Attention: Please take a moment to consider our terms and conditions before posting.

Vaccine

1757678808195

Comments

  • Paulsturgess: "ludicrous, not for a moment suggesting that is the case"
    Aliwibble: "ridiculous"

    The point still stands though. There are unknowns about the vaccine, and there is no long term data on it. We KNOW that as much as we know that there haven't been large numbers of deaths associated with the initial tests. I'm not for a comment suggesting death but the point I'm making is that there are unknowns, and the ongoing discoveries about bleeding etc show that; yes not life threatening and yes blood clot risk extremely low too, but could other matters similarly emerge? Again, probably not, but to me it doesn't make sense to be imposing a vaccine on vast numbers of fit and healthy young people with minimal statistical risk from covid given those uncertainties (at this stage) and in order solely to protect a relatively small number of other vulnerable unvaccinated people, the risk to who I think is also minimal statistically.

    As a side note, one of my best mates told me today (after I'd had my jab!) that he had his last week and passed out a few minutes later, had 3 hours at the hospital as a result and was then in bed with flu symptoms for the next 3 days. Probably no long term effects but even with that to be honest - why for a fit and healthy 34 year old who also had covid last year and gave him less symptoms than the jab itself!
    If he'd already had the virus then a strong immune response isn't totally unexpected
  • edited June 2021
    If we look at the scenes from India and are not seeing those scenes here, surely it is obvious the vaccination of so many of our population is a key factor in preventing people needing hospitalisation. That in itself ought to persuade everybody of the importance of being vaccinated.
  • edited June 2021
    @paulsturgess, as you've had the jab for the benefit of others and not yourself, I'd say well done to you for being so community minded.
    a miserable bitter and ungracious philanthropist, that's me!!
  • You're showing a fundamental lack of understanding of basic science or even numbers.

    Because for flu there is a base level of immunity in the population gained from the Spanish flu pandemic and over 100 subsequent years of flu spreading in the population. With COVID we dont have the benefit of the base level of immunity in the population. The point of the vaccination programme is to get that base level of immunity in the population so that in the future only the vulnerable and over 50s need annual booster vaccines against new variants just like flu. but we are not there yet - not even close. That is why we need a high uptake - its been estimated as somewhere over 90% thats gonna be required to get us to that level of base immunity.

    Alternatively we can wait until we get to that point "naturally" with more years of deaths and lockdowns and economic ruin. Either way we are getting to that point.

    I wonder why people are so keen on vaccinations?
    Don't profess to have anything more than a very layman's understanding of science (or for that matter numbers!). And quite frankly that's why I posted on the first place - as I think I said in my very initial post, trying to see if there is an argument out there that changes my relatively uneducated but nonetheless thought-out opinion that vaccinating older and vulnerable people but not healthy young people should be the approach.

    Why should there be substantial (excess) deaths (and I think the word substantial is key here, some excess deaths have to unfortunately be expected), lockdowns and economic ruin if all of the over 50s and vulnerable are vaccinated now? If all the over 50s and vulnerable are vaccinated now - who make up the overwhelming majority of serious illnesses/deaths/hospitalisations - then the theory is that the overwhelming majority of them won't get seriously ill and therefore deaths and hospitalisations through Covid will be very low. Why does it then matter if the rest of the population don't have the "base level" of immunity you refer to and this takes some years to develop?


  • Sponsored links:



  • I do understand and share concern about "other" (i.e. unvaccinatable) vulnerable people but again - overall that comprises a very small proportion of the population and many of those vulnerable people are similarly vulnerable to serious illness from flu every year which we do not mass vaccinate against.

    As before above, I still don't see a clear compelling argument for fit healthy young people to be taking the vaccine. But I've done it so...
    How many avoidable deaths are required for a 'compelling argument'.
    I'll stake 10 to 1 you know nobody who's required treatment for Covid.

    This sort of "argument" was touted by some against compulsory seat belts in cars and helmets for motor-cycle drivers, but you're too young to have known a time when there was a choice. 
  • Billy_Mix said:
    How many avoidable deaths are required for a 'compelling argument'.
    I'll stake 10 to 1 you know nobody who's required treatment for Covid.

    This sort of "argument" was touted by some against compulsory seat belts in cars and helmets for motor-cycle drivers, but you're too young to have known a time when there was a choice. 
    Wrong. I know somebody I’m relatively close to who was in Basildon hospital on a ventilator in intensive care cos he was struggling with it, and he was from north london but there was no hospital capacity near him so he got shipped over there, and now has long covid.

    he is 58, obese and has diabetes. 

    I’ll take the tenner off ya when we’re back at the valley. 
  • Don't profess to have anything more than a very layman's understanding of science (or for that matter numbers!). And quite frankly that's why I posted on the first place - as I think I said in my very initial post, trying to see if there is an argument out there that changes my relatively uneducated but nonetheless thought-out opinion that vaccinating older and vulnerable people but not healthy young people should be the approach.

    Why should there be substantial (excess) deaths (and I think the word substantial is key here, some excess deaths have to unfortunately be expected), lockdowns and economic ruin if all of the over 50s and vulnerable are vaccinated now? If all the over 50s and vulnerable are vaccinated now - who make up the overwhelming majority of serious illnesses/deaths/hospitalisations - then the theory is that the overwhelming majority of them won't get seriously ill and therefore deaths and hospitalisations through Covid will be very low. Why does it then matter if the rest of the population don't have the "base level" of immunity you refer to and this takes some years to develop?


    Understood @cantersaddick
  • The compelling argument for everyone taking the vaccine is because every virologist, epidemiologist, physician and scientist and health statistician involved in this pandemic is saying we should. Despite what Michael Gove might believe, we haven’t had enough of experts. It’s these experts that got us out of trouble and I think taking their advice is quite a good idea. Of course if you can’t see that as a compelling reason then nothing will.
    Well fair enough. And I guess that’s why I cracked on with it. And ultimately I have no expectation of adverse impacts but ya know, I’ve explained my thought process 
  • JamesSeed said:
    I’d say it sort of is clear cut, unless you're looking for absolute 100% certainty, and as they say, nothing is certain except death and taxes. There are people refusing the vaccine because of a one in a million chance they’ll have a serious adverse reaction, which is a bit daft, and not in the interest of the  creating a society/world that can stamp out viruses if and when they arise. Of course ‘we’ (society) need to be vigilant, but at the end of the day I’m more than happy to leave it to the experts to advise me what to do. And if I turn out to be the unlucky one in a million, so be it. 
    But it certainly isn’t what I would call ‘an unknown gamble’. Vaccines have made the world a much better place for long enough for that not to be the case. 
    Only thing I’d say here which is an absolutely fundamental flaw , in my view, with the above, is the suggestion of a society stamping out a virus when it arises. If that was going to occur by everyone being vaccinated my mindset would be very, very different. But to quote the same trusted sources as SHG, there is no virologist, epidemiologist, physician or health statistician who is suggesting that is even a remote possibility with covid. 
  • Only thing I’d say here which is an absolutely fundamental flaw , in my view, with the above, is the suggestion of a society stamping out a virus when it arises. If that was going to occur by everyone being vaccinated my mindset would be very, very different. But to quote the same trusted sources as SHG, there is no virologist, epidemiologist, physician or health statistician who is suggesting that is even a remote possibility with covid. 

    It will never be stamped out - I agree. But vaccines, repeated as necessary, will hold it at bay until human physiology (immune system) evolves to deal with it as a mild condition rather than a killer. Exactly the same way humanity has evolved to deal with the Spanish Flu that is still in circulation today, although obviously it was tougher to deal with that pandemic 100 years ago as there were no vaccines.
  • Sponsored links:


  • India has ordered 300 million doses of an unapproved coronavirus vaccine amid a devastating second wave. 

    The unnamed vaccine from Indian firm Biological E is in Phase 3 trials, and had showed "promising results" in the first two phases, the federal government said in a statement. 

  • bobmunro said:

    It will never be stamped out - I agree. But vaccines, repeated as necessary, will hold it at bay until human physiology (immune system) evolves to deal with it as a mild condition rather than a killer. Exactly the same way humanity has evolved to deal with the Spanish Flu that is still in circulation today, although obviously it was tougher to deal with that pandemic 100 years ago as there were no vaccines.
    And I suppose there may also be the possibility it evolves into a harmless variant at some point in the future. We can but hope!
  • Vaccines seem to be our main weapon of managing covid at present. Some countries are obviously really suffering.

    To an extent we have to rely on a degree of educated guesswork. Human beings crave certainty which is simply not there at present.


  • And I suppose there may also be the possibility it evolves into a harmless variant at some point in the future. We can but hope!
    Very, very likely, Mutts - if it follows the life cycle of pretty much every other virus known to man.
  • edited June 2021
    Which will ultimately be the best way out of this hell. In the meantime vaccines and caution has to be the way to go.
  • The UK has approved the use of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine in children aged 12-15, saying it is safe and effective in this age group and the benefits outweigh the risks.

    The MHRA said it had carried out a "rigorous review" of the vaccine in adolescents.

    The UK's vaccines committee will now decide whether children should get the jab.

  • The World Health Organization (WHO) has approved a second Chinese vaccine for emergency use. CoronaVac was found to be 51% effective at preventing COVID-19 in late-stage trials, and researchers say it will be key to curbing the pandemic.

    This overall protection is lower than that provided by the seven other vaccines already listed by the WHO. But, importantly, trials suggest that CoronaVac — an inactivated-virus vaccine produced by Beijing-based company Sinovac — is 100% effective at preventing severe disease and death.

    More details here:  https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-021-01497-8 

    (@Jessie, Nature is a well-regarded peer-reviewed periodical)

    I noticed a few days ago that CoronaVac has been used extensively in Chile, to good effect.  Perhaps that was the additional data the WHO had been waiting for?    

  • Got jabbed up with Pfizer yesterday. 

    My arm feels like its been punched repeatedly and I feel pretty run down today. 
Sign In or Register to comment.

Roland Out Forever!