Sabag Gots Da Rona

if youre a bama fan, you gotta hope and pray there's an outbreak from a football standpoint. no way can you have sarkisian coaching against UGA
Their offense has been ridiculous this year. Bigger issues are definitely on the defensive side with Saban, nothing to do with Sark. The DC has given the fan base pause for concern.
 
Advertisement
Substitute get shot with die:

1602721625951.png
 
Their offense has been ridiculous this year. Bigger issues are definitely on the defensive side with Saban, nothing to do with Sark. The DC has given the fan base pause for concern.

the point being im not sure they want a drunk going in there against their toughest opponent this year
 
Advertisement
Sabag will get the rich guy super juice that the other guy got. Alabaga ain't letting that old coot die. He's their entire state and identity.
 
Advertisement
Will be classic when Bama without Saban on the sidelines still crushes UGA! Wonder how the pups will try to spin this one....
 
Not much worry about team getting it. apparently like 80% of them already had it. Including Bryce Young., the backup QB.
 
Advertisement
Advertisement
Sabag will get the rich guy super juice that the other guy got. Alabaga ain't letting that old coot die. He's their entire state and identity.

If you’re talking about Regeneron, nobody knows if it actually works or not, it’s super early in clinical trials and is not approved for patient use unless administered through the “compassionate use”exception. It has yet to be proven safe or effective, no matter how positive it looks in the early stages of trials. That is why it’s not approved for the general public, it just has not met stringent FDA requirements yet.

I’m pretty sure he also got remdesivir and dexamethasone, which are available and approved by the FDA, and are now almost de facto standard of care for patients who are either very ill or at high risk of becoming extremely ill.

Dexamethasone is cheap and widely available, remdesivir is subject to shortages in hospitals from time to time, but lately has been fairly available with some exceptions, throughout the United States.
 
If you’re talking about Regeneron, nobody knows if it actually works or not, it’s super early in clinical trials and is not approved for patient use unless administered through the “compassionate use”exception. It has yet to be proven safe or effective, no matter how positive it looks in the early stages of trials. That is why it’s not approved for the general public, it just has not met stringent FDA requirements yet.

I’m pretty sure he also got remdesivir and dexamethasone, which are available and approved by the FDA, and are now almost de facto standard of care for patients who are either very ill or at high risk of becoming extremely ill.

Dexamethasone is cheap and widely available, remdesivir is subject to shortages in hospitals from time to time, but lately has been fairly available with some exceptions, throughout the United States.
He's gonna get the best money can buy, and whatever is the best this week, he's getting it.
 
He's gonna get the best money can buy, and whatever is the best this week, he's getting it.

“The best” that money can buy is irrelevant in this case.

The actual situation is as I explained above.

You have one unapproved monoclonal antibody treatment that is in extremely limited supply, is in early trails, is unproven for widespread use, and which carries a risk/benefit profile which is unclear due to lack of data, and is only available in extremely few cases under the FDA “compassionate use“ clause.

All other treatments are generally readily available.

And the above is only even a serious consideration for those that are either extremely ill, or are projected to be extremely ill.

If someone is only exhibiting minor symptoms, which in truth even most elderly people don’t exhibit the most severe symptoms, there may be more risk in aggressively treating them than just letting it run its course. So even readily available treatments like dexamethasone and remdesivir normally will only be given to those who either exhibit severe symptoms, are severely compromised or predicted to have a severe outcome.
 
Advertisement
Back
Top