When Cornell University in the U.S. reopened to in-person tuition in August 2021, it had in place an extensive testing, contact tracing and quarantine programme in conjunction with the local health department. Vaccination was mandated for all students and encouraged for employees (students as usual getting a rough deal from their university). Masks were required on campus and isolation orders and contact tracing occurred within hours of any positive result.
The university is therefore an excellent live experiment to see whether vaccination, masks, mass testing and quarantine – tools deployed to contain Covid outbreaks the world over – could succeed.
The findings – published in the Journal of the American Medical Association – could not be clearer: the measures made no visible impact on the outbreak.
Related:
Towards the emergence of a new form of the
neurodegenerative Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease:
Twenty six cases of CJD declared a few days
after a COVID-19 “vaccine” JabTowards the emergence of a new form of the
neurodegenerative Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease:
Twenty six cases of CJD declared a few days
after a COVID-19 “vaccine” Jab
Towards the emergence of a new form of the
neurodegenerative Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease:
Twenty six cases of CJD declared a few days
after a COVID-19 “vaccine” Jab
Towards the emergence of a new form of the
neurodegenerative Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease:
Twenty six cases of CJD declared a few days
after a COVID-19 “vaccine” Jab
No comments:
Post a Comment