Deportivo Seagull
I should coco
the likely result is that the vaccine will need to be updated in 2022
Every couple of years would be the norm for corona and fLu vaccines.
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the likely result is that the vaccine will need to be updated in 2022
Indeed, this is already a deeply concerning development in the pandemic even assuming that it has no impact on our ability to vaccinate people.
The use of language makes me a little nervous, that there is no ‘current’ evidence to suggest that it makes vaccines less effective. That said, the strain has been around since September so you’d have expected a reasonable number of trial participants to have been exposed to it and yet we still appear to have high levels of efficacy.
I should imagine we will know more in the coming days. Let’s just hope that Christmas doesn’t get yet more depressing than it already is.
That’s not how a typical vaccine trial works. The efficacy of the vaccine is established in a lab. The trial tests whether people have a reaction to the vaccine, it doesn’t establish the efficacy because you don’t expose the participants to the virus in a typical vaccine trial.
There are studies planned where participants can be given the virus to test potential vaccines called ‘human challenge’ trials, these are more experimental, have some medical controversy, but it is argued can be done safely and give more insights into the disease.
Does this make it a sovereign strain?
Regards
DF
Until I see the actual presented scientific evidence behind this ‘new strain’ I’m extremely sceptical, they’ve known about this new strain since early September and only now are they making all these claims about it being ‘up to 77% more infectious’ etc
I don’t see why people in government are allowed to make statements with total guess work statements like UP TO or ‘as high as’, we need to see actual factual science not statements that sound like credit card deals. Are you seriously telling me that this new strain has been known about since then yet Boris has made himself look like a donut again by having to massively backtrack on his 5 days of Christmas just 2 days after he announced it?
Something just isn’t right.
That’s not how a typical vaccine trial works. The efficacy of the vaccine is established in a lab. The trial tests whether people have a reaction to the vaccine, it doesn’t establish the efficacy because you don’t expose the participants to the virus in a typical vaccine trial.
There are studies planned where participants can be given the virus to test potential vaccines called ‘human challenge’ trials, these are more experimental, have some medical controversy, but it is argued can be done safely and give more insights into the disease.
There have been 4,000 known mutations/strains of this virus identified over the last ten months.
Mutating is what viruses do.
As with the other c3,999 strains to date, this particular variant just pretty much looked like any other and was no particular cause for concern.
It is only over the last couple of weeks or so that scientists and researchers were able to make what seems to be the link between rapid growth of cases in sone areas and this new strain.
The government have acted up of this quickly, as seems highly appropriate.
Fortunately they don’t feel the need to satisfy someone on a football message board, particularly someone who seems to have disbelieved much to do with this pandemic.
Not sure that’s right.
Part of the trials involves essentially waiting for a number of trial participants to catch the virus before then in minding the study to see which of them had received the target vaccine and which had a placebo.
It was often said over recent months that one bit of good news, so to speak, of the virus spread was that trial participants would more likely to be exposed to it meaning more rapid trial results.
That’s not how a typical vaccine trial works. The efficacy of the vaccine is established in a lab. The trial tests whether people have a reaction to the vaccine, it doesn’t establish the efficacy because you don’t expose the participants to the virus in a typical vaccine trial.
There are studies planned where participants can be given the virus to test potential vaccines called ‘human challenge’ trials, these are more experimental, have some medical controversy, but it is argued can be done safely and give more insights into the disease.
Until I see the actual presented scientific evidence behind this ‘new strain’ I’m extremely sceptical, they’ve known about this new strain since early September and only now are they making all these claims about it being ‘up to 77% more infectious’ etc
I don’t see why people in government are allowed to make statements with total guess work statements like UP TO or ‘as high as’, we need to see actual factual science not statements that sound like credit card deals. Are you seriously telling me that this new strain has been known about since then yet Boris has made himself look like a donut again by having to massively backtrack on his 5 days of Christmas just 2 days after he announced it?
Something just isn’t right.
They don’t know if it’s more deadly
They don’t know if it’s equally deadly
They don’t know how much more infectious it is and so have to use guesswork language
Yes you’re correct they’ve acted so quickly, that just days before this MUTANT strain became such a massive issue our PM and scientific advisors agreed to allowing a large loosening of restrictions over the Christmas period, then 2 days after that this ‘new strain’ became massive news. Interesting timing.
I don’t know why you even reply to my posts, your condescending tone has been quite remarkable throughout this, anyone who questions anything gets spoken to like a child on the naughty step.
Briefing paper from the scientists. they did not know about this in September, they found something later in samples from in September, then grew their knowledge over weeks, before coming to a conclusion.
The slight good news is that we have 3+ different vaccines that are not identical. In particular Astra Zenica uses a different approach to Pfizer and Moderna.Advance warning: depressing post
That is positive, however this latest development causes me deep, deep concern. The consensus from people far, far more intelligent than me seems to be that as it stands, the current mutation will still respond to vaccines, however further mutation could still lead to 'vaccine escape' whereby this is no longer the case.
What we now appear to have in our wake is a mutant virus which is, and this is no longer hyperbole, completely out of control. Estimates suggest that the mutation increases the R rate by at least 0.4, and given that the original lockdown was never able to bring down R any lower than 0.7, we may have no way in the short-term of getting the genie back in the bottle.
Vaccinations will assist with this, but here's the kicker. By Sunday's count, cases have doubled in the space of a week. With Christmas on the horizon and the high likelihood of many people ignoring the latest restrictions, it's hard to see anything but an explosion of cases over the next couple of weeks. We run the risk of having uncontrollably high levels of virus in the community, which in turn means a greater opportunity for the virus to mutate out of the grasp of the vaccines we have at our disposal.
This is going to become a race against time to get large swathes of the population immunised, and if we lose that battle we will likely face a significant setback and prolongation of the pandemic in this country.
I fear the next few months could sadly turn out to be by far the bleakest of this horrible period so far. As someone who has regularly contributed to the good news thread, I hope I am wrong.
Advance warning: depressing post
That is positive, however this latest development causes me deep, deep concern. The consensus from people far, far more intelligent than me seems to be that as it stands, the current mutation will still respond to vaccines, however further mutation could still lead to 'vaccine escape' whereby this is no longer the case.
What we now appear to have in our wake is a mutant virus which is, and this is no longer hyperbole, completely out of control. Estimates suggest that the mutation increases the R rate by at least 0.4, and given that the original lockdown was never able to bring down R any lower than 0.7, we may have no way in the short-term of getting the genie back in the bottle.
Vaccinations will assist with this, but here's the kicker. By Sunday's count, cases have doubled in the space of a week. With Christmas on the horizon and the high likelihood of many people ignoring the latest restrictions, it's hard to see anything but an explosion of cases over the next couple of weeks. We run the risk of having uncontrollably high levels of virus in the community, which in turn means a greater opportunity for the virus to mutate out of the grasp of the vaccines we have at our disposal.
This is going to become a race against time to get large swathes of the population immunised, and if we lose that battle we will likely face a significant setback and prolongation of the pandemic in this country.
I fear the next few months could sadly turn out to be by far the bleakest of this horrible period so far. As someone who has regularly contributed to the good news thread, I hope I am wrong.