ACitizenErased wrote: » Might send Oxford an email and ask them to hurry up, christ I'd love a vaccine now
ShineOn7 wrote: » I've gone from: "hmmm, lets wait awhile to see if users grow extra heads and turn into actual dogs" To: "Give me two! I'll stick one into each arm"
Micky 32 wrote: » I’ll even take a third one right on the arse cheek! Left or right i don’t mind!
normanoffside wrote: » I see they are doing the PCR test for €160. Very reasonable with a 72 hour turnaround. Cheaper than the apparent government cost of €200.https://www.tmb.ie/services/covid-19-travel-clearance-certificate
mandrake04 wrote: » €200 government cost? where did you hear of that?
normanoffside wrote: » That's what Leo said they cost the state:https://www.irishtimes.com/news/politics/covid-19-tests-cost-the-state-200-each-says-taoiseach-1.4264130
mandrake04 wrote: » Near fell of my chair laughing, that's $325 per test...LOL someone is pocketing a shitload money somewhere probably the European overlords taking their share.https://www.smh.com.au/national/pathology-groups-threatened-covid-19-test-ban-at-height-of-pandemic-20200520-p54uva.html
bennyineire wrote: » We use Euro in Ireland, this is an Irish site :cool:
hmmm wrote: » Biontech/Pfizer aim to look for regulatory approval for their vaccine by end of 2020.https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-vaccine-pfizer-bio/pfizer-biontechs-covid-19-vaccine-expected-to-be-ready-for-approval-by-year-end-wsj-idUSKBN24B1KL "If it receives marketing approval, the companies are preparing to make up to 100 million doses by the end of 2020 and another 1.2 billion doses by the end of 2021 at sites in Germany and the United States, Reuters reported last week."
LiquidZeb wrote: » Just wondering, what do you think of what Helen Clark, former New Zealand pm said about the timeline for a vaccine being 2 1/2 years off? She says sources she has in Geneva have said so but it runs contrary to what Pfizer, Astra zeneca and Oxford and moderna and Dr fauci have said.
hmmm wrote: » Two and a half is an odd number. If the current vaccine candidates work, and if there are no major issues identified in phase 3 testing (i.e. the best case scenario), we'll have a vaccine next year with some limited doses this year. If the first batch of vaccines (e.g. Oxford, Moderna, China) fail, we'll have other technologies delivering vaccines in the 2nd half of 2021. If none of these work, and if we run into major problems, then it could be many years (if ever) before we have a vaccine. Two and a half is not in any scenario I've seen discussed. Regulators are obviously working very closely with vaccine developers right now to ensure the tests are right, they aren't going to be sitting on their hands for a year after trials are finished.
Hmmzis wrote: » ICL saRNA candidate pre clinical data:https://www.researchhub.com/paper/818046/summary Makes me wonder if the mice had any blood plasma left in their antibodies. Seriously impressive results, especially given the miniscule dosages required. All titres were referenced against hospitalised patient convalescent sera. Even the 0.01ug dose outdid the convalescent serum, the 10ug dose looks a bit otherworldly. Hope it's well tolerated in people and shows similar results. I think they've already dosed the phase I human trial volunteers.
Marhay70 wrote: » Are there any new developments in the search for a treatment? Back in March when the Australians successfully isolated the root of Covid there was much excitement about finding a treatment to at least control the virus until a successful course of treatment was found to cure it, This area seems to have gone very quiet and even taken a backward step with the debunking of hydroxychlorophine. This, incidentally was used to treat an acquaintance of mine for the virus, with no ill effects. One possibility I heard of was Eidd 2801 which apparently is a more potent variant of remdesivir and can be effective later in the onset of the virus but having been developed in the US with public funds, has now been swallowed up by private money and , no doubt will go the same way as remdesivir.
ACitizenErased wrote: » We know they’re going to work
SeaBreezes wrote: » Helen is a straight shooter. The exact words were 2.5 years to a trusted, globally available vaccine.. So, I assume with trials, proper testing, then global rollout ... that could take up to another 2 years?
stevek93 wrote: » Russia completes phase 3?https://www.siasat.com/russia-1st-nation-to-finish-human-trials-for-covid-19-vaccine-1922903/