Even though most of the United States has moved on from COVID-19, chalking it up to a mild cold, if even that, California is continuing to try to panic its slaves over the âvirus.â Media reports claim that cases are still headed skyward, and the virus shows no signs of retreating.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Golden State, along with Nevada, Arizona, and Hawaii, is now the most afflicted region in the U.S. Wastewater data, which is often used to help predict future surges, also reveals that several Bay Area cities like San Francisco and San Jose are grappling with âhighâ Sars-Cov-2 levels compared with other regions.
The media has pushed the âwastewaterâ narrative for a long time too.
MSM: The Next COVID Variant Could Be Found in âAirplane Wastewaterâ
âItâs very strange that the West Coast continues to be high,â Dr. Peter Chin-Hong, an infectious diseases specialist at UC San Francisco, told San Francisco GATE. It isnât actually strange at all. What is strange is that the slaves in California continue to buy this narrative and fall for it time and time again.
Though not as severe as the January peak, current COVID concentrations are still higher than at this time last year, Amanda Bidwell, a wastewater researcher and Stanford data analyst, told SFGATE. The wave also started earlier; in 2023, wastewater concentrations began to rise in late June, she said, but in 2024, they started to rise toward the end of April.
To stay âprotectedâ, Chin-Hong recommends that seniors and immunocompromised individuals get vaccinated, either with the current version or the updated one coming out in the fall. Having access to Paxlovid, maintaining awareness of rising case rates, and properly masking also can help people keep themselves â and others â safe, he continued.
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