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The Delta variant

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Comments

  • Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 24,146 Mod ✭✭✭✭robinph


    There was never any suggestion of doing a total travel shutdown into the UK, just quarantine for normal people. Exemptions for "important" people would still have applied and quarantine is also very leaky, delta would still have got in. Maybe it would have arrived through a different third country to the UK, but it was always going to get there, and I doubt that even with strict travel restrictions (which are not totally secure) the travel between India and the UK is probably still the most likely route into Europe for the virus.


    As for fear of delta driving vaccine take up, that is total nonsense as the UK was already well on the way to having the majority of their population at least single jabbed before there was any talk of delta variants existing. Maybe it upped the percentage of people taking vaccines in the rest of Europe through fear of the variant, but it didn't make a whole lot of difference to the UK take up which was already high and carrying on at a high pace.


    You can blame Johnson for lots of things. Not a lot would have happened differently if they had shut down travel a week or two earlier though, was still going to happen.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,722 ✭✭✭saabsaab


    Why didn't European shut air travel from China when Wuhan started? Don't give me that hindsight nonsense many on boards could see it coming at the end of Jan 2020.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,566 ✭✭✭Risteard81




  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Depends if it was a North American Airplane or English Aeroplane



  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    With all due respect more than a year into this pandemic, not closing borders to India earlier was saying Delta come and get me Especially at a time we were all vaccinating

    We knew roughly how much time we needed to be fully vaccinated yet led by Borris ,in we let Delta charge

    A year earlier, not having a clue what was best versus wrecking Economies would have been more understandable



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,301 ✭✭✭patnor1011


    Nonsense. "Closing borders to India" - how does that work short of building wall and machine gun posts all around India and telling them to ride it out?

    Even the most zealous zero covid countries like New Zealand or Australia do have delta even though they closed borders. Try getting small packet or large envelope there, it can take ridiculously long like months...



  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Its not nonsense if you only did it for 2 months

    Conflating New Zealands approach for the last 18 months in the context of no vaccine and stopping an obvious threat from India for maybe 2 or 3 months to give the vaccine roll out a chance to finish when very good vaccines were being rolled out is nonsense though

    It was irresponsible of Borris

    He put a trade deal before health

    Making as bad a mistake as not stopping big events like Cheltenham 20 basically



  • Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 24,146 Mod ✭✭✭✭robinph


    So considering how many cases of delta there are daily in the UK at the moment with almost everyone who is likely to get vaccinated having been double jabbed, and that cases have not changed much since delta was in the wild in the UK... How was shutting down travel for normal people from India going to make any difference?


    Cases, hospitalisations and deaths are not rising further in the UK and delta has been doing its thing for several months now.


    Delta was almost certainly already in the UK before it had been identified anyway. It might have delayed the rise in cases by a week or two if they had shut travel down, but nothing would have changed significantly in that time with vaccines that would have helped things in dealing with delta as the UK was at that point the furthest along with vaccination and already had the vulnerable double jabbed. Despite being double jabbed though its still those vulnerable who are being hospitalised, so delaying by a week would have made no difference.


    The biggest failing was from opposition politicians not scoring enough points against Johnson, but they have somehow failed to dislodge him throughout the last few years despite his repeated failures and own goals.


    A travel ban from India would have had no impact on the current situation.



  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Lol

    If you stopped Indian entries in time,Delta wouldn't have got in

    Even when it was too late it was delayed

    Its not a zero covid policy to do that, it would have been a reduce delta untill the vaccine roll out was finished

    Simple

    Not complicated

    Boris was irresponsibly more interested in his trade mission to India at the time

    No surprises there



  • Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 24,146 Mod ✭✭✭✭robinph


    If you stopped Indian entries in time,Delta wouldn't have got in

    So how come Delta is now worldwide, including in Australia and New Zealand? Every other country had additional warning of Delta being on the loose, why did they not shut down travel, and for those that did (Aus/ NZ) how come it's still got in?



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  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Because flights left for London and other cities without MHQ at the other end

    Come on now!

    You're answering me as if I'm talking about zero covid nonsense

    It was perfectly possible for Boris to have installed mhq in time for 2 or 3 months untill the UK was fully vaccinated

    We would have followed suit but stopping the spread in the UK would have vastly mitigated the problem with us

    This is all on Boris and his stupid Brexit trade obsession



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,609 ✭✭✭timmyntc


    Delta is the dominant strain worldwide. it was always going to get here. Our own MHQ didnt stop it, neither would the UKs.

    You clearly have a chip on your shoulder wrt the UK



  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Nonsense as I wasn't talking about stopping it,just delaying it which is what a timely mhq would have done

    Note the word timely



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,271 ✭✭✭brickster69


    You know how many generations of Indian families there are in the UK. Delta has been found to of been roaming around India since December so can you imagine the amount of people that had gone to see family and picked it up there, brought it back without even knowing even before it was officially discovered.

    That is why all the early outbreaks were in towns that had a large Indian community. It is hard to stop something getting a foothold in a country if don't even know it exists.

    "if you get on the wrong train, get off at the nearest station, the longer it takes you to get off, the more expensive the return trip will be."



  • Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 24,146 Mod ✭✭✭✭robinph


    The UK was already vaccinated across all vulnerable groups before delta appeared on the scene.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,579 ✭✭✭✭charlie14


    My post was not about blaming the U.K. for the Delta variant. On the contrary, it was in reply to a poster who believed we should take responsibility for it. The poster seemed to believe that the authorities here were blaming the U.K. for its spread in Ireland. I don`t believe that the authorities pointing out that the rapid spread here due to us having a land-border with our neighbours was any attempt to attach blame.

    Could the U.K. authorities have done more to control the speed of spread there and given others more time to get their vaccination levels up ? Personally I believe they could have. Unlike here the U.K. had the luxury of not sharing a border with where this variant was coming from. People travelling from India were arriving by plane and were then going to communities within the U.K, where there were high levels of vaccine hesitancy. They already knew that was the situation within those communities and there were also low levels of vaccination in India yet they did very little through airport control until the variant was well established throughout the U.K.

    Months ago the two variants of concern were the India Delta and the South Africa Beta. As soon as a few examples of the Beta variant were detected in France from some of their former colonies, the U.K. imposed quarantine restrictions on anyone travelling from France. Even those fully vaccinated. Perhaps that was just a result of them learning from their India experience, but then again with the present jingoistic political leadership in the U.K. who knows. India is a former U.K. colony which the U.K. is now looking to do much more business with. France, along with being a country the U.K. in general has long looked down on, is also a member of an economic bloc the U.K. now are attempting to distance themselves from as much a possible. The U.K. to me at least. is now a country where, like the U.S under Trump, practically everything is politicised.



  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    And that's a reason not to go down hard on its source once it was known?

    I certainly don't think so and to be honest have no faith in any governments acting on experience if another worse variant turns up



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,150 ✭✭✭TonyMaloney


    michael-collins-rea-screenshot1.jpg

    ...



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,301 ✭✭✭patnor1011


    Go hard on what source? Many countries tried that and failed miserably. You seems to watch too many movies where hundreds of doctors and people in full hazmat descend on town where one or few people got sick.

    Come on now. This kind of armchair-general-after-battle-talk is like, unreal. We go this way then I cannot wait for triple-vaxxers to be PISSED at the double-vaxxers lol



  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Go hard on locking out anyone connected to India at the time it was being Ravaged

    Not a difficult thing to do for 2 or 3 months untill a majority were vaccinated

    Notice what I'm doing here?

    Stating my opinion without ad hominem or non sequitur's



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 25,109 ✭✭✭✭Kermit.de.frog


    Grim in Russia. 820 deaths in the last 24 hours.




  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,301 ✭✭✭patnor1011


    Thing is that we did not locked up anyone and could not do so even if we wanted. Even at our first lockdown about third of workforce went about their routine as if nothing was going on. "Essential workers" needed to maintain illusion of some lockdown. They then came back home and exposed their families.

    I do not know why some people think like end of the world is coming. Covid is out for nearly 2 years and with so many daily cases out of which absolute majority is non symptomatic there is good chance most of the people already had it and built up natural immunity which is by the way far superior to any current vaccine.

    Latest Israel study showed that the vaccinated were ultimately 13x as likely to be infected as those who were infected previously, and 27x more likely to be symptomatic.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,492 ✭✭✭McGiver




  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,200 ✭✭✭amandstu




  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,394 ✭✭✭Wolf359f


    That's a month old, I'm sure you have an update on it now? Has it spread more than delta? Is it dominant in a country now? Or are you just link dumping?



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 383 ✭✭Unicorn Milk Latte


    Don't fall for his BS, he's deliberately trying to mislead.

    What he's referring to: breakthrough infections for vaccinated are extremely rare. They are even more rare for people who were infected with Covid naturally - but this only applies to natural infection with the Delta variant.


    The study he's referring to states "Individuals who were both previously infected with SARS-CoV-2 and given a single dose of the vaccine gained additional protection against the Delta variant" - which is consistent with the current guidance that even people who had Covid should get vaccinated.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,301 ✭✭✭patnor1011


    Sure. Please direct your anger to the professors and researchers behind that study. It is they who try to mislead not me. Care to explain what is misleading on their find that the vaccinated were ultimately 13x as likely to be infected as those who were infected previously, and 27x more likely to be symptomatic. Plus what I forgot to mention that vaccinated people were also at greater risk for covid related hospitalization compared to those who were previously infected?

    It is all stated right in conclusions part of the study.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 383 ✭✭Unicorn Milk Latte


    The study looks at how many people got sick twice with Covid since January 2021 compared to getting vaccinated and getting sick once afterwards. There are extremely few who got vaccinated who got sick within 7 months, and even fewer who got sick a second time, after getting sick first in Jan/Feb 2021, before being vaccinated.

    Entirely unsurprising.

    The 'misleading' part is to make some insane antivax narrative - 'vaccines are not really effective' - out of a study that has entirely unsurprising results. The study never questions vaccine effectiveness.



  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    What's the story with the new variant c12

    Spreading twice as fast as Delta

    Originated in South Africa and now found in concert goers in Cornwall

    Also several times removed,the most varied so far from the original virus so potentially a problem for the vaccinated


    Long thread 👇


    https://twitter.com/DrEricDing/status/1432200392776028162?s=20



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  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    That thread is pure horseshit even by his standards.

    There have 101 cases of C.1.2 to date with almost all of them from South Africa. The earliest known samples are from last May so his claim it was just identified is nonsense. It's early frequency may have been a founder effect and it is has shown no signs of significant growth since then. Obviously never say never but it may well be on the way to extinction.

    Untitled Image


    Post edited by [Deleted User] on


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