LamieRobertson
Not awoke
Potency in.....?
Come on! Don't just leave us hanging there!
Lol ..yes sorry potency in.....
and that’s all we have time for today
Potency in.....?
Come on! Don't just leave us hanging there!
Moderna’s potential coronavirus vaccine generated a promising immune response in elderly patients in an early stage clinical trial, the biotech firm announced Wednesday.
The company tested its vaccine on 10 adults between the ages of 56 and 70 and 10 elderly adults aged 71 and older, Moderna said. Each participant received two 100 microgram doses of the vaccine 28 days apart.
The volunteers produced neutralizing antibodies, which researchers believe are necessary to build immunity to the virus, and T-cells, Moderna said in its results, which have not yet been published in a peer-reviewed journal. Additionally, the antibodies that were produced were higher than those seen in people who have recovered from Covid-19.
The vaccine also appeared to be well tolerated, with no serious adverse events reported, the company said. Some patients reported fatigue, chills, headaches and pain at the injection site, though the majority of symptoms resolved within two days, the company said.
Schools going back in the next couple of weeks is the next big challenge (especially as already seen a few localised outbreaks in Scotland), if that goes well then things are looking very positive.
One bit of good news which I haven't seen properly reported is the continued decline in deaths. If you look at the stats for France their numbers of infections are currently the same as at the peak in April, about 5,000 per day, however the first half of April saw between 400 and 1,500 deaths per day whereas now they're seeing 11 a day with that number still declining. Similar pattern for Spain, UK, etc. Maybe the virus has mutated, almost certainly we've found much better ways to treat it. It just doesn't seem like something long-term deadly any more (or am I getting a bit too rose-tinted here?)
Just by way of explanation, as it is the Good News Thread. The case numbers we are picking up now are not comparable to those in the early days of the crisis. We were only testing only 21,000 people a day in April and most of those were ill and in hospital. Now we are testing over 150,000 a day and most of those are community based, younger and asymptomatic.
Now there is a possibility that the virus is weakening as that is not an unlikely event for a virus, but simply comparing case numbers from different times is ineffective as a tool to measure mortality rates.
Just by way of explanation, as it is the Good News Thread. The case numbers we are picking up now are not comparable to those in the early days of the crisis. We were only testing only 21,000 people a day in April and most of those were ill and in hospital. Now we are testing over 150,000 a day and most of those are community based, younger and asymptomatic.
Now there is a possibility that the virus is weakening as that is not an unlikely event for a virus, but simply comparing case numbers from different times is ineffective as a tool to measure mortality rates.
Thank you GCCM, genuinely mean it when say was feeling a bit depressed about cv19 and the future today and so clicked on this thread, read your post and it's cheered me up.
Another option is that we missed millions of cases making it less harmful.
Another option is that we missed millions of cases making it less harmful.
Another option is that we missed millions of cases making it less harmful.
No problem. Sorry you were feeling low. It is genuinely good that so many cases now are not as serious as before. I think we are headed in the right direction.
Just by way of explanation, as it is the Good News Thread. The case numbers we are picking up now are not comparable to those in the early days of the crisis. We were only testing 21,000 people a day in April and most of those were ill and in hospital. Now we are testing over 150,000 a day and most of those are community based, younger and asymptomatic.
Now there is a possibility that the virus is weakening as that is not an unlikely event for a virus, but simply comparing case numbers from different times is ineffective as a tool to measure mortality rates.
Just by way of explanation, as it is the Good News Thread. The case numbers we are picking up now are not comparable to those in the early days of the crisis. We were only testing 21,000 people a day in April and most of those were ill and in hospital. Now we are testing over 150,000 a day and most of those are community based, younger and asymptomatic.
Now there is a possibility that the virus is weakening as that is not an unlikely event for a virus, but simply comparing case numbers from different times is ineffective as a tool to measure mortality rates.
Out of interest, where are the 150,000 a day coming from? I know there are different criteria for testing; one of the main ones being that a person is exhibiting symptoms. So, why are so many younger and asymptomatic people apparently being tested?
Good post.Right, I just wanted to chime in with some anti-bad news on the good news thread, given it's the bad news that's currently the lead story on Sky News and the like. I quote: UK reports highest number of coronavirus cases since 12 June with 1,522 infections.
Taking that headline in isolation, we've gone backwards nearly three months - quite a stark claim. However, here are two charts from the government web site where the daily stats are published:
View attachment 127743
As you'll see, the recent (i.e. post 12th June) record in cases also corresponds with a record in tests processed. And that's the thing, given that tests processed are a constantly moving target, case numbers alone are a bit of an irrelevant, blunt instrument. We also need to be wary of a single day's data, due to the potential for statistical anomalies. A more useful measure is the infection rate, ergo the number of people tested who return a positive sample, taken as a 7 day rolling average.
Here's how that looks since the beginning of June:
View attachment 127744
What we have is a generally pretty flat situation, if anything we're down on the past couple of weeks. Admittedly, in the interest of balance we're slightly up on where we were in early July, but when you consider how much more social interaction and economic activity we have going on, I'd say the level of increase we've seen is a worthwhile price to pay for the nation as a whole.
The media need to hold their horses when it comes to reporting daily data. It could be a spike which marks the beginning of the second wave, but it probably isn't. Until we see this kind of rise sustained over a period of days, it's really in the interest of public anxiety for Sky News and the like to keep their ink dry.