FintanMcluskey wrote: » A tattoo or microchip would be more practical. Always a risk of losing documents and getting stuck out foreign
hmmm wrote: » and avoid the possibility that passengers are obliged to be re-vaccinated.
donegal_man wrote: » Official stamp on your passport from whomever administered the vaccine or a card similar to passport card.
stephenjmcd wrote: » We're not going to start administering based on press release. I'm not sure what's so hard to grasp about this, the people who get the full data first are the regulatory bodies and thats completely proper.
stephenjmcd wrote: » As posted in the main thread, Do you think the data is given to the EMA & FDA as press release. We're not going to start administering based on press release. I'm not sure what's so hard to grasp about this, the people who get the full data first are the regulatory bodies and thats completely proper. Why would McConkey have access to it ? He's nothing special in terms of being top of the line to get data. Regulators first.
daheff wrote: » German vaccination plans include using the army to do it due to the sheer numbers requiring the vaccineIt'd be interesting to see the roll out plan here
HEALTH MINISTER STEPHEN Donnelly will bring a memo to Cabinet today on Ireland signing up to a fifth Covid-19 vaccine, which is produced by Moderna. The State had signed up to four vaccines already – AstraZeneca, Jansen, Sanofi and Pfizer.
Deleted User wrote: » UK have appointed a Minister for Vaccine deployment, mostly a PR move I'd guess, but not a bad idea. It puts a face on who's responsible and might be an added impetus to get things moving.
hmmm wrote: » I wasn't filled with confidence by something I read earlier in the month. If they have been working on some of these things for months (particularly with the knowledge of the potential cold storage requirements), shouldn't these names have been available immediately? (genuine question). "Mr Martin said the taskforce will be chaired by Professor Brian MacCraith of DCU. The Chief Medical Officer will also be on the committee along withMr Reid Reid, chair of the senior officials group on Covid-19 Liz Canavan, Government chief information officer Barry Lowry, Government chief procurement officer Paul Quinn, a yet to be confirmed officials from the Department of Business, along with a logistics cold chain expert and project management expert." The first meeting of the task force was on the 23rd, and this was published:https://www.gov.ie/en/press-release/de326-first-meeting-of-the-high-level-taskforce-on-covid-19-vaccination/
CruelSummer wrote: » Ok I’m not aware of the upcoming procedures. And it is confusing when you’ve McConkey and others making noise about data access.
brisan wrote: » You would think they would be meeting every day and not once a week I mean it is a national health and economic crisis after all
JTMan wrote: » Sunday Independent reports here and here (paywall): - Officially speaking the government are saying that vaccinations will start at the end of January but privately those involved expect vaccinations to start at the end of December. - Supplies are probably going to arrive in December. One insider said what is the point in storing them rather than putting them to immediate use. - Vaccinations could start 5 days to 1 week after the supplies arrive. The supplies might arrive around 11 December. - 1.4 million people in Ireland fall under the "vulnerable" category. - 'People over 80 in nursing homes' might be the first category to get the vaccine. - Decisions still to be made on mass vaccinations centres. (So slow making these decisions versus other countries).
irishgeo wrote: » Nothing been approved yet and it's the 1st of December next Tuesday. Unless it's approved and shipped by the end of the week they haven't a hope.
Micky 32 wrote: » I’m now losing faith after that. I may finally have to accept i’ll never be able to travel abroad to visit family again, depressing stuff.
CIARAN_BOYLE wrote: » They're not publishing plans because there's a lot out of their control. If vaccine x gets approved they need the data on how vaccine x does with vulnerable groups. There is no point publishing a list saying the elderly are getting vaccinated first. Then a week later they get actual data that says efficacy on the elderly is 60% while it's 98% in other groups. If they then pivot and make another group highest priority (expecting another vaccine to have a better performance in the elderly) did they lie to the public? I'm willing to bet a lot of people would accuse them of it?They have a lot of plans prepared with contingencies based on data.
Irish Stones wrote: » This is exactly why I'm living in a deep depression state. I am totally sure that we will never live as we did before, and any simple change in what my life was will make me feel worse. Right now I'm not even getting out of home unless to go to work, because life outside is unsettling, and I'm not accepting it.
iamwhoiam wrote: » Good point . As a non scientist my list would be something like this Care Home nurses and carers Care Home residents Frontline staff including all hospital staff and ambulance crews and fire brigade All vulnerable children and adults with underlying conditions All Over 70 All over 65 Pharmacists and GP's Secondary school teachers and SNASecondary pupils National School teachers an d SNA Those living with immuno compromised and very vulnerableNational school children rest of population
wes wrote: » The vaccine is what will enable us to get back to normal. The rollout to get to herd immunity will take a while. I reckon this time next year, we should have pretty much all restrictions lifted. The big question is how fast can we get people vaccinate to achieve herd immunity.
ACitizenErased wrote: » Well thank Christ you're wrong
Irish Stones wrote: » And how do you know you're right?
funnydoggy wrote: » https://www.thejournal.ie/fifth-vaccine-ireland-sign-up-5284072-Dec2020/ [/B] We're signing up for Moderna folks!
ACitizenErased wrote: » That Sunday Times article posted a few pages back boils my blood. Why the **** are we waiting a few days before starting vaccinations? It literally takes 3-4 hours max from Dublin to anywhere in the country - they could start same day ffs
JTMan wrote: » David McRedmond (CEO of An Post) has called for a "sense of urgency" in vaccine distribution in Ireland like there is in the UK. He is correct, we need to hear urgency and a push for speed in the voices of politicians and the HSE. This has to happen quickly to save lives. Meanwhile, Dr Adrian Hill one of the leaders of the Oxford Vaccine has said vaccine rollout should see normality return “late-Spring /early-Summer”. A separate report in the UK yesterday said that normality would resume around 4 April 2021 (Easter) in the UK. In the US, those in charge of vaccine distribution say normality will resume in May 2021.https://twitter.com/DavidMcredmond/status/1333005304494252034