Being vaccinated won’t prevent you from catching Covid and potentially suffering from Long Covid. For that reason I voted the same way as you.
Err....yes it will.
Being vaccinated won’t prevent you from catching Covid and potentially suffering from Long Covid. For that reason I voted the same way as you.
In my short time on here i have noted you have a distinctive way with words that fits your new avatar , bloody brilliant always have a laugh
Err....yes it will.
Only for 4 out of 5 people who are vaccinated
The proof of your vaccine is linked to your medical recordsShirley this " passport " will merely be proof that you have had the vaccination , not the 10 digit code to the countries nuclear arms launch codes ?
If someone said hey mate had ya jab , you wouldn`t take offence , so how can a little itty bitty piece of card steal your identity
Only?
When you factor in the unfortunate who already had Covid when vaccinated, or got it in the 5 days before the immunization kicked it...that makes (hang on....let me....yes! 5 out of 5! Or near as dammit.
FFS.
Don't have the vaccination, then. You never know, it may not save your life
Err....yes it will.
I've been vaccinated and would urge everyone who can to also get the vaccination.
however I'm not stupid enough to believe that having had the vaccination I'm now invulnerable to Covid - I'm NOT.
Not only may I still contract Covid, I may pass it on to others. The vaccination is very effective but not 100%.
Afraid not. It merely protects you from the worst of symptoms that would otherwise put you in hospital. You can still catch and transmit Covid after vaccination.
Your original statement was 'being vaccinated won't protect you against Covid'. If the vaccine worked (i.e., you are 'vaccinated', then you won't contract covid or pass it on. That is a fact.
The reality is it is much more likely that you are vaccinated (immune and not a spreader) after getting the jab than surviving in a car crash when wearing a seatbelt.
I have heard people spreading lies on national radio saying 'there is no point getting vaccinated because it doesn't protect you'. And 'there may be side effects we don't know about'.
Nobody said getting the jab makes you invulnerable. I understand that it is possible to be nuanced about vaccination, but let's not start making misleading statements.
I'm 95% sure that's a misunderstanding. We simply don't have the data yet, so the government web site says "We do not yet know whether it will stop you from catching and passing on the virus, but we do expect it to reduce this risk".
The only way to test whether vaccination prevents infection is to attempt to deliberately infect someone with the virus after vaccination and see what happens (and repeat with multiple 'volunteers' to get statistical power). That is, I'm pretty sure, unethical.
The only way to prove that one cannot spread the vaccine after vaccination is to shut a vaccinated person in a room with an unvaccinated person then attempt to deliberately infect the vaccinated person (which may not work, due to them being vaccinated) and see what happens to the other person. Obviously you'd need to do this with at least 30 people and include a variety of control pairs (for example a pair who have not been vaccinated and one is deliberately infected and then the investigators waits to see if the infection transmits to the other person) allowing the necessary controls and statistical power to test the hypotheses.
The other way of getting a steer is to compare over time a population with widespread vaccination compared with a population without. Say, compare the UK with somewhere really poor and disorganized such as, er, Zimbabwe, for numbers of new cases, relating outcome to vaccination numbers. The trouble with this is there are too many confounds, not least patient selection, level of diagnosis, data collection and collation, access to information, etc. Cohort studies like these are prone to false positives and are a source of false findings. Wasn't Andrew Wakefields 'revelation' that MMR causes autism the product of a cohort study?
In the meantime we can look at the wider medical piece for clues. There is no vaccine I know of that does nothing more than reduce symptoms and somehow magically make the invading virus or bacterium less able to spread in exhaled microdroplets to others. Vaccine's work on the human, not the invading organism, changing the human's immune response. The outcome, I am 95% certain, is all-or-none. Thus the flu vac either protects us so we don't get flu, or it fails for some reason and we get flu. (I would add that if it fails I am 95% certain that this would be due to a technical issue, not a genuine shortcoming of the vaccine itself).
Reading various comments elsewhere in this thread and in the wider world, I think we are seeing the turbulence created when scientific facts (things proven), and well-justified scientific hypotheses are imported into government statements and policy for the digestion of a public that does not truly undestand the nature of proof, or things like the risk benefit ratio, let alone how infection, vaccination and immunity work. I must admit that I don't really understand it. I'm not an immunologist (albeit I did study immunology as an undergraduate. Er...44 years ago :Thumbsup:.
The proof of your vaccine is linked to your medical records
I'm 95% sure that's a misunderstanding. We simply don't have the data yet, so the government web site says "We do not yet know whether it will stop you from catching and passing on the virus, but we do expect it to reduce this risk".
The only way to test whether vaccination prevents infection is to attempt to deliberately infect someone with the virus after vaccination and see what happens (and repeat with multiple 'volunteers' to get statistical power). That is, I'm pretty sure, unethical.
The only way to prove that one cannot spread the vaccine after vaccination is to shut a vaccinated person in a room with an unvaccinated person then attempt to deliberately infect the vaccinated person (which may not work, due to them being vaccinated) and see what happens to the other person. Obviously you'd need to do this with at least 30 people and include a variety of control pairs (for example a pair who have not been vaccinated and one is deliberately infected and then the investigators waits to see if the infection transmits to the other person) allowing the necessary controls and statistical power to test the hypotheses.
The other way of getting a steer is to compare over time a population with widespread vaccination compared with a population without. Say, compare the UK with somewhere really poor and disorganized such as, er, Zimbabwe, for numbers of new cases, relating outcome to vaccination numbers. The trouble with this is there are too many confounds, not least patient selection, level of diagnosis, data collection and collation, access to information, etc. Cohort studies like these are prone to false positives and are a source of false findings. Wasn't Andrew Wakefields 'revelation' that MMR causes autism the product of a cohort study?
In the meantime we can look at the wider medical piece for clues. There is no vaccine I know of that does nothing more than reduce symptoms and somehow magically make the invading virus or bacterium less able to spread in exhaled microdroplets to others. Vaccine's work on the human, not the invading organism, changing the human's immune response. The outcome, I am 95% certain, is all-or-none. Thus the flu vac either protects us so we don't get flu, or it fails for some reason and we get flu. (I would add that if it fails I am 95% certain that this would be due to a technical issue, not a genuine shortcoming of the vaccine itself).
Reading various comments elsewhere in this thread and in the wider world, I think we are seeing the turbulence created when scientific facts (things proven), and well-justified scientific hypotheses are imported into government statements and policy for the digestion of a public that does not truly undestand the nature of proof, or things like the risk benefit ratio, let alone how infection, vaccination and immunity work. I must admit that I don't really understand it. I'm not an immunologist (albeit I did study immunology as an undergraduate. Er...44 years ago :Thumbsup:.
Amazing how quickly people become happy to discriminate against others, when it suits them isn’t it.
I've had enough. A year of my life has already been stolen and I'm not putting up with this nonsense for a minute longer.
What you really meant to say was "when it becomes a matter of life and death"
The Wizard.
Can I respectfully suggest you try to educate yourself a bit better. Someone who has had the vaccine can still carry the virus and hand it on to others such as the under 40's or the 40% of people that have only had the first jab (which only offers about 60% protection).