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The Vaccine Thread

Would you take a vaccine if offered, as per the post below?

  • YES - Let's get this COVID thing done and over with.

    Votes: 201 78.5%
  • NO - I still have issues about a rushed vaccine/I don't need to/I'm not happy with being forced to.

    Votes: 29 11.3%
  • UNSURE - I still can't tell what I'll do when it comes to it.

    Votes: 26 10.2%

  • Total voters
    256


blue-shifted

Banned
Feb 20, 2004
7,645
a galaxy far far away
I will probably be on to it as early as able. I guess that the very vulnerable and health workers will be first in the queue, but as an a so called asthmatic I should not be far behind,

Why so keen? I have about 20 years plus (hopefully) of being able to travel to see friends, family and more of the world. I want to get on with it ASAP.

On that basis most of the Liverpool squad won't be far behind
 




BBassic

I changed this.
Jul 28, 2011
13,055
veins.jpg
 


peterward

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Nov 11, 2009
12,275
I will probably be on to it as early as able. I guess that the very vulnerable and health workers will be first in the queue, but as an a so called asthmatic I should not be far behind,

Why so keen? I have about 20 years plus (hopefully) of being able to travel to see friends, family and more of the world. I want to get on with it ASAP.

We're all entitled to our views, but I don't understand some of the negativety towards a vaccine with what has been an unbelievable and unprecedented human endeavour to find a treatment to deal with this horrible disease.

More so as businesses go to the wall and the associated human suffering is more than just those affected by covid, the way out of this for public health and ending the economically devastating restrictions is surely a vaccine?

Watching our beloved Albion at the Amex is the other side of it.

For sure running various phases of trials simultaneously rather than usual back to back is not the norm but seems totally reasonable with the havoc this has caused globally.

Personally I trust the best Brains from Oxford Uni and Astra Zeneca, as well as those from Pfizer etc.

Everytime I step inside a plane, train or doctor's surgery I put my trust in their training and expertise. This is no different. Ways to save process time doesn't mean short cuts in testing or safety profiling, and whatever the slight risk of side effect, they are greatly inferior to risk of severe complications of disease, spreading it to others unwittingly or loss of employment if the economic tide isn't turned soon.

I will trust the medical experts, if they say it's safe to take, then I will believe they say that with genuine reason and with the best intent. The best Brains at Oxford are not going to lie if something doesn't work or is unsafe to simply line the pockets of Astra Zeneca. That's ludicrous imho
 








Fungus

Well-known member
NSC Patron
May 21, 2004
7,156
Truro
I imagine many of us will be so far down the priority list, that any issues will have been found before we get the chance. I don't bother with the annual flu vaccine, but see no reason for me not to get this, if only to stop anyone accusing me of being selfish.
 


peterward

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Nov 11, 2009
12,275
I imagine many of us will be so far down the priority list, that any issues will have been found before we get the chance. I don't bother with the annual flu vaccine, but see no reason for me not to get this, if only to stop anyone accusing me of being selfish.

I never took the annual flu vaccine till last year, having got flu in both 2017 and 2018 (the only times I ever have). Never knew what flu was before 2017, or thought, stupidly, a bad cold was flu...... Literally couldn't get off the bed for a week such was the weakness.

Converted flu vaccine taker now, nowt last year or this thus far.
 
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blue-shifted

Banned
Feb 20, 2004
7,645
a galaxy far far away
I never took the annual flu vaccine till last year, having got flu in both 2017 and 2018 (the only times I ever have). Never knew what flu was before 2017, or thought, stupidly, a bad cold was flu...... Literally couldn't get off the bed for a week such was the weakness.

Converted flu vaccine taker now, now last year or this thus far.

Many of us have learned a lot about disease transmission in the last 6 months :)
 




Shropshire Seagull

Well-known member
Nov 5, 2004
8,788
Telford
I don't know the ins & outs of vaccines, I'm no medical expert.
But I have faith in medical technology - I inject a synthetic drug called insulin 4-5 times per day - I know for a fact this keeps me from dying.
There are a couple of minor side-effects but I accept these willingly as the consequences are far outweighed.

Whilst the absence of insulin to any type-1 diabetic, regardless of age, health, gender, race [or religion] are no different, Covid-19 carries a multitude of consequences ranging between asymptomatic [zero effect] and death. So choosing a medical solution is worthy of careful consideration on an individual basis since zero side-effects of any vaccine are very unlikely.

For me, it's a simple decision, take the side effects to avert the predicted Covid-19 consequences. So long as the vaccine side-effect isn't death, I'm quids-in.

My 25 year-old daughter, however, does not see a vaccine [for her] as at all necessary.
 


Half Time Pies

Well-known member
Sep 7, 2003
1,575
Brighton
It looks like the trials have been conducted pretty thoroughly (if quickly), several of the trials were stopped when participants became unwell and by the time they are approved for market many thousands of people will have taken it.

Like with most medication, I am sure some people will have adverse responses, but as far as I can see with vaccinations these tend to be pretty minor and rare. There is, in my opinion, a social responsibility element to this around protecting other people and particularly the elderly. It's not just about the chances of dying from coronavirus its also about protecting the many people who would be left with long-term, quality of life impacting health problems after contracting the virus and the pressure that this will put on the NHS.

I will definitely be taking it when its available.
 


sparkie

Well-known member
Jul 17, 2003
13,268
Hove
Of course! Be crazy not to under the conditions you have outlined.

Be interesting to see who is classified as a "high priority member of the public". Doctors, nurses, careworkers - absolutely. Politicians should be at the back of the queue.
Politicians should be at the front of the queue !

They need to take it to show that no safety corners have been cut in order to get a substance-less 'world beating' headline.

And it has to be independently verified that they haven't switched their dose for a harmless substitute.

Unfortunately both Johnson and Hancock have had covid, so they won't be on any list to take the vaccine, but the rest of them... front of the queue.
 
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sydney

tinky ****in winky
Jul 11, 2003
17,965
town full of eejits
yep....politicians lead by example for a change and Gates and his family and Fauci and all the CEO'S of all the companies working so tirelessly to develop a safe vaccine , any word from China ....?? All gone very quiet over there.
 


GT49er

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Feb 1, 2009
49,186
Gloucester
I never took the annual flu vaccine till last year, having got flu in both 2017 and 2018 (the only times I ever have). Never knew what flu was before 2017, or thought, stupidly, a bad cold was flu...... Literally couldn't get off the bed for a week such was the weakness.

Converted flu vaccine taker now, now last year or this thus far.

Flu jabs are brilliant. I've had (real) flu a few times in y life - thankfully not many - but I used to get those bad cold/chill/man flu type things (you know, couple of days in bed feeling rotten, lots of Lemsip, and that's it) a lot - 3 or 4 times a year, probably.
Twenty or so years ago my GP added me to the surgery's flu jab list, and I've had the jab every year since. In that 20 years I've had (real) flu just once, but for me the big benefit is that I hardly ever get one of those heavy colds either, Recommend them to anyone!
 


peterward

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Nov 11, 2009
12,275
I don't know the ins & outs of vaccines, I'm no medical expert.
But I have faith in medical technology - I inject a synthetic drug called insulin 4-5 times per day - I know for a fact this keeps me from dying.
There are a couple of minor side-effects but I accept these willingly as the consequences are far outweighed.

Whilst the absence of insulin to any type-1 diabetic, regardless of age, health, gender, race [or religion] are no different, Covid-19 carries a multitude of consequences ranging between asymptomatic [zero effect] and death. So choosing a medical solution is worthy of careful consideration on an individual basis since zero side-effects of any vaccine are very unlikely.

For me, it's a simple decision, take the side effects to avert the predicted Covid-19 consequences. So long as the vaccine side-effect isn't death, I'm quids-in.

My 25 year-old daughter, however, does not see a vaccine [for her] as at all necessary.

Totally agree. If the next time you get a headache, have a look at the info paper in your box of paracetamol about known side effects. Theres loads (that probably happened to 1 in thousands). If paracetamol was brand new, many thousands who've used it with success for their headaches, wouldn't have touched it

There is always a small element of risk with anything, you can't get zero risk, but you can mitigate risk to the 1 in hundreds/thousands which is reasonable with any potential vaccine when compared to the personal and society risks of not doing so.

I'm 100% confident the data of both drug effect risk and drug covid efficacy rewards and safety profiling from all trial data will be presented accurately.

I take a biologic drug made from mouse proteins, I trust our UK system.
 






Machiavelli

Well-known member
Oct 11, 2013
17,773
Fiveways
I voted YES in the full knowledge that it won't exactly led to the outcome that [MENTION=12101]Mellotron[/MENTION] has suggested. A vaccine will not get rid of CV19 once and for all, but it will in all likelihood dampen down its effects, and enable the refinement of that particular vaccine or buy us some time so other, more effective vaccines can be designed, mass produced, deployed, and then tested according to its efficacy.
There's been a lot of talk about (that disturbing phrase) herd immunity. There are two ways to arrive at this. One, let the virus rip through the population, such that c60% have been infected. The other is through a vaccine, or multiple vaccines. Once put like that, it's obvious that the right thing to do is to take the vaccine.
I do find it interesting that those posters that have been advocating a herd immunity strategy are now showing their colours by refusing option two, which leaves either option one or this constant cat-and-mouse lockdown-approach that we've been subjected to over the past seven months.
 




Hugo Rune

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Feb 23, 2012
23,684
Brighton
i work in the industry, my company has been involved. process of trials doesnt necessarily take years, it takes years to get to trials. you recognise the difference? funding, competing for clinical teams, scheduling get in the way. where normally recruitment for first phase 3 might take a month or two, they completed that in a week back in March. another point is 3 or 4 were ready for phase 3 trials, having completed earlier phases and put on shelf because there wasnt financial incentive to develop further.

The big thing for me in terms of the speed of delivery (having heard a professor from one of the vaccine projects on the wireless) is that the phases have been running concurrently instead of the usual sequential system. You can do this when Governments are offering millions of pounds worth of support.
 




Uncle Spielberg

Well-known member
Jul 6, 2003
43,094
Lancing
It is clear that we will not be allowed out to play until we have a vaccination and daily covid test and a health passport so the choice is do I want to live my life like this forever - no vaccine, do I want to allowed to go anywhere or do anything ever again - vaccine
 


NooBHA

Well-known member
Jan 13, 2015
8,591
Personally I would take the Vaccine

However, I would be reluctant to encourage infants or growing children to take it without more advanced testing due to the risk of it causing deformities in the future. At my age any ''deformity'' could be a blessing as things are only gonna get worse in the future as opposed to getting better. It's unlikely I an gonna start looking like Brad Pitt overnight.

In all seriousness though. I think anyone above say 40 years of age should seriously consider it. The dangers of Covid-19 Outweigh any of the risks I would have thought.
 


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