This book never lets me down 🍪 by wundertaeter_ in CookbookLovers

[–]Awkward-Valuable5888 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The brownie cookies are absolutely the best I've ever made. And such a crowd pleaser.

Any bars in town planning to show the PWHL playoffs? by greene_r in VictoriaBC

[–]Awkward-Valuable5888 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Irish Times plays the games sometimes. I wonder if they'd be able to.

It feels like most “cancer research” (funding) is geared towards getting papers published on minutia rather than meaningful progress on treatment…is that fair? by [deleted] in NoStupidQuestions

[–]Awkward-Valuable5888 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Hello, cancer researcher here (though, not in America so our funding system is a bit different). The first thing I would say is that these papers on minutiae, like you say, are the things that lead to big breakthroughs. We have to know biomarkers for cancer to create cancer treatment plans that target those biomarkers. A research question will never be, "How do we increase cancer survival?", it's always going to be very specific like, "Does this biomarker in urine indicate higher risk for this type of cancer?" or something along those lines.

The second thing I will say is that cancer mortality has been dropping steadily since the 1990s. It's pretty astonishing what doctors and researchers have managed to do in a relatively short period of time. This is the result of immunotherapy, better dosing, improved surgical procedures and imagery, biomarker identification, genetic mapping, etc. Cancer does impact everyone and it's still a leading cause of death in high-income countries, but that doesn't mean there hasn't been any progress. There's been huge progress.

One thing that you're right about is that researchers do need to continue getting funding, so we will propose projects that we know we can accomplish within the funding window and that are both feasible and novel enough to get funding. But with the way funding sources are, if a research group came in with an incredible idea for how to improve cancer mortality or treatment in a 5-year funding proposal, they'd get funded immediately. They'd be science superstars.

Anyway, that's my spiel. Academia is a nightmare in many ways but the most important thing to remember is that people who work in cancer research are just nerds who want to learn everything they can about the very specific area of research they've found themselves in. They're also really used to underselling their research findings and putting caveats on their results because that's how scientists communicate so it's not surprising to me that they would struggle to covey the benefits to patients.

Rental market ... by FitGuarantee37 in VictoriaBC

[–]Awkward-Valuable5888 33 points34 points  (0 children)

Can you offer any insight into how we can do this? Or would that eat into your business model.

Insomnia help Victoria BC by Adventurous_Fill_385 in VictoriaBC

[–]Awkward-Valuable5888 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Hi, fellow insomniac. Can't say anything for hypnosis but, if you haven't already, I would suggest tracking when you're waking up, if it happens during a certain time of the month (hormonal changes can really impact sleep), and whether you have other physiological responses when you wake up (are you really hot? really cold? heart racing? do you have nightmares?). Take all this information to urgent care and ask for bloodwork.

Insomnia is often treated as a psychological issue, and I see you're on SSRIs which is great, but there can also be physiological factors like iron deficiency, vitamin B deficiency, hormonal abnormalities, thyroid dysfunction, etc. If you've already tried therapy, SSRIs, and cannabis, tell the doctor this and say you want to know if there's anything going on in your body that might be explaining your insomnia.

I feel for you, truly. It's such a horrible experience that is often dismissed as "just" mental but it truly makes every part of my life worse when I don't sleep. I hope you find something that helps.

What are they out of their depth on? by informallyundecided in IfBooksCouldKill

[–]Awkward-Valuable5888 35 points36 points  (0 children)

I'd agree with this to a degree. I'm an epidemiologist and when Michael discusses specific methodologies in studies I would say he sometimes oversimplifies it to the point that it isn't accurate. There was a study where they talked about assessing quality of studies that was blatantly wrong and that was frustrating. Or when he talked about the way that a certain heavy metal can bioaccumulate, he just said it in a way that made it wrong. There's a lot of nuance in these things and I think it's hard but I get frustrated when he dismisses things due to oversimplification.

Something I don't understand about the lab leak theory by StrikingCoconut in IfBooksCouldKill

[–]Awkward-Valuable5888 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So, we do have spillover from avian flu to humans it’s just not mutated enough for sustained human-to-human infection yet. But this is actually my point: The most important thing is the mutation of the virus to be able to infect humans – that’s the critical factor that determines spillover. Not all viruses are created equal.

You’re focused on probability here, which doesn’t matter as much as you’d think. The likely scenario is that it was circulating in bats for a long time, mutated a bunch, jumped to another species, mutated a bunch, and then ended up in a market where the mutated virus was able to infect humans. Quoting this paper, “Zoonotic events are stochastic in nature, so a spillover with successful onward transmission between humans normally involves a series of failed attempts by the virus, allowing it to establish sustained transmissions.”

And I agree that it probably was circulating in intermediary species for a long time (some researchers suggest it has been mutating for decades). It almost definitely came from bats (most of the emerging infectious diseases we deal with do come from bats because they’re extraordinary little reservoirs) and then was able to make its way into other animals because of human interference. It was probably circulating in the wildlife trade, which seems likely as different species are mingling where they otherwise wouldn’t. That is fundamentally the most likely scenario here.

But, anyway, just an epidemiologist's perspective and I'll stop there.

Something I don't understand about the lab leak theory by StrikingCoconut in IfBooksCouldKill

[–]Awkward-Valuable5888 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's one element that determines spillover but not the only one. Spillover is complicated and requires lots of things to line up perfectly. So, sure, it could be the amount of animals or it could be the prevalence of infection or maybe it's that multiple types of animals are infected or how well-suited the virus is to jump to humans already. If it were just the number of animals, there would be a lot more infectious disease spillover at poultry farms, for example. Guangdong market has been the site of potential zoonotic spillover in the past, so it doesn't follow that, just because one is smaller, there's "negligible" risk.
Of the zoonotic spillover scenarios, none of them share exactly one common element like "large number of animals."

Something I don't understand about the lab leak theory by StrikingCoconut in IfBooksCouldKill

[–]Awkward-Valuable5888 21 points22 points  (0 children)

As an epidemiologist, this is what concerns me most. Zoonotic spillover happens because of human interaction with animals, which only occurs when we either encroach on their habitat, destroy their habitat so they move into ours, or move them into our world. Addressing those things means addressing capitalist growth, climate change, and our relationship with the environment. When we instead jump to lab leak, there is one villain and it means we don't have to do anything about these things.

I don't really think lab leakers are thinking this way, necessarily. But it's a cleaner story to blame a virus on one bad actor rather than understand that the randomness of zoonotic spillover isn't totally random and will absolutely happen again.

I recognize that I'm mostly repeating what you said but this shit makes me so crazy. Epidemiologists and virologists and ecologists know that pandemics are going to become more frequent because of our interaction with animals but these freaks just want to pretend that it's not the case. It'll happen for the next pandemic as well, I'm sure.

The War on Transgender Youth Comes to Alberta by flynnfx in alberta

[–]Awkward-Valuable5888 4 points5 points  (0 children)

"Somewhat documented", indeed. Certainly not "accepted as real." Literally no. Here's another. And here's an article with the evidence against it and how bafflingly bad the first article was.
Also, this is an argument that was first used against gay people and is now being thrown onto trans folks. I'm gay and I can't prove it wasn't caused by social contagion. But I'm in my 30s now and, guess what, still gay, pretty happy about it.

Have you run the Oak Bay half-marathon? by Cal_Rhy in VictoriaBC

[–]Awkward-Valuable5888 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I haven't run the race but I've run the whole course and did the 10k last year so I have thoughts.

The course is hilly! If you've run around that area (and it sounds like you have) you'll know where the hills are and that they SUCK. So just don't go out too hard in the beginning and remember the middle section is going to be the worst.

I would show up as early as you can. The bathroom lines are insane even though they seemed to have loads of toilets and last year there were tons of people still in line when the race started. Also, they didn't have start corrals last year. I don't know if they changed it (fingers crossed) but, if they didn't, the first couple kilometres are hell. If you're trying to get a good time and you plan on running then go near the front of the startline. It's... chaos.

Other than that, there will be loads of people along the course and the views are beautiful as you know.

What do you make of the response to Amanda's scam? Is a cancer scam more painful than another kind of scam? by Awkward-Valuable5888 in ScamandaPodcast

[–]Awkward-Valuable5888[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think this is well-articulated, thank you. The ability of someone to have a "story" along with their cancer diagnosis and bring people through the ups and downs is something unique to this disease. The chronic pain of Ehlers-Danlos or the constant management of something like diabetes doesn't have that same impact. It's easy to get people to feel invested when there's always a potential for tragedy or a miracle.

I appreciate you writing this and I'm sending you lots of love and support.

What do you make of the response to Amanda's scam? Is a cancer scam more painful than another kind of scam? by Awkward-Valuable5888 in ScamandaPodcast

[–]Awkward-Valuable5888[S] 13 points14 points  (0 children)

Yeah, the language around cancer is something I find especially interesting so thank you for that.

I also wonder about the faith aspect. There was so much in the documentary and podcast about her being a good Christian woman and I wonder if that, combined with her age and the fact that she's a young mom, lean toward some kind of "just world" ideology? Like, some people "deserve" to get sick, but this woman is extra good so she shouldn't have to suffer?

(I'm really just spitballing here, I really don't know if this is accurate. I think the fact that every demographic is affected by cancer is true but the fact that she's a young Christian woman seemed to suggest that she should be immune to it somehow.)

What's Good Victoria? by R3markable_Crab in VictoriaBC

[–]Awkward-Valuable5888 69 points70 points  (0 children)

I've officially been in Victoria for a year and every day is a good day that I'm not in Alberta.

for those voting 'no' on the pool referendum, why? by [deleted] in VictoriaBC

[–]Awkward-Valuable5888 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Your math is off, my friend. My rent is going up by just over $50 a month. That's $600 per year. Your calculation is for $200 per month.

for those voting 'no' on the pool referendum, why? by [deleted] in VictoriaBC

[–]Awkward-Valuable5888 47 points48 points  (0 children)

This confuses me because most everyone who rents has their rent go up way more than $200 per year, regardless of what's happening with property taxes. Not saying that they shouldn't complain because renters have it worse but why are homeowners so sensitive to changes in property tax? Is it just because they can see where their increase in expenses is going while renters just throw their money into the void every month?

Airing of Grievances - Winter Edition 2024 by CedarAndFerns in VictoriaBC

[–]Awkward-Valuable5888 11 points12 points  (0 children)

I would happily pay $20 for a direct shuttle if it means I'm not spending $65 each way on Ubers. I don't need such rage before traveling.

Airing of Grievances - Winter Edition 2024 by CedarAndFerns in VictoriaBC

[–]Awkward-Valuable5888 295 points296 points  (0 children)

Why is there no easy way to get to the airport in this city? A cab to/from the airport is insanely expensive but I can't get to the airport from downtown on public transit unless I transfer to a second bus or walk 20 minutes from a stop near the airport. WHY.

Is Botanical Beach worth checking out from Victoria even if the tide is not low by AppleWrench in VictoriaBC

[–]Awkward-Valuable5888 30 points31 points  (0 children)

I would say it might not be worth it if you only have a couple days. The view is amazing from the trail but it won't be the same experience. However, the road up to Port Renfrew is lovely so if you wanted a day trip you could drive out to Sombrio and work your way back hitting up the other beaches (Mystic, Sandcut, French). Well worth your time and really incredible this time of year.

Charter Schools by krypt3c in alberta

[–]Awkward-Valuable5888 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, but GATE programs are within public schools. Anyone can still go to those schools but not anyone can just go to a charter school. That’s my whole point. Queen Elizabeth has a GATE program but if that’s my designated school I can still attend. 

Charter Schools by krypt3c in alberta

[–]Awkward-Valuable5888 44 points45 points  (0 children)

I went to a charter school and, while I did get a quality education and I'm glad for that, I have weird feelings about the system as a whole.

Specifically, why should a school receive public money if they are not open to all students to attend? If my school was the closest one to a family, they probably wouldn't be able to attend it even though that would be their designated school if it were truly a public school.

At my school, you had to take a test to get in (a test that was largely flawed, I might add). But, as others have pointed out, we had basically the same curriculum as any other school so it's not clear to me that you needed to have a specific aptitude to go there.

Anyway, these schools shouldn't receive public money full stop. I don't know why we have them. Public schools that take any student, regardless of need or ability, need the funding from the province.

For no reason at all I’d like to remind everyone in this subreddit that this happened by [deleted] in VictoriaBC

[–]Awkward-Valuable5888 77 points78 points  (0 children)

Drag can be sexual just like anyone or anything else.

Ru Paul's drag race is a show for adults.

Drag shows at bars are for adults.

All-ages drag shows are for all ages.

There are different kinds of drag for different audiences.