Jonm
Established Member
Thankyou, I am pleased that is sorted. We actually agree on a lot of these points.Ahh, jonm - it was jake. My apologies for getting you confused with him.
Thankyou, I am pleased that is sorted. We actually agree on a lot of these points.Ahh, jonm - it was jake. My apologies for getting you confused with him.
I would like to say that this j person also did not "try to hang you up".
...
Pfizer appears to be the best of all of the vaccines so far. My comment was pretty simple - if you have a choice, that's the best so far in terms of total efficacy and side effects. If I lived somewhere that only AZ was available, I would certainly take it.
...
We'll see how this goes in the US - the J&J vaccine appears to be less ideal as far as preventing cases, but similar in preventing hospitalizations.
I know you intended that as a rhetorical question, but the answer is no the U.K. has never had a lid on Covid. The infection rate has been appallingly high. The deaths even more so. The U.K. has done an appallingly bad job of stopping the spread and keep people alive.Did we not have the lid on covid back in July last
Though I do not give the covid situation much attention at all really, Its more the inconveniance it causes for me, IE wearing a mask to go shopping etc, and broke my glasses taking the darn thing off. If the politicians take all the advice from the who and follow there directive as they said they were doing "follow the sience, sience driven" and we end up in a worse state than we were already in. Well the only asumption you can make off that debacle, is that our sientists are just fumbling about in the dark. whoever no one should be allowed to travel outside there own contry for any reason whatsoever, regardless until this flue ist put to bed.I know you intended that as a rhetorical question, but the answer is no the U.K. has never had a lid on Covid. The infection rate has been appallingly high. The deaths even more so. The U.K. has done an appallingly bad job of stopping the spread and keep people alive.
I live in a country that until about a month ago had actually controlled Covid very effectively the population is a little larger than the U.K. Even now the total number of Covid infections since January 2020 is 1.4% of the U.K. numbers (65,000 vs over 4 million) and the number of deaths, though there has been an almost 100% increase in the last month is under 200!!! Not per day but since the first identified case in January 2020.
Now we are in wave 2.5 there is a universal mask mandate with fine of £480, not much if your minimum wage is £9 per hour as in the U.K. but here it is £7.7 PER DAY so the fine is 2 months pay. We have a mandatory 14 day quarantine for anyone arriving, it’s been in effect for the last year, you have to get cleared by the government to even get on a flight.
So all in all while we probably get a B+ rating, Australia is an A+ the U.K. is an F or more correctly at the end of the alphabet. The only good news is the vaccination.
There is no evidence to suggest that staying with the same maker of vaccines helps and quite a bit to suggest that a different one provides better protection.As for UK, I would expect boosters to be the same manufacturer as original doses. I cannot see us going away from AZ but cannot find evidence of us ordering boosters.
I do hope that the infection to fatality rate is ”well under 99%“. a long way under like nearly 99% under 99%.
There is no evidence to suggest that staying with the same maker of vaccines helps and quite a bit to suggest that a different one provides better protection.
There is no evidence yet to say how long the protection will last. The only suggestion on lifespan is to look at SARS & MERS immunity, it is currently at 17 years and going up year by year. A possible 3rd dose will depend on mutations evading the current vaccination or protection reducing over time. So until there is data suggesting a 3rd injection is needed there is no point in ordering it, is there?
Good piece of information. Explains it really well, particularly the difficulties in comparing efficacy rates. At the beginning of this vaccine roll out Van Tam said , do not get hung up on efficacy percentages. I tend to listen and believe what the two experts on either side of the buffoon have to say. Personally I would take any one of them but I am in the vulnerable age group. I would not touch Sputnik or Sinovac because I do not trust Russia or China when it comes to injecting chemicals in my arm. Perhaps unfairly but novichok in Salisbury has an influence and Chile has come unstuck with Sinovac, high numbers have received one dose and they are back in lockdown, transpires Sinovac efficacy after one dose is 3%.I thought the same as I was all focussed on the efficacy rate, the medical professionals all said "take any vaccine given" but in my heart I did feel a bit disappointed to get the AZ rather than pfizer or moderna ***
Thank you for that very interesting comment, it demonstrates how badly we have done.I know you intended that as a rhetorical question, but the answer is no the U.K. has never had a lid on Covid. The infection rate has been appallingly high. The deaths even more so. The U.K. has done an appallingly bad job of stopping the spread and keep people alive.
I live in a country that until about a month ago had actually controlled Covid very effectively the population is a little larger than the U.K. Even now the total number of Covid infections since January 2020 is 1.4% of the U.K. numbers (65,000 vs over 4 million) and the number of deaths, though there has been an almost 100% increase in the last month is under 200!!! Not per day but since the first identified case in January 2020.
Now we are in wave 2.5 there is a universal mask mandate with fine of £480, not much if your minimum wage is £9 per hour as in the U.K. but here it is £7.7 PER DAY so the fine is 2 months pay. We have a mandatory 14 day quarantine for anyone arriving, it’s been in effect for the last year, you have to get cleared by the government to even get on a flight as the borders are still closed.
So all in all while we probably get a B+ rating, Australia is an A+ the U.K. is an F or more correctly at the end of the alphabet. The only good news is the vaccination.
PS I forgot to mention that the track and trace system has been functioning here since the disease started, so for a supposedly backward country we have been well supported by our system something the U.K. can’t claim.
Hey layoff the vaccine bashing - it's harming my bonus!!!Once again, money. Why on earth wouldn't you want to insist on a 3rd dose when you can sell 8 billion of them?
Our land borders as well as inbound international travel boarders were closed on 26th of March 2020 with 1,045 cases and 4 deaths total at that time, of course since then citizens were permitted to be repatriated but all were quarantined in government facilities, some foreign residents were permitted from October all foreign entrants are required to pay for a 14 day medically supervised hotel quarantine.Thank you for that very interesting comment, it demonstrates how badly we have done.
UK is also an island country so has an advantage over Thailand and most other countries as everyone is arriving in a controlled way, boat, plane or rail. ( yes I know we have a border in Ireland).
So until there is data suggesting a 3rd injection is needed there is no point in ordering it, is there?
The U.K. had the ability to do as well but didn’t have the political will to act.
I don’t agree. Given one thing the UK has done well is acting decisively to source a supply of vaccinations I’d say experience suggests getting an early order in is a sensible step.
And certain politicians are making good money on vaccines.
I don’t agree. Given one thing the UK has done well is acting decisively to source a supply of vaccinations I’d say experience suggests getting an early order in is a sensible step.
Enter your email address to join: