ACitizenErased wrote: » Further to what Hmmzis postedhttps://twitter.com/afp/status/1319393089249792009?s=21
giveitholly wrote: » Will this make much of a difference in the overall treatment of covid?
Gael23 wrote: » My concern is our government seem fixated on case numbers, a vaccine won’t stop new cases so where does that leave us. That why I find it hard to see a way out of this
opinionated3 wrote: » LBC radio reporting that the latest update on the Oxford/ astrazeneca vaccine is highly positive. It basically does exactly what it set out to do: activate a strong immunity to the virus. ( I'm trying to find some positive articles out there rather than getting depressed from RTE��)
opinionated3 wrote: » LBC radio reporting that the latest update on the Oxford/ astrazeneca vaccine is highly positive. It basically does exactly what it set out to do: activate a strong immunity to the virus. ( I'm trying to find some positive articles out there rather than getting depressed from RTE😂)
ACitizenErased wrote: » I'll help you out Coronavirus: Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine 'behaves as desired', analysis findshttps://news.sky.com/story/coronavirus-oxford-astrazeneca-vaccine-behaves-as-desired-analysis-finds-12111085
opinionated3 wrote: » Apologies if this has been asked already but are the EU purchasing this vaccine as well as others?
Today, the European Commission has reached a first agreement with the pharmaceutical company AstraZeneca to purchase a potential vaccine against COVID-19 as well as to donate to lower and middle income countries or re-direct to other European countries. This is following the positive steps regarding the conclusion of exploratory talks with Sanofi-GSK announced on 31 July and with Johnson & Johnson on 13 August. Once the vaccine has proven to be safe and effective against COVID-19, the Commission now has agreed the basis for a contractual framework for the purchase of 300 million doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine, with an option to purchase 100 million more, on behalf of EU Member States. The Commission continues discussing similar agreements with other vaccine manufacturers.
mandrake04 wrote: » This is very reassuring thankfully, I heard that the Pfizer vaccine didn’t really reach the expectations of immune response in older patients.
Le Bruise wrote: » Where did you hear that (not being smart, just interested)?
iguana wrote: » It's not coming quite as fast but I seem to recall something about Moderna working quite well in older patients.
mandrake04 wrote: » Heard it on radio the other day, over 56s wasn’t as good as 18-55. It’s early days yet.
hmmm wrote: » Germany planning to start vaccinations before the end of the yearhttps://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-health-coronavirus-germany-vaccine-idUKKBN277342 "The health ministry plans to create 60 special vaccination centres to ensure the vaccines can be stored at the proper temperature and has asked the country’s 16 federal states to provide addresses for them by Nov. 10, Bild reported without citing its sources."
stephenjmcd wrote: » Germany preparing to roll out Pfizer then. You can be dam sure these vaccination centres will be unbelievable well set up and run. Everyone could learn something from the Germans organisation. We can only hope that the HSE & Dept of Health have some sort of plan
stephenjmcd wrote: » Germany preparing to roll out Pfizer then. You can be dam sure these vaccination centres will be unbelievable well set up and run. Everyone could learn something from the Germans organisation.We can only hope that the HSE & Dept of Health have some sort of plan
henke wrote: » In the app it tells you 1) daily case number, 2) current hospitalisations and 3) number in ICU. When the vaccine starts rolling out to the vulnerable wouldn't the hope be that points 2 and 3 drop off with not a whole lot of importance on point 1. If we had 5,000 daily cases and 5 in hospital and 1 in ICU I don't think there would be a need for restrictions. I'm no expert but aren't 2 and 3 the important ones and its the rate these go up that drive restrictions?
Away With The Fairies wrote: » I hope the Oxford vaccine helps when it comes out. But when do people see normal back again? We're almost at the end of 2020, soon into 2021 and I still don't see any normal for 2021 yet. Maybe the end of next year but is that too optimistic at this stage?
According to historians, pandemics typically have two types of endings: the medical, which occurs when the incidence and death rates plummet, and the social, when the epidemic of fear about the disease wanes.
hmmm wrote: » Convalescent plasma is ineffective. Very disappointing, and in fact it looks like it may even be slightly harmful for some.https://www.bmj.com/content/371/bmj.m4072 "The desperation engendered by covid-19 demands that we strongly resist the urge to succumb to pandemic research exceptionalism.13 High quality clinical research must be an integral part of a coordinated international response.13 Specifically, scientific validity is a necessary component of ethical research.14 Low quality research not only wastes scarce resources, it is also inherently unethical.14"
Level 42 wrote: » The HSE lads can't even organize hand sanatizer for the schools no faith in them
=stephenjmcd;115029191 We can only hope that the HSE & Dept of Health have some sort of plan