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Celerity

(43,485 posts)
Wed Jan 12, 2022, 01:55 PM Jan 2022

California hospitals find that Omicron causes fewer hospitalizations and shorter stays.

https://www.nytimes.com/2022/01/11/health/california-omicron-hospitalizations.html

A new study of nearly 70,000 Covid patients in California demonstrates that Omicron causes less severe disease than other coronavirus variants, results that align with similar findings from South Africa, Britain and Denmark, as well as a host of experiments on animals.

Compared with Delta, Omicron infections were half as likely to send people to the hospital. Out of more than 52,000 Omicron patients identified from electronic medical records of Kaiser Permanente of Southern California, a large health system, the researchers found that not a single patient went on a ventilator during that time.

“It’s truly a viral factor that accounts for reduced severity,” said Dr. Lewnard, an epidemiologist at the University of California, Berkeley who was an author of the study, which was posted online on Tuesday and has not yet been published in a scientific journal.

Despite the less severe virulence of Omicron, U.S. hospitals are buckling under an influx of coronavirus cases. Dr. Lewnard said that this was the result of the variant spreading like wildfire. On average, more than 730,000 people are testing positive every day in the United States, almost three times the previous peak last winter.

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California hospitals find that Omicron causes fewer hospitalizations and shorter stays. (Original Post) Celerity Jan 2022 OP
Buried lede: crickets Jan 2022 #1
Mix in healthcare workers are retiring/quitting in droves Sympthsical Jan 2022 #2
good luck if you go for it! Celerity Jan 2022 #3

crickets

(25,982 posts)
1. Buried lede:
Wed Jan 12, 2022, 03:13 PM
Jan 2022

"Despite the less severe virulence of Omicron, U.S. hospitals are buckling under an influx of coronavirus cases."

Sympthsical

(9,096 posts)
2. Mix in healthcare workers are retiring/quitting in droves
Wed Jan 12, 2022, 03:18 PM
Jan 2022

Partner's a regional manager for a major health system, and they are so short-handed it's absurd. People are just tapping right on out. There are days management have to go in and replace clerks themselves.

I originally went back to school for psychology, but I've started switching gears towards the medical field. With a background in social work and current demands, the salary I'd get going in would be insane.

Definitely weighing on my mind. I altered my spring semester classes just in case I go that route.

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