productive day”.
One thing that has not changed is his politics. Asked about the storming of the Capitol in Washington, he clicks back into more familiar, self-assured Peterson mode. “I thought that the continual pushing on the radical leftist front would wake up the sleeping right. I saw it coming five years ago. And you can put it at Trump’s feet, but it’s not helpful. I mean, obviously he was the immediate catalyst for the horrible events that enveloped Washington — and perhaps it’ll all die down when Trump disappears. But I doubt it.” Should Trump be impeached? “I think he should be ignored.”
Incredibly, throughout all of this he has managed to write another book — Beyond Order: 12 More Rules for Life — the sequel to his self-help bestseller. I ask how he feels about the prospect of its publication this spring. “Well, I’m ambivalent about it because I can’t judge the book properly. I didn’t write it under optimal circumstances, to say the least, so I can’t make an adequate judgment of its quality.”
Why didn’t he postpone the book until he was better?
“I can tell you why I did it. How I could do it. It was easy. Because the alternative was worse.” He’d lost a year to Tammy being ill, then a year to his own illness. “If I would have lost the book, I wouldn’t have had anything left.” I tell him I’m amazed he managed it, and he looks pleased.
“If you would have seen me, believe me, it would have been more amazing. When I recorded the audio book in November I was akathisic almost the entire time.” His voice raises and fills with pride. “I would go to the studio virtually convulsing in the car. I was moving just frenetically, and then I’d get upstairs into the studio and force myself to not move for two hours.
“If you would have asked me to lay odds on the probability that I would live to finish the recording, I would have bet you ten to one that I wouldn’t have. But I did the recording. And it was the same with the book. Because not to would have been worse. So, to the degree that I can explain how I was able to manage it, I’m not going to talk about willpower or courage, I’m going to talk about the lesser of two evils.”
Except, of course, that he has ended up framing his story in terms of his willpower and courage.
Beyond Order: 12 More Rules for Life by Jordan B Peterson is published on March 2 (Allen Lane £25)
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I (26M) threw in the towel and don't feel any better, feel like I might have made a mistake

I (26M) decided to call it quits with the most important person in my last night (23F). We have been dating for 4 years. You've all heard this story before, she's perfect but doesn't like sex. Told me it plainly before and told me it again last night.
The sex slowed down about a year into the relationship and eventually never again. I knew this would never last because I could see this red flag ages ago but I could never rip the bandaid because I genuinely don't believe I'll find another girl I'm compatible with. I never had any luck with girls until I met her. I'm just too different of an individual, my entire life revolves around heavy metal music (sounds stupid, I'm probably mildly autistic and undiagnosed) and this girl was the only person who shared the passion in the same way I did. Most girls find me repulsive and won't give me a chance. I'm not stupid or unattractive, but I have really long hair, I'm skinny, I'm a computer nerd and I'm just generally the type of guy that most women find repulsive. And I'm not willing to change my identity just to get women to like me. So when I met this girl in europe and we clicked I fell hopelessly in love and did whatever I could to make it work. I helped her get a visa to canada and we soon became common law and moved out to the coast away from both our family and friends to start our new exciting life. I am definitely understating the amount of effort and anguish that we went through to be together here. All our interests align, I thought I would spend the rest of my life with her. We lived happily ever after...until she stopped having sex with me. It destroyed my self esteem, made me depressed, so I finally decided that I'd probably feel less lonely if I was actually alone.
We talked about it many times, she just doesn't enjoy sex. Doesn't need it, doesn't think about it, doesn't understand why it's a dealbreaker for me. She used to like sex though, so this makes no sense to me, but she denies this and says she was faking it. I swear her libido died when she got an IUD but she refuses to even humour the idea of removing it because it has a slew of other benefits. So that's it, she wants to be together but we're never having sex again. Either I accept that or throw in the towel. She even offered to open the relationship but I'll never find a FWB so this offer doesn't interest me.
So I reluctantly dumped my best friend and she feels betrayed. This created a really toxic environment though, we're stuck in this 1 bedroom apartment but neither of us can afford to move out alone. We live in the most expensive city in canada. I can't move back to my parents because it would be plain stupid to throw away my golden handcuffs government job over this (parents in alberta, no jobs there), and she can't move back to europe because covid/money. I won't consider moving into a situation with roommates because I need my space. So here we are at a standoff in this puny apartment that once felt like home.
I have no family or friends in this city and I'm stuck living with the love of my life who I just had to dump. I don't know what to do next. I'm considering quitting my job and packing up and leaving, but who knows how long I'll be unemployed if I do this. Just feel dead inside and really need the support of my family right now. It really feels like I'm going to be alone forever, I'm just not good at making friends, nevermind girlfriends, and I just dumped the only person who made me feel like life is worth living. Plus the dating scene is just fucking terrible for people my age, I'm convinced I really will be forever alone now.
Not sure what I'm looking to get out of this, just really needed to put my words down somewhere. Been lurking here a while.
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COVID Facts That Every Person Should Know (But Most Don't) - Canadian Version

Updated January 8, 2020
DISCLAIMER: I wear my mask, wash my hands and try not to touch my face. I limit my social interactions. I follow most rules, even though many don't make sense. This is NOT a “COVID hoax” or “anti-vaxxer” post.
I agreed with lockdown measures that were taken in March 2020, when a lot was unknown. We did not have full knowledge of whom the virus affected and we did not have better treatment measures.
But science and data over the last 10 months has clearly shown that our approach needs to change.
“Where all think alike, no one thinks very much” Walter Lippmann, 2-time Pulitzer Prize winner
SO WHO IS COVID DEADLY FOR? Data from government public health websites.
PUBLIC HEALTH CANADA https://health-infobase.canada.ca/covid ... s.html#fn1
Out of 16435 COVID related deaths in Canada, 89.2% are in the 70+ age group.
Percentage of COVID deaths in the 0-49 age group: 1.1% (this is a total of 192 COVID related deaths in Canada)
NOTE: It is important to make the distinction that just because someone dies WITH COVID does not mean that they died BECAUSE of COVID. COVID deaths may be inflated due to this distinction. False positive cases may further inflate this number (more on this later).
LONG TERM CARE HOMES https://ltc-covid19-tracker.ca
70.3% of all COVID related deaths in Canada have been in long term care homes
PUBLIC HEALTH ALBERTA https://www.alberta.ca/stats/covid-19-a ... istics.htm
Average age of COVID-related death in Alberta: 82 years old.
Out of 1241 COVID related deaths in Alberta, 97.1% have had 1 or more co-morbidities.
Here is the breakdown: * 3 or more comorbidities: 75.0% * 2 comorbidities: 14.4% * 1 comorbidity: 7.7% * No comorbidity: 2.9% (highly likely to be in the older age demographic)
NOTE: Comorbidities included are: Diabetes, Hypertension, COPD, Cancer, Dementia, Stroke, Liver Cirrhosis, Cardiovascular diseases (including IHD and Congestive heart failure), Chronic Kidney disease, and Immuno-deficiency.
STATSCAN REPORT: COVID 19 DEATH COMORBIDITIES IN CANADA (from the first wave, until July 31, 2020) https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/pub/45- ... 87-eng.htm
WHAT DOES THIS ALL MEAN?
We must acknowledge that these stats are all people and each number represents a human loss. We are all empathetic to that.
Now, the data clearly states the obvious: 1. A LARGE majority of COVID related deaths have and are still occurring in long term care homes. 2. COVID is a deadly threat to persons with co-morbidities and/or persons above the age of 70. It is not a LONE killer by itself. Note that any disease is dangerous to this population set, not just COVID. 3. For a healthy person below the age of 70, there is greater than 99% chance of COVID recovery. This is no worse than the flu.
This is all good news, because we know who COVID affects and who we desperately need to protect. We also have other good news…
GOOD NEWS #1: VITAMIN D3 DATA
Vitamin D acts a key function for strengthening our immune system and is primarily acquired through sunlight exposure. There is a strong correlation that a Vitamin D deficiency will likely result in a serious case of a COVID infection, lowering hospitalizations, deaths and long-term COVID effects.
Vitamin D3 was shown to be deficient in 80% of hospitalized COVID patients in Spain [2].
The most comprehensive scientific study of Vitamin D deficiency in correlation to COVID patients was conducted in India over a span of 6 weeks [3]. Out of 154 patients, 63 severe cases needed ICU. Out of these, 61 patients (97%) had a Vitamin D deficiency. Overall, India has shown to have a lower strain of COVID, possibly because Vitamin D deficiency hits a much lower percentage of the population (due to more sunlight).
The UK government has already promoted Vitamin D to the entire population and is giving out free vitamin D handouts to persons most at risk for COVID [4].
4000 IU daily is recommended to create a strong immune response to COVID [5].
GOOD NEWS #2: BETTER COVID TREATMENTS
Doctors have improved the mortality rates of severe COVID cases, using better ICU procedures. A person hospitalized in March 2020 was 3 times more likely to die than someone hospitalized in August 2020 [6].
GOOD NEWS #3: ASYMPTOMATIC %
At least 17% of the population is estimated to be asymptomatic to COVID [7]. Many are immune to the danger of COVID.
The converse argument, of course, is the possible asymptomatic spread of infection which is difficult to detect. However, if an asymptomatic person does not interact with the vulnerable portion of the population, then what difference does it make?
Instead, why not focus on controlling spread in the SMALLER vulnerable demographic where it really matters?
BAD NEWS #1: LOOKING AT CASE NUMBERS USING FLAWED PCR TESTING
PCR tests, in their current form, are faulty and ineffective [9]. In Dec 2020, the World Health Organization confirmed what was known for months; that high cycle threshold PCR tests result in a high amount of false positives and that testing labs around the world need to reduce their threshold values [10]. The US FDA has also warned of the risk of false positives from PCR tests [8].
It is important for everyone to understand what a Polymerase Chain Reaction test does. A PCR test is looking for RNA, which is a small particle of any cell (just like DNA). In this case, we are looking for the coronavirus RNA.
The amount of RNA in a saliva/nasal swab is very small, so PCR tests amplify the sample to help detect it. Each cycle doubles the material. One becomes two. In the next cycle, two is amplified to four, and so on. In Canada, and most of the world, specimens are amplified to a minimum value of at least 35 cycle thresholds (Ct). That creates over 17 billion copies of the material, enough to be able to detect any viral particle.
However, a Canadian National Microbiology study stated that specimens with Ct values greater than 24 were found to be viral culture negative [11]. What does this mean?
That if RNA is found at a Ct value of 35, the virus cannot be cultured. It cannot be grown. Because it is DEAD. The RNA is simply a remnant of a past COVID infection. A FALSE POSITIVE CASE. This case does not reflect an active infection nor is it contagious. That person was infected weeks or months ago.
This has been known irrefutable scientific fact for months: PCR tests are not reliable unless we REDUCE Ct values. Why are we creating worldwide mitigation policies based on this?
Lastly, and most importantly, using number of cases for policy making does not reflect the bigger picture. Someone with little or no symptoms of illness is NOT a case.
Instead, our main concern should this: How many of those cases are getting HOSPITALIZED and who is DYING?
THE BAD NEWS #2: LONG COVID
Long term effects of COVID; persistent symptoms such as fatigue, headaches, respiratory, brain and heart issues can continue for weeks and months for some COVID cases. While there is still more research to be done, here is what we know so far.
King’s College London and the UK National Health Service have compiled the largest data set on this topic, using information from 4182 confirmed COVID cases [12]. Here was the breakdown of how many experienced long COVID, by duration of symptoms. The study also states that these numbers were comparable to Sweden and USA.
The susceptibility to experience long COVID is increased by the following factors, but can occur in low proportions in healthy individuals as well:
Long COVID is a definitely a concern, but it does not warrant ignoring the negative long-term health effects of a lockdown.
BAD NEWS# 3: LOCKDOWNS DO MORE HARM THAN GOOD
If you believe that a lockdown puts life and health ahead of the economy, you have been gravely misled. Lockdowns kill and destroy more lives than save lives.
The World Health Organization themselves do not advocate for lockdowns as the primary means of control of this virus [13].
The first and very comprehensive cost-benefit analysis of a lockdown in Canada was performed by Dr. Ari Jaffe, an infectious disease expert, who initially supported lockdowns but is now a strong opponent. His study concluded that the lockdowns in Canada will result in 10 statistical lives lost for every 1 COVID life saved [14].
Reasons for these lockdown deaths is due to restricted medical care such as
Moreover, the following repercussions of a lockdown are also not taken into account. All of these have a negative impact on life expectancy and illness.
The Canadian Mental Health Association concluded a study on all of the above, with 3027 participants Canada wide [15]. Here are some highlights:
A Canadian Psychiatric Research report has projected an increase of between 418-2114 excess suicides in Canada (depending on 1.6% to 10.7% increase in unemployment) [16].
Lastly, lockdowns are causing our general health and immunity to be being lowered. We are locked down at home, with increasing mental health issues, stress, lack of sunlight and lack of exercise. This further lowers our bodies’ response to any sort of infection, including COVID.
Using lockdowns, we have only looked at short term gratification, while disregarding long term destruction.
BAD NEWS #4: HOSPITAL OVERCAPACITY
The ideal measure to avoid a lockdown is to increase hospital capacity as much as possible.
Unfortunately, hospital space and staff shortages have always been a problem, even before the pandemic [17]. Every flu season in the last 3 years has had hospitals running at over capacity. Don’t let COVID distract you from the historical failures of the government.
This may sound ludicrous, but a simple online search will prove it. Here are a few news articles from previous years addressing that concern:
Dec 2017: https://bit.ly/38wEqwn
Feb 2018: https://bit.ly/2M5dIU4
Jan 2020: https://bit.ly/3nZ5laR
Canada, despite being one of the biggest spenders for health care, sits far behind for services provided. As of 2019, out of 28 developed countries, here is how Canada ranked [18]:
Between Mar 15-Jun 13, 2020 (the first lockdown), the Ontario surgical backlog had an average increase of a whopping 11413 surgeries per week. This led to a total of 150000 backlogged surgeries, which is estimated to take 84 weeks to clear (almost 1.5 years) [19].
We were completely unprepared for additional medical concerns, let alone a pandemic. Why has the government not addressed the hospital capacity issue? This is the most IMPORTANT factor in avoiding a lockdown. Why is the public paying the price for government inadequacy?
BAD NEWS #5: CANADA’S ECONOMIC SITUATION
Socio-economic factors are the greatest indicator for the health of the population. Lack of finances do affect mental health, physical health and life expectancy. Look at any third-world country. Look at the impoverished demographic of any population set.
Canadian Annual Deficit:
2019: $19.8 Billion [20]
Projected for March 2021: $381.6 to $398.7 Billion [21]
This is an increase in deficit of almost 2000%. THIS IS REAL. This is NOT a typo. Imagine your $20,000 student loan becoming $398,000. By far, this is the HIGHEST deficit in Canadian history.
Within the last year, Canada has had the worst increase in Debt-to-GDP ratio in the world, which has risen by 80% [22]. We have spent the most amount of money in proportion to what our economy generates.
Our Minister of Finance resigned during the summer. A day after the Fall Economic statement was released on Nov 30, 2020, our Deputy Minister of Finance also resigned.
Our current Minister of Finance has no background in this field. Watch this video of her in Parliament: https://fb.watch/23ypw_Ru1_/
The following industries have been devastated: Aviation, Tourism, Entertainment, Hospitality, Restaurants, Fitness, Retail
Our official unemployment rate in October 2020 was listed at 8.9% [23]. This is deceiving. This is artificially held low by government subsidies and by ridiculous requirements to be considered “unemployed”.
The true unemployment number could be as high as 30%, if not more [24]. That means a staggering 10 million Canadians unemployed.
218000 small-to-medium businesses are at risk of closing permanently [25]. That is 1 out of every 5 businesses. This was based on July 2020 data, before a second lockdown was announced, and is clearly much worse now.
On the other hand, large corporations are thriving. The price of a lockdown is not equally borne across the Canadian population.
We are all in the SAME storm, but not the SAME boat.
WHY IS THE GOVERNMENT STILL IMPLEMENTING SUCH DAMAGING POLICIES?
This all started with a wildly incorrect and catastrophic model of COVID deaths by Dr. Neil Ferguson, from the Imperial College in the U.K. He projected that, unmitigated, COVID-19 would kill 326,000 in Canada this year [26]. Similar projections were made for other countries. Dr. Ferguson’s faulty projections, without being reviewed, led to a swift global lockdown and mass hysteria.
Using the Wuhan lockdown as a example, with a “75% reduction in interpersonal contact rates” however, he predicted deaths would fall to under 46,000 in Canada. Coming to the end of 2020, we are at approximately 15000 COVID related deaths in Canada [1]. While that is still a tragic number, it is nowhere close to what was predicted.
Dr. Ferguson has a history of incorrect modeling, apart from COVID. [26] [27]
In March 2020, Dr. Ferguson admitted that his COVID modeling was based on a 13-year old computer code that was intended for a “feared influenza pandemic”.
We shut down the world based on this? No one looked for a second opinion? His reckless advice set a dangerous precedent for lockdown policies and abuse of human and constitutional rights.
If the government realized and changed their approach now, it would essentially mean admitting they are wrong. (Personally, I feel they have succumbed to tunnel vision).
How can they reverse course without getting politically skewered for going all in on what is now by far the largest public spending campaign ever, the most significant restriction on free society ever and the greatest peacetime damage ever inflicted on a generation, socially and economically, in modern history when it turns out it didn't make much of a difference? (Credit: Josh Kocher)
Instead, politicians have used the new “science” of DEMAGOGY - political activity or practices that seek support by appealing to the desires, prejudices and emotions of ordinary people rather than by using rational argument.
Implement measures that make us FEEL safe instead of what is ACTUALLY safe. With only COVID in the spotlight, actions are based on “optics”. As long as COVID lives are down, why bother with the collateral damage from a lockdown and its accompanying non-COVID deaths? Politicians don’t have to wipe that blood off their hands. Ignorance is bliss. Let’s save 1 COVID life that is in the public eye, but it will cost 10 lives down the road, not in the public eye. This is known as the Corona Dilemma (see attached pictures) [14].
If we had always put health ahead of the economy, here’s what would have happened a long time ago.
Doing the above would save millions of lives globally. But we accept those risks despite high fatality numbers, in order to stimulate the economy. We leave the decisions to drive cars, consume alcohol, eat fried foods and smoke in the hands of the people. (Yes, they are not CONTAGIOUS so it’s a different form of threat, but a death is a death, specially if it is statistically preventable).
Another important point to consider is that politicians are making decisions while being completely protected from the consequences of their decisions. Their salary stays the same and their large pensions fully protected. This is a position of PRIVILEGE.
WHY IS THE PUBLIC SUPPORTING THESE POLICIES?
For the general public, there are many working from home with pay. They have little to lose with a lockdown, so it is easy to support it. Again, a position of privilege. They are unaware of our country’s disastrous economic situation or the dangerous effects of a lockdown.
But more importantly, public support is being driven by mass hysteria; from the fear-mongering and sensationalizing of news by irresponsible journalism and incompetent politicians.
QUESTIONS FOR THE GOVERNMENT
QUESTION: Why are high cycle threshold PCR tests still being used as the lone source for creating broad policies, despite their known inaccuracy and unsuitability? Can we stop with the constant regurgitating of daily case numbers?
QUESTION: Why are long term care facilities still experiencing COVID related deaths and not being protected better?
QUESTION: Why is the rest of Canada shut down when a distinct majority of the COVID related deaths are occurring in long term care homes, in age groups of 70+ and persons with co-morbidities?
QUESTION: Why do thousands of small businesses have to suffer when there is no proof that they are responsible for COVID transmissions?
Ontario COVID-19 Science Advisory Table [29]: Restaurants, bars and clubs were the source of 0.7% of all COVID transmissions in Ontario. In fact, 58% of COVID cases do not know how and where the person was infected. The primary known source, close contact, adds up to 45% of Ontario COVID transmissions [29]. This means an unmasked setting for a prolonged period near someone close to you.
Have we seen Walmart and Costco take the contact information of every customer that enters the premises? No tracing = no cases = let them stay open.
Our politicians are blindly flailing at theories and superstitions to control this virus. How can a politician rob someone of their entire livelihood based on a hunch?
QUESTION: What is considered essential? Who decides this? Why is the LCBO (alcohol store ) open but gyms are not? To every person who is about to lose their job or business, is that not considered ESSENTIAL?
QUESTION: Why is a cost-benefit-result analysis not mentioned in any government policy?
QUESTION: Why has the government not put out a simple disclaimer to increase our Vitamin D3 intake, especially during the winter months? This one measure can possibly yield the MOST result with LEAST effort and collateral damage.
QUESTION: Why has the government not volunteered to take a pay cut, given that most of the population is suffering economically? Don’t CEOs take a pay cut when their company is in financial trouble?
NOTE: The New Zealand PM and her ministers took a 6-month 20% pay cut in April 2020 [30].
SIDENOTE: A Canadian MP who only holds 6 years in office gets a lifelong pension. Even a war veteran does not get this benefit [31]
QUESTION: Why are these policies being made behind closed doors? The Ontario government has abused its arbitrary emergency powers to make policies without the input of ALL members of Parliament. When did we give up democracy? Watch The Ontario Government Being Questioned About This In Parliament: https://fb.watch/22j-hpTDiL/
Why have those affected financially not been given a choice? If someone has to worry about putting food on the table and a roof over their head, they should have the right to go out and make a living. Let them decide for themselves whether they are willing to risk contracting COVID (a disease with a lethality rate of under 1% for the younger healthy working population).
QUESTION: Why is every international arrival subject to an archaic 14-day quarantine, when the Canada’s chief public health officer Dr. Tam herself has said that there is little - if any - evidence of COVID transmission aboard aircraft? [32]
COVID transmission through travel primarily occurred BEFORE mitigation measures were implemented. Now, it is one of the safest public places you can be in. As of Jan 2, 2020, travel has only accounted for 2.5% of all COVID cases in Canada (with a known exposure setting). Most of these travel related cases are from early in the pandemic, before restrictions were placed [1].
Read the following fact-based article: The Irrational Fear Around Air Travel Needs To Stop (And We Need To Use Science Based Measures Instead): https://bit.ly/3rnS3GT
Why is rapid testing not conducted on arriving passengers? Results from the McMaster Health Lab rapid test study at Toronto Pearson airport: 99.7% were cleared or detected for COVID on arrival [34].
QUESTION: If someone got COVID and has recovered, they have built natural immunity. Why do they need to be vaccinated?
DOCTORS AROUND THE WORLD ARE SPEAKING OUT
Great Barrington Declaration: https://gbdeclaration.org
World Doctors Alliance: Letter to Citizens and Governments of the World: https://worlddoctorsalliance.com
MOVING FORWARD: WHAT DO WE DO NOW?
We have had 11 months to prepare and learn more. A lot is still unknown about COVID but A LOT IS KNOWN.
COVID is here now and we cannot stop it; that’s the harsh truth. Risk and harm cannot be completely eliminated. COVID will affect some people; that is unavoidable. It cannot be the SOLE reason behind making broad policies.
COVID is a harmful virus but not the killer virus it was projected to be.
There is a fine line between learning to live with COVID vs paralyzing our lives due to COVID, which we crossed a long time ago. Why are we hiding from COVID when we should use our knowledge to fight against it? Let’s stop the shortsighted and reactionary decision making.
We are we so focused on “number of cases and infections”? The test results are not reliable, and infections pose little or no harm to most of the younger healthy population. The important data is “number of hospitalizations and deaths”. In other words, shift our energy from “how do we limit COVID SPREAD?” to “how do we limit COVID DAMAGE?”
The long-term health and financial effects of a lockdown need to be considered. A lockdown will only transfer lives lost and destroyed. It will not save the overall excess deaths to a population. In fact, it will increase them in the long term.
The ONLY way out of this pandemic is through herd immunity, either naturally or through a vaccine. That vaccine is at least more than a year away for most people (another governmental failure). Moreover, there are many who will choose not to take a vaccine (personally, I will take it). We cannot have another 6 months of lockdowns. Every single day adds incredible amounts of short and long term damage.
A SUMMARY OF WHAT SHOULD BE DONE:
(Edit) Firstly, we should continue precautions to limit COVID spread. These are mitigation measures that may yield results without collateral damage: masks, wash hands frequently, don’t touch your face, reasonably limit social interactions.
I hope it’s clear: the problem isn’t number of cases. It’s the number of deaths and number of hospitalizations.
We know one thing for sure: Lockdowns should be our absolute last measure and that they will still come at a serious cost to society. Lockdowns are a REACTIVE measure to avoid getting hospitals overloaded.
Our most helpful measure to avoid a lockdown would have been to increase hospital capacity, but the government has failed us there.
Moreover, implement the actions below:
  1. Offer Focused Protection for the following: long term care homes, the vulnerable population and those that have UNAVOIDABLE interaction with them. The measure alone may reduce COVID related deaths by 90+%. Even if the above demographic is half of the Canadian population, at least the other half don’t need to be locked down.
  2. Let everyone else live normally, if they CHOOSE (of course, with cautionary measures)
  3. Promote a healthy lifestyle, nutritious diet and increase Vitamin D intake for EVERYONE. This alone may reduce the number of hospitalizations, severe cases and long COVID.
  4. BONUS MEASURE: All politicians need to take a pay cut. Sign the following petition: https://www.truenorthinitiative.com/politicians_need_to_cut_their_salaries
LET ME BE CLEAR. This is not about Lives VS. Economy. Health policy has been mistakenly sold as such. The truth is that a Focused Protection approach will save more lives and protect the economy. It’s a win-win.
This is about using everything we know to have an all-inclusive approach and look at the bigger long-term picture. To make decisions using science, data and logic, as opposed to fear and emotion.
Enough damage has been done. Don’t make the CURE worse than the virus. Don’t let political agendas get in the way of real help.
Free discourse is important because it helps to prevent bad ideas from blossoming and spreading.
We cannot simply accept the first viewpoint presented to us. Science requires many different points of view, rigorously tested, before arriving to a conclusion [35]. Science DEMANDS opposing opinions. Propaganda, on the other hand, silences it.
Something is VERY wrong when there is massive blowback to any questioning of the narrative. Something is VERY wrong when fear has become a virtue and courage a vice [35].
Something is VERY wrong when law enforcement questions the government about why they are forced to abandon their oath to the Charter Of Rights & Freedoms. Read their letter: https://bit.ly/3nW0Mhu
Please copy, paste or share this message if you agree.
SHARE ORIGINAL FACEBOOK POST: https://bit.ly/2IRbRRC
Samad Kadri
[[email protected]](mailto:[email protected])
REFERENCES
[1] https://health-infobase.canada.ca/covid ... s.html#fn1
[2] https://www.ctvnews.ca/health/more-than ... -1.5162396
[3] https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-020-77093-z
[4] https://www.theguardian.com/society/202 ... n-d-supply
[5] https://www.nutraingredients.com/Articl ... in-D-alarm
[6] https://www.snopes.com/news/2020/11/03/ ... s-improve/
[7] https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-020-03141-3
[8] https://www.fda.gov/medical-devices/saf ... RHTwitterD
[9] https://cormandrostenreview.com/report/
[10] https://www.who.int/news/item/14-12-202 ... -ivd-users
[11] https://academic.oup.com/cid/article/71/10/2663/5842165
[12] https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101 ... 20214494v2
[13] https://www.narcity.com/en-ca/news/lock ... rol-method
[14] https://www.preprints.org/manuscript/20 ... 2/download
[15] https://cmha.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020 ... NAL-EN.pdf
[16] https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/a ... 8120310386
[17] https://globalnews.ca/news/7464926/coro ... -capacity/
[18] https://www.fraserinstitute.org/sites/d ... mary_0.pdf
[19] https://www.cmaj.ca/content/192/44/E1347
[20] https://www.budget.gc.ca/2019/docs/plan/toc-tdm-en.html
[21] https://www.ctvnews.ca/politics/federal ... -1.5209807
[22] https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2020/12/ ... dp-covid19
[23] https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/daily-q ... 6a-eng.htm
[24] https://www.thestar.com/business/opinio ... ke-30.html
[25] https://www.cfib-fcei.ca/sites/default/ ... losing.pdf
[26] https://www.iedm.org/the-flawed-covid-1 ... wn-canada/
[27] https://www.nationalreview.com/cornep ... grace/amp/
[28] https://www.health.com/condition/cold-f ... every-year
[29] https://www.thestar.com/news/gta/2020/1 ... tario.html
[30] https://globalnews.ca/news/6820459/jaci ... s-pay-cut/
[31] https://www.canada.ca/en/treasury-board ... -plan.html
[32] https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/covid- ... -1.5797065
[33] https://www.canada.ca/en/public-health/services/diseases/coronavirus-disease-covid-19/epidemiological-economic-research-data.html
[34] https://mcmasterhealthlabs.ca/pdf/MHL%2 ... Tr6W2NgSCw
[35] https://financialpost.com/opinion/2020- ... he-science
[36] https://www.publichealthontario.ca/-/media/documents/o/2020/opioid-mortality-covid-surveillance-report.pdf?la=en
submitted by SamadKadri to LockdownSkepticism [link] [comments]

r/CoronavirusDownunder random daily discussion thread - 11 January, 2021

CoronavirusDownunder random daily discussion thread - 11 January, 2021

🎥 Press conferences today

State Presser time Where to watch
Victoria 2pm The Age, ABC Melbourne, 9news live, ABC News - YouTube
Queensland TBA The Age, ABC Brisbane (Facebook), 9news live, ABC News - YouTube, Annastacia Palaszczuk MP (Facebook)
NSW Most likely at 11am AEDT The Age, NSW Health Facebook, 9news live, ABC News - YouTube
https://preview.redd.it/qvr525gh5ma61.jpg?width=638&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=5b65bffd2d16dbc813aa360decda979f9e64972f

Do you know what makes you feel down or worried?

Sometimes it’s hard to identify why we might be feeling the way we are. It’s OK to reach out for help. Learn more about keeping spirit strong at http://headtohealth.gov.au
Source: Australian Government Department of Health Twitter

🌎 Other news

Feel free to talk about the COVID-19 situation in any country within this post and/or anything else you like as long as it is within the rules.
TYPE SUBMISSION DOMAIN
Asia 🇯🇵 - New coronavirus variant with similarities to UK & South Africa strains discovered in Japan rt.com
🇨🇳 - New coronavirus cases in China double, mainly in Hebei province reuters.com
🇨🇳 - China locks down two cities a year after Wuhan dw.com
🇯🇵 - New coronavirus variant found in travellers from Brazil: Japan government reuters.com
🇯🇵 - Japanese pray for end to COVID-19 pandemic in annual ice bath ritual at Tokyo shrine channelnewsasia.com
🇮🇳 - India to begin vaccine rollout on 16 January news.yahoo.com
🇯🇵 - About 80% favor canceling or postponing Tokyo Olympics in summer japantimes.co.jp
🇮🇱 - Israel reports first case of South African coronavirus strain washingtontimes.com
🇲🇾 - Malaysian minister Mustapa Mohamed tests positive for Covid-19 straitstimes.com
🇮🇱 - Israel rolls out COVID-19 booster shots channelnewsasia.com
🇵🇭 - Philippines secures 30 million Novavax coronavirus vaccine doses straitstimes.com
Europe 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 - Mass testing for asymptomatic Covid to be rolled out across England ft.com
🇧🇪 - Belgium's coronavirus deaths hit 20,000, still among world's highest per capita reuters.com
🇨🇭 - Switzerland's decision to close schools was one of most effective measures of reducing Covid spread, study says telegraph.co.uk
🇸🇪 - Sweden's new COVID lockdown law takes effect dw.com
🇪🇸 - Spain to send out COVID-19 vaccine, food convoys after snowstorm paralyses roads channelnewsasia.com
🇺🇦 - Ukraine's hospitals grapple with COVID-19 surge independent.co.uk
🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 - Scotland: Case numbers continue to soar bbc.co.uk
🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 - London Declares State of Emergency as COVID-19 Surge Threatens to Overwhelm Hospitals news.yahoo.com
🇧🇪🇩🇪 - Belgium and Germany reach grim new milestones for COVID-19 death tolls euronews.com
Americas 🇺🇸 - How much worse will coronavirus crisis get in L.A. County? Here is what next few weeks could look like latimes.com
🇨🇦 - Canada’s coronavirus cases surpass 650K as Quebec imposes new overnight curfew globalnews.ca
🇺🇸 - Battered by COVID surge, hospitals are admitting patients faster than they can discharge them latimes.com
🇺🇸 - Why getting the Covid-19 vaccine will be good for America's financial health cnbc.com
🇨🇦 - Some Alberta business owners disappointed with extension of COVID-19 restrictions cbc.ca
Rest of the world Algerian leader returns to Germany to be treated for Covid-19 complications france24.com
Africa exceeds 3 million COVID-19 cases, 30% in South Africa independent.co.uk

Some numbers around the world 🌏️


🇭🇰 - HONG KONG:
  • +31 (total cases: 9,243).
  • +1 (total deaths: 158).

🇹🇭 - THAILAND:
  • +245 (total cases: 10,298).
  • +0 (total deaths: 67).

🇰🇷 - SOUTH KOREA:
  • +665 (total cases: 68,664).
  • +25 (total deaths: 1,125).

🇲🇾 - MALAYSIA
  • +2,433 (total cases: 135,992).
  • +9 (total deaths: 551).

🇮🇪 - IRELAND:
  • +6,886 (total cases: 147,613).
  • +8 (total deaths: 2,344).

🇯🇵 - JAPAN:
  • +7,621 (total cases: 280,775).
  • +64 (total deaths: 3,996).

🇵🇱 - POLAND:
  • +9,410 (total cases: 1,385,522).
  • +177 (total deaths: 31,189).

🇮🇩 - INDONESIA:
  • +9,640 (total cases: 828,026).
  • +182 (total deaths: 24,129).

🇲🇽 - MEXICO:
  • +16,105 (total cases: 1,524,036).
  • +1,135 (total deaths: 133,204).

🇬🇧 - UK:
  • +54,940 (total cases: 3,072,349).
  • +563 (total deaths: 81,431).
  • +1,327 (total hospitalisations: 34,995).
  • +123 (total ICU admissions: 3,285).

🇺🇸 - USA (as of 09/01):
  • +261,993 (total cases: ).
  • +3,500 (total deaths: ).
  • Positivity rate: 13.1% (-1.4).
  • +1,112 (total hospitalisations: 130,777).
  • -155 (total ICU admissions: 23,731).
  • Vaccinated: 7.7M (+673,158)
Our daily update is published. States reported 2.0M tests, 262k cases, 130,777 current hospitalizations, and 3,500 deaths. Average hospitalizations and daily reported deaths are at their single-day record.

The past week had the most reported cases, average hospitalizations, and deaths of any week during the pandemic. We are still seeing post-holiday instability in the data - NJ reduced their probable cases number by more than 10k since yesterday.

Nationwide, the record 21,752 deaths over the last weeks comes from across the country. The average number of reported deaths is rising in all regions.

California’s data continues to show the dire state of the pandemic there. With 695 deaths reported today, the state is averaging more than 410 deaths and nearly 40k new cases a day. One in 105 people in CA have tested positive for COVID-19 in 2021.
submitted by Stoaticor to CoronavirusDownunder [link] [comments]

An Open Letter to Jason Kenney

Jason Kenney,
You are the currently elected majority leader of Alberta, and both your party members and yourself, have been trusted with the protection and improvement of our great province. However all you have done is spit in the faces of those who trusted you. While this would have been an insult before the covid-19 pandemic, it is nothing but an atrocity now. To say I am disappointed is an understatement. I am ashamed to call myself an Albertan, something that I never thought would happen.
My mother, who lives in the dishonourable Tracy Allard’s constituency, has put in countless 24 hour days to ensure people can buy their groceries during these trying times. One of those days was over Christmas. My grandmother, who is dependent on the help of her grandchildren, has not seen any of us since March and has been struggling alone since March 13th, 2020. This was the first time she spent Christmas alone in her 87 years. We selflessly put our traditions on hold for the greater good of our society.
However it has now become apparent that Tracy Allard spent Christmas in Hawaii, for a “17 year tradition”. Your chief of staff Jamie Huckabay travelled to the UK, which is currently a hot spot for a new strain. After the federal government halted all flights coming from The United Kingdom on December 20th. He returned on Boxing Day through the USA. Not to mention Jeremy Nixon, Jason Stephan, Pat Rehn, Tanya Fir, and unfortunately too many others.
What your employees, our elected MLAs, and yourself have done, by the refusal to discipline those that have violated in both word and deed, the bylaws put into place by your government for what you assured us was the good of all Albertans, is grossly violate public trust. There is no human decency nor leadership to be found here. The good people of Alberta have tried to put each other first before ourselves. That being said, the fact that you have allowed MLAs and staff to hold their positions after disregarding the federal health advisory for non-essential travel, a policy that to again repeat, was your own party’s recommendation, have shown me you do not care about Alberta or its people.
As patriotic citizens of our great country, we have sacrificed our livelihoods to ensure the safety of those around us. In March, I was laid off because of a potential Covid case. My family has sacrificed more when it comes to their employment. Some of whom have not been able to work in their skilled trade since March. Their small businesses have been shut down. When we, my family and myself, are fortunate enough to work, we are constantly tip-toeing around jobs, for fear of getting a coworker sick, or contracting Covid. Our job sites are in constant fear of being shut down if a Covid case is found to have been present onsite. This fear stems from what I perceive as a gross mismanagement of policies that would allow us as workers - the true backbone of this great province - to safely work. This fear is felt across all industries, with the glaring exception being your political party.
There has been no protection, nor improvement from your policies and response to the Covid-19 pandemic You and our elected officials are not acting in the best interest of those who elected you. In fact to me, you have shown that you believe yourself and other public office holders to be above the law This is unacceptable, not just for the violation of public trust, but for the violation of the Rule of Law, which we as a democracy should strive to uphold, no matter our race, creed, or Status. I demand that your MLAs resign their positions, and yourself for your utter disregard for public safety and federal mandates by allowing members of your caucus to hold their positions.
Regards,
submitted by beatneckspeeds to alberta [link] [comments]

Class Politics

I tried to write a blog post about the shocking revelations about several politicians in Canada and specifically their vacation plans, but I fell short at first. Why? I can't feign the surprise it would take to do so. What is in fact the most disappointing aspect of their actions is the regularity of it. In fact, the travel plans of the world's democratic leadership is their single most unifying aspect of their COVID responses. It defies party, ideology, and any laws against it. They come from all over, the UK's Dominic Cummings, the entire US Federal Government, Rod Phillips of the Ontario Conservatives, several MPPs in Jason Kenny's Alberta government, or just recently, Niki Ashton of the federal NDP. What are the two common aspects of life they all share? They are politicians, and they feel that the rules and recommendations that apply to us do not apply to them.
For all of Donnie Trump's aggressive stupidity, he has accidentally stumbled into the truth on a few occasions, if only by accident. His rants about the Liberal "elites", the political class that has infested D.C. are badly written, badly expressed, but not wholly without merit. The fact that his plan involved the support of Republicans, the most swampy and elite of the US political scene is ironic, though not surprising as self awareness is clearly not his strong suit. While voting for a grifter with gold buildings is not the way one unseats the political class from power, it's not like that problem doesn't need solving. Look at the recent stimulus negotiations in the USA; both parties there clearly need massive reform, starting with the removal from power of those who are so stuck in the "swamp," that they cannot prioritize their own constituents. Politicians who use their position to gain for themselves, be it money or political capital are the problem.
Career politicians (I've never liked the term "lawmakers") develop blind spots with remarkable speed. This, I would guess, stems from the requisite wheeling and dealing that is required to be a politician in today's politics in addition to the position of power they are in upon ascending to said position. Just the act of being nominated by your party constituents to then win an election with that party is a process that rewards unscrupulous conduct and once elected it only seems to get worse. It is this one problem that seems to be at the heart of almost all liberal democracies today; a political figure achieves a position of power and leverages it to further their own power and get away with that which others cannot. It is why corruption happens, it's why unpopular politicians get re-elected and it's why the USA is now barely a democracy at all. If given time, the system we use to create political figures (I won't say "train" or any other positive attribute) creates a person who no longer feels they live in the society they claim to serve. In fact, society becomes subservient to this person. In short, our systems create a political class, and just like all other class politics, you don't have to believe in it for it to exist around you.
We encourage the worst in politicians. I loved 'House Of Cards' because of the vicious conduct by those at the center of power. We want them to speak their minds, but are of course appalled when they disagree with what we think. We want political figures that are the best of us, but our system is a 'survival of the fittest' system in which the most ruthless, or well-funded wins. Attack ads to destroy the credibility of the opponent? They work. Lobbying to gain favor with a politician, so that they stop any reform and still get reelected? Police reform I'm looking at you. Electoral Reform promised in 2015 by the then opposition Liberals? Yeah, sure, that'll happen when they get into power, right? Not only were they never actually going to do that, but they would have been idiots to have done so. The people who voted for them don't want to see them lose, so they will not support that which will make the party lose and thus, the electorate supports a government that lied to them.
So, this is why when I see the pious and well-meaning anger directed at political figures for their often blatant abuse of their position, it doesn't shock me. Rather it disappoints me. It disappoints me because we live in a political system in which the government derives power from the people, and yet, we, the people, actively encourage our worst political figures. When Rod Phillips got embroiled in his vacation scandal, the issue to me was never that he did something bad. He is (was) Ontario's Finance Minister and I just assume he must be some sort of unscrupulous scumbag already, but rather that he had the audacity to do it at all was shocking to me. This wasn't the act of somebody who doesn't think COVID is real, or not a big concern. Rather, this was the act of someone who didn't EVER feel like the rules that applied to us also applied to him. That is the real problem, and it's our own fault.
It's to the point now where I see all these similar cabinet ministers across multiple branches of government all do one obvious, easily caught, and easily called out infraction and I almost think it's not their fault. It's like blaming a pig for rolling around in shit. They were just so used to doing whatever they want and we just forgot to mention this is the one lie you actually can't get away with.
submitted by The_Canadian_Century to u/The_Canadian_Century [link] [comments]

what are the covid laws in alberta video

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Alberta is monitoring for COVID-19 variants that appear to spread more easily than the original COVID-19 strain. Symptoms in variant cases are the same as usual COVID-19 symptoms, including cough, fever, shortness of breath, runny nose, and sore throat. The Government of Canada has announced measures to support individuals, businesses and industries with the impacts of COVID-19. Learn more about Government of Canada supports. How the law applies. Employment Standards COVID-19 Leave Regulation sets out the rules for COVID-19 leave. Other available leaves. Long-term illness and injury leave (up covid-19 The holidays will look different this year for all of us, but the spirit of the season remains the same. From shopping for gifts and food, to carrying on holiday traditions and visiting with loved ones online, you can enjoy the holidays safely by taking precautions. Alberta Health Services may take the lead in notifying building residents if there are concerns with a suspected or confirmed COVID-19 case. It may also be prudent to send a notice to residents once you have confirmation of a COVID-19 case from your health authority, with general information such as there is a confirmed COVID-19 case in the COVID-19 cost relief: In Q3 we will begin implementing cost relief for COVID-19 claims and costs related to the provincial pandemic shutdown in the spring. Cost relief will be implemented automatically; employers do not need to apply. Please see our cost relief Q&A for more information.; The Government of Alberta announced premium relief measures for private sector employers. An official global travel advisory remains in effect. Avoid non-essential travel outside Canada until further notice. The Canada/U.S. border remains closed to non-essential travel. Some essential service workers are exempt from travel restrictions if they have no symptoms. As of January 7, proof of First off, you should know that in response to the COVID-19 crisis, the Government of Alberta has suspended the deadlines for nonprofits governed by Alberta law to hold their annual general meetings. These groups will not be dissolved due to failing to file annual returns on time at Alberta corporate registry. To protect the health and safety of Albertans, public health orders are legally-enforceable and fines can be issued for violations. Minimum mandatory quarantine for 14 days for anyone who returned to or entered Alberta from outside Canada, or are a close contact of someone with COVID-19. The Alberta government has banned indoor private gatherings, introduced new restrictions on businesses, and will be moving older students to online learning as part of sweeping new COVID-19 measures. Canada: Alberta Announces Updated COVID-19 Restrictions Hudson's Bay Company, the Ontario Superior Court of Justice considered the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on the reasonable Ontario Gets A New Tort, For Now Canadian And U.S. Tax Laws: A Review Of 2020 And A Look Ahead To 2021.

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Coronavirus: Alberta announces new restrictions to curb ...

Premier Jason Kenney announced sweeping new provincial measures Tuesday as the second wave of COVID-19 continues to hit Alberta hard. The announcement came a... Alberta’s chief medical officer of health, Dr. Deena Hinshaw, announced 20 deaths from COVID-19 in the province on Monday, making it the deadliest day in Alb... Most major cities have only been quarantined for a few weeks, trying to lower the curve of the spreading virus known as COVID-19. People are already getting ... The Guardian's health editor, Sarah Boseley, answers some of the most common and pressing questions surrounding the recent coronavirus outbreak in Wuhan, Chi... From Texas to Washington, hundreds of Americans defied all medical advice to join protests against lockdown measures across the country meant to keep them sa... Alberta has seen its first suspected cases of in-school transmission of a COVID-19 variant. Alberta chief medical officer of health Dr. Deena Hinshaw made th... A newspaper in northern Italy has seen its obituaries section grow from two pages to ten in the last week. France and Spain are the latest European countries... Real estate investors - When that dreaded call comes in from your tenant, "I can't pay rent because of the Coronavirus..." what should you do? In this video,... We've produced an updated version of this video that you can watch here: https://youtu.be/iv4mrCE6TggIn this video, you will learn about the symptoms associa... Total COVID-19 cases in Alberta continue to trend down. But outside the province’s major cities, the rate of spread in the community is on the rise.In the we...

what are the covid laws in alberta

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