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27 novembro 2020

Los 15 grupos para la vacuna del covid en España

Grupos vacunación: Los 15 grupos para la vacuna del covid en España:

Estos son:

  • Personal sanitario y sociosanitario.
  • Personas residentes en centros de mayores.
  • Población general mayor de 64 años. 
  • Personas con gran discapacidad.
  • Personas con condiciones de riesgo.
  • Personas que viven o trabajan en comunidades o entornos cerrados.
  • Personas pertenecientes a poblaciones vulnerables por su situación socioeconómica.
  • Personas con trabajos esenciales.
  • Personal docente.
  • Población infantil.
  • Población adolescente y joven (mayores de 16 años).
  • Población adulta.
  • Población de áreas de alta incidencia y/o situaciones de brotes.
  • Embarazadas y madres que proporcionan lactancia natural.
  • Población seropositiva a SARS-CoV-2.

Data from 45 countries show containing COVID vs saving the economy is a false dichotomy

Data from 45 countries show containing COVID vs saving the economy is a false dichotomy: It’s not a zero-sum game

The standard economic indicators reviewed here show, overall, countries that have contained the virus also tend to have had less severe economic impacts than those that haven’t.

No one should be misled into believing there is zero-sum choice between saving lives and saving the economy. That is a false dichotomy.

If there is anything to be learned regarding how to deal with future pandemics, it is that rapidly containing the pandemic may well lessen its economic impact.

A Model for a Just COVID-19 Vaccination Program

A Model for a Just COVID-19 Vaccination Program: Scientists have now produced apparently effective vaccines at sufficient scale to vaccinate most vulnerable populations in the United States in the next few months, and the U.S. population more broadly in the next year. How can the distribution protect the masses without perpetuating inequalities? There are no simple answers but the way forward must be informed by understanding the complex interactions among the virus, vaccines, individual health and socio-economic status, and the societal structures in which these are all embedded.

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“Este virus va a seguir entre nosotros para siempre”

“Este virus va a seguir entre nosotros para siempre”: Ian Lipkin, uno de los mayores expertos en virus emergentes del planeta, opina que será imposible erradicar el SARS-CoV-2

P. ¿Cuándo cree que terminará esta pandemia?

R. Vamos a vivir el resto de nuestras vidas con este virus; no va a desaparecer. Habrá que vacunar a los recién nacidos para siempre y probablemente tengamos que dar dosis adicionales de recuerdo a los ya vacunados. Va a ser un problema recurrente. No creo que la vida vuelva a ser del todo normal.

 

Will Covid kill Silicon Valley?

Will Covid kill Silicon Valley?

One of the biggest worries about working remotely is that’s it bad for creativity. Without the interactions enabled by physical proximity it is feared that workforces won’t generate the ideas on which innovation depends.

But perhaps Silicon Valley has become too close. These days, it’s less of a cluster and more of a blob. Genuinely creative thinking is being smothered by a conformist corporate culture. Certainly, the last ten years of tech has been noticeably less exciting than previous decades. We’re still getting the iterative improvements, but where are the world-changing new products? I’m afraid Alexa can’t answer that one.

 

Where is the dividing line between you and the world?

Where is the dividing line between you and the world? Like all animals, humans also protect themselves from potential threats by keeping them at a distance. Those of us beginning to see friends again after months of pandemic-induced social distancing can feel this at a visceral level, as we balance the desire for contact against a sense of risk. Once we evaluate something as a potential threat – even if that assessment is informed by public policy or expert prescription – there’s a powerful urge to maintain a buffer of space.

This buffer is a byproduct of our evolutionary history, which has equipped our brains with a way to acknowledge and track the importance of our immediate surroundings. That mechanism is known as peripersonal space, the region in and around a person’s body (peri comes from the Ancient Greek meaning ‘about’, ‘around’, ‘enclosing’ or ‘near’). Peripersonal space exists in various forms across the animal kingdom, from fish and fruit flies to wild horses and chimpanzees. The neuroscience behind it sheds fascinating light on how humans and other animals conceive of themselves and their boundaries. Where is the dividing line between you and the world? You might think that this is a clean-cut question with a simple answer – your skin is the boundary, with the self on one side and the rest of the world on the other. But peripersonal space shows that the division is messy and malleable, and the boundary is blurrier than you might think.

The peripersonal zone is a nexus where space, time and survival are tightly bound together. Maintaining a buffer of peripersonal space is important because it gives an animal time to react to a threat before it’s too late.

Virus update

Virus update: I remain a vaccine skeptic. Consider these...

I think that there is at least a 25 percent chance that we will be as fearful of the virus a year from now as we are now. And if our fears have declined, this may be due mostly to a change in reporting about the virus. Perhaps someone with congestive heart failure who dies with the virus will no longer be counted as a virus death. Perhaps the press will no longer report cases of long-term damage from the virus. Should such a change in reporting take place, a cynic might call it the “Biden effect.”