Erm
That’s The Telegraph
I would rather believe Karen off Facebook to be honest
“Readily available”. Brilliant slip sliding. Lol
Can you share a link that explains the supply problems/timeline ?
Erm
That’s The Telegraph
I would rather believe Karen off Facebook to be honest
“Readily available”. Brilliant slip sliding. Lol
Can you share a link that explains the supply problems/timeline ?
Link ? Why do you keep peddling fake news ?
1 million available Monday and a further 2m by the middle of Jan, with a total of 19-20m readily available.
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/20...ly-approved-oxford-vaccine-will-ready-monday/
Behind a paywall, so not sure exactly what it says - but reports in other papers do seem to talk about a shortage. The Mirror says 530,000 available on 30 December
https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/covid-19-vaccine-shortages-reality-23247355
Tks - had read that article as well. Even that says ‘millions by beginning of Feb’ (although it’s quoting Hancockwomble so possibly unreliable [emoji849]). Whitty’s reference to shortages do seem to be in a global context though - if there’s one think the government have done well it seems to be procurement of vaccines......guess we’ll find out pretty quickly.
Fortunately there soon will be.'There are no data to demonstrate that protection after the first dose is sustained after 21 days.'
Fortunately there soon will be.
There are also no data to say that 21 days is the optimum period, incidentally. 21 is the only number that has been tested.
Fortunately there soon will be.
There are also no data to say that 21 days is the optimum period, incidentally. 21 is the only number that has been tested.
You're assuming that this decision is set in stone and cannot possibly be changed. You're wrong. By mid-January they will have a good idea of the effectiveness of a single jab, and by the end of January they will know whether that effectiveness wears off after 3 weeks.But 21 days works from the data.
I just wonder if this change by the Government to go to 12 weeks, is nothing more than looking to be towards the top of international tables for the number of people vaccinated, as by going to 12 weeks they immediately double the number. Thereby being able to say look how good we are, and hoping no one looks behind the headlines.
The fact that if the 12 weeks is found to be useless if the effects of the first jab fall away after 21 days, the UK second jab rather than giving the 95% protection will in effect be the 1st jab, thereby needing another jab within 21 days.
Let's hope this is wrong, otherwise the UK will have lost 12 weeks in fighting back against the virus and the increased number of deaths will be solely down to the Government.
To me it just seems to be a big gamble by a gambler trying to recover his losses.
Maybe they are taking a risky route because there is no safe route.It seems a rather risky road to take, that’s a lot of wasted vaccines.
But 21 days works from the data.
I just wonder if this change by the Government to go to 12 weeks, is nothing more than looking to be towards the top of international tables for the number of people vaccinated, as by going to 12 weeks they immediately double the number. Thereby being able to say look how good we are, and hoping no one looks behind the headlines.
The fact that if the 12 weeks is found to be useless if the effects of the first jab fall away after 21 days, the UK second jab rather than giving the 95% protection will in effect be the 1st jab, thereby needing another jab within 21 days.
Let's hope this is wrong, otherwise the UK will have lost 12 weeks in fighting back against the virus and the increased number of deaths will be solely down to the Government.
To me it just seems to be a big gamble by a gambler trying to recover his losses.
Maybe they are taking a risky route because there is no safe route.
How do people feel on an individual basis? With 2 hypothetical elderly relatives, would you prefer both get a single jab, or would you rather have one with two jabs and the other left unprotected?
With the facts as we now know them.With the chance of both having the effectiveness fading away?
You're assuming that this decision is set in stone and cannot possibly be changed. You're wrong. By mid-January they will have a good idea of the effectiveness of a single jab, and by the end of January they will know whether that effectiveness wears off after 3 weeks.
The government has perhaps been a bit brave, it's true. As you suggest, the "safe" thing to do is to do the three week jab regardless of results, because that's what's written down and any extra deaths that result will be someone else's fault. But if the government chose to govern on the basis of avoiding blame rather than saving lives, it would be worse than if they follow their medical advice that there is another way and this other way is probably better.
They will keep records day by day. If the single-jab vaccine ceases to work on day 22, they will know that by the end of January.
With the chance of both having the effectiveness fading away?
where has the idea efficacy fades come from?
Thank you. The latter. I've posted a bit about the takeover on the specific thread referencing the takeover, on the main part of the board.Thank you for your input on this thread. Very insightful.
Q: are you a B&HA fan that lives in Burnley, or a Burnley fan that frequents this board? If the latter, be interested to hear your thoughts on the takeover, and what the impact will be in the next six months or so.
The criticism comes after Pfizer said that it only assessed its vaccine on a two-dose regimen where people were given the jab three weeks apart, and there was "no data to demonstrate that protection after the first dose is sustained after 21 days".
In a statement, Pfizer says: "Pfizer and BioNTech’s Phase 3 study for the Covid-19 vaccine was designed to evaluate the vaccine’s safety and efficacy following a 2-dose schedule, separated by 21 days.
It’s fair to say they know more about the jab/data than our guys?
they've given all their data on trials to the regulators. both FDA and MHRA are looking at that data and suggesting they dont necessarily need to do two doses to be effective (50% is the benchmark, not 90%+). Pfizer might have a commercial interest in supporting their 2 dose schedule...