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Brandon M
The Rational National
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Comments by "Brandon M" (@brandonm949) on "New Study Finds Even Greater Link Between COVID-19 u0026 Mental Health" video.
@poodlelover5421 How dare the government not know exactly how to stop this new virus right when it showed up! Also, I suspect that GetThePitchforks is right and it probably wouldn't have helped.
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Then make sure to get vaccinated 👍
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COVID-19 causes blood clotting, which can reduce blood flow to the brain, which can cause strokes and dementia. I don't know how they calculated the hazard ratios in the study, but apparently COVID has a significant (though kinda small) effect on strokes/dementia.
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I thought it was $20, which is $14 USD. Your overall point still stands. We shouldn't be struggling to do $15.
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@poodlelover5421 Isn't taking ivermectin for a disease it's not approved for also volunteering as a guinea pig for big pharma? And ivermectin is an anti-parasite medicine that attacks the nerves and muscles of parasites, specifically by hyperpolarizing the cell membranes. Does the coronavirus have nerves, muscles, or cells? How could this possibly treat COVID? And wasn't hydroxychloroquine the big miracle cure? What happened to that?
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The control group also participated in lockdowns. That has zero effect on the study.
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The study does separate it into hospitalization, ICU, and no hospitalization. The more physical issues (like stroke or dementia) increase quite a bit with higher COVID severity. Mood and anxiety disorders only show a slight increase. https://www.thelancet.com/action/showFullTableHTML?isHtml=true&tableId=tbl2&pii=S2215-0366%2821%2900084-5
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Part of me is really impressed with this virus lol
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The 2% (actually 1.74%) is for patients with an ICU stay. It's 1.46% for all hospitalized patients and 0.35% for non-hospitalized patients. https://www.thelancet.com/action/showFullTableHTML?isHtml=true&tableId=tbl2&pii=S2215-0366%2821%2900084-5 It doesn't split out symptomatic vs asymptomatic cases; I assume that data would be really hard to get.
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I can't really tell. The hospitalized group definitely has more risk factors. Proportionally, their stroke rates are slightly higher than you'd expect, but that might just be a correlation/causation thing. The strokes probably predict the hospitalization, not the other way around. The study is freely available to check out yourself. If you scroll near the bottom, the tables of data are clickable. It'll save you the time of reading the whole study. https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanpsy/article/PIIS2215-0366(21)00084-5/fulltext#sec1
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Source?
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