I dodged a bullet. I was in New Orleans and Florida back to back for two weeks. I’m vaccinated but there were times I was slipping with my mask usage. Came home and felt sick but tested negative. I already had COVID once and I don’t want it again.
I give it 30 days or less before this gets picked up by half the country.

200 million?They gonna body over 200 million people because of greed![]()
Until this is resolved![]()
Yeah that app is trash, look for Apple, Google or both to end up stepping into this arena.
There's already a NY State pass but they have to make it complicatedYeah that app is trash, look for Apple, Google or both to end up stepping into this arena.

Nice, I've been thinking about health record integration and ease of aggregating it all while in the middle of this relocation. I use an iPhone for work but I'm Android Gang on the personal phone side.While I am wildly concerned about privacy, Apple Health intrigued me about its integration with hospital systems/doctor systems and all that. I bit the bullet and integrated mine, voila, immunization shows up right on it.
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. (KNWA/KFTA) — Nearly a third of the state’s total vaccine supply expired Saturday, July 31, after weeks of struggling to distribute the doses.
Out of the 300,000 total vaccine doses currently spread across the state, an estimated 90,000 of those are Pfizer doses that expired July 31.
Colonel Robert Ator is the head of the state’s vaccine distribution program, and what he said is most frustrating about the wastage is its timing.
“The truth of it is if I had one more week, I would be able to get rid of it,” said Ator.
Ator said he only needed one more week to get the expired vaccines out because vaccine turnout across the state has more than doubled.
“Four weeks ago, I got out 27,000 doses, and the week that just ended, I got out more than 70,000 doses,” said Ator.
While Ator labels 90,000 doses as large-scale wastage, he said it could have been even worse.
The state also has 50,000 Johnson and Johnson doses which were also set to expire; however, the deadline has been extended and Ator is confident he’ll be able to get those into arms.
“As of late, I’ve had to move quite a bit of it around the state because the demand is returning. People are scared and they don’t want to wait for a booster dose,” said Ator.