Charles Babbage wrote: » Truly convenient reliable testing would also allow progress from the present position, e.g. if you had a gadget that could test all students or all employees. Moderna release data on their vaccine trials.https://www.nytimes.com/2020/09/17/world/covid-19-coronavirus.html they might know in December, but more likely March, as to whether it works.
ACitizenErased wrote: » Moderna said very little today other than releasing their protocols for phase 3, they’ll be another while
Bikerman2019 wrote: » Hiya Does anyone know the rough turnaround times for tests? Someone has a covid test in punchestown at 3.30 Friday. Extended self isolation for the family will be a problem
hmmm wrote: » They're hoping for November now for results (but I think it was always November for them).
Bikerman2019 wrote: » Either late on a Friday afternoon? Do they do weekends?
mcsean2163 wrote: » The influenza vaccine reduces risk of hospitalisation by 40 - 60%.https://www.cdc.gov/flu/vaccines-work/vaccineeffect.htm#howeffective Even with a vaccine what is going to happen? Will we have to wear masks forever? We're the third most indebted country per capita in the world, how long can we afford to be a lockdown country before our debtors consider us to risky to lend money?
Vestiapx wrote: » What is it you think will happen ?
Jim_Hodge wrote: » Who knows? Do you? As for our debtors: We're rated one of the best for credit in the world right now, so worry not.
ExMachina1000 wrote: » Not necessarily true. We are above average and that's all.
Gael23 wrote: » Is this to start phase 3?
Del Griffith wrote: » Sure hospital figures have barely moved at all anyway, and deaths literally haven't increased at all.
mcsean2163 wrote: » We're still doing ok because we are processing all the EU money for Google et al here at a rate 12.5% that screws over everyone else in the EU. If that changes....
Del Griffith wrote: » Sure hospital figures have barely moved at all anyway, and deaths literally haven't increased at all. Its not even about that anymore, we're now going to restrictions because healthy people are catching a mild illness with little or no symptoms in most cases.
mcsean2163 wrote: » Everyone seems to be saying things cannot go back to normal unless we have a vaccine. If the vaccine is as effective as the influenza vaccine which has been developed for a LONG time. Do we suddenly say, ok, we'll now have roughly half the risk of hospitalisation if contracted and that's ok?
Why the comparison with influenza? SARS-cov-2 is a very different beast entirely, I would personally go as far as saying that comparing the two is pointless to the point of being actively misleading.
patnor1011 wrote: » I do not know but disregarding the Russian vaccine despite clearly positive results so far is strange, to say the least. The most obvious reason is that there is a lot of money at stake.
xhomelezz wrote: » Sure let's wait till the figures will move. We all know hospitals will do fine, won't they? Just order more trolleys, empty hospital carparks to park trolleys there and we are back in business. Not panicking or scaremongering, but just to ask how's the healthcare in Ireland, up to speed?
Atlantic Dawn wrote: » Mask use and social distancing will reduce the spread of the flu.