tom1ie wrote: » This is the problem. Restrictions have to stay in place for a short period of time AFTER everyone who can get a vaccine gets a vaccine. Otherwise people who can’t get could be in trouble.
tom1ie wrote: » if these measures are lifted before we reach herd immunity, and then allow a short break for the virus to die off, then cases among the unvaccinated at risk group will rise.
brisan wrote: » Of course its true today Nobody has one You cannot ask somebody for something that does not exist at that point in time What about in the future when the majority of people have one Have you a definitive statement on that ,as it was the future we were talking about ie after the vaccination rollout I have (nor can I possibly have ) no definitive statement on what may or may not happen in the future
Hmmzis wrote: » For them this virus will be one more entry in an already very long list of pathogens that can be dangerous to them. There really are not that many people who can't take any type of vaccines. Not all vaccines are the same.
schmoo2k wrote: » Not taking the piss - Today in Ireland there are more than 23,364 people who are immune - no reason why they shouldn't have an "I am immune" cert.
dominatinMC wrote: » Let's not be pedantic ffs. I think most people accept that "normal" refers to no social distancing, isolating, cocooning, masks, and such extreme measures. No one will give a toss if we're still asked to sanitise hands and observe better cough etiquette.
tom1ie wrote: » ok. so 25% of the population cant take the vaccine. That's children under 16. a certain percentage of these will have illness that means they have low immune systems or CF etc etc. now add on the over 16s in that bracket, what's your percentage at now? on top of that: person A has a child that has a low immune system. Person A has been restricting due to the child. Person A gets the vaccine. at the same time as person A gets the vaccine, restrictions are dropped. Person A goes shopping, which used to be low risk, but due to restrictions being lifted is now back to the levels of risk we seen at the start of the year. Person A becomes infected, but due to being vaccinated is fully protected but becomes a carrier. Person A now brings the virus home to the child who wasn't allowed the vaccine. replace shopping with indoor dining/cinema/gigs/plane/bus/office etc etc. Do you see how this works now?
John O.Groats wrote: » How do you come to that figure?
tom1ie wrote: » ok. so 25% of the population cant take the vaccine. That's children under 16. a certain percentage of these will have illness that means they have low immune systems or CF etc etc. now add on the over 16s in that bracket, what's your percentage at now? on top of that: person A has a child that has a low immune system. Person A has been restricting due to the child. Person A gets the vaccine. at the same time as person A gets the vaccine, restrictions are dropped. Person A goes shopping, which used to be low risk, but due to restrictions being lifted is now back to the levels of risk we seen at the start of the year. Person A becomes infected, but due to being vaccinated is fully protected but becomes a carrier. Person A now brings the virus home to the child who wasn't allowed the vaccine. replace shopping with indoor dining/cinema/gigs/plane/bus/office etc etc. Do you see how this works now? we NEED everyone that can to take the vaccine, however is equally important restrictions stay in place until herd immunity (approx 70%) is reached.
tom1ie wrote: » we NEED everyone that can to take the vaccine, however is equally important restrictions stay in place until herd immunity (approx 70%) is reached.
schmoo2k wrote: » Its the current number of folks who have recovered from Covid (https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/) now its generally accepted that number is only a fraction of the actual number - but I went with it for simplicity.
brisan wrote: » How do you know Have you an alternative scenario on how things will go ? Can you back it up I have a rearranged holiday to the Canaries in July Checked flights with Ryanair Already 125 euro dearer than the same dates this year No one knows ,even you
tom1ie wrote: » No. Because covid 19 is much worse. As is the general consensus at this stage.
odyssey06 wrote: » I don't think we know e.g. that someone infected say last March would still be immune by Q2 2021.
schmoo2k wrote: » Unfortunately, once you add up the under 16s, folks who cannot take it and folks who won't take it (and shortages?) we won't get to 70%, which is why we will rely on natural immunity within the low risk groups to make up the difference.
Person A becomes infected, but due to being vaccinated is fully protected but becomes a carrier.
tom1ie wrote: » ok.so 25% of the population cant take the vaccine. That's children under 16. a certain percentage of these will have illness that means they have low immune systems or CF etc etc. now add on the over 16s in that bracket, what's your percentage at now? on top of that: person A has a child that has a low immune system. Person A has been restricting due to the child. Person A gets the vaccine. at the same time as person A gets the vaccine, restrictions are dropped. Person A goes shopping, which used to be low risk, but due to restrictions being lifted is now back to the levels of risk we seen at the start of the year. Person A becomes infected, but due to being vaccinated is fully protected but becomes a carrier. Person A now brings the virus home to the child who wasn't allowed the vaccine. replace shopping with indoor dining/cinema/gigs/plane/bus/office etc etc. Do you see how this works now? we NEED everyone that can to take the vaccine, however is equally important restrictions stay in place until herd immunity (approx 70%) is reached.
BryanMartin21 wrote: » We don't know that not to be the case. Why worry about something that does not exist and has little to no indication it might even exist?
schmoo2k wrote: » True - but so far the reinfection numbers are holding and based on previous viruses the odds are that they will continue to do so. If there was 1 dose of vaccine left and two folks who needed it, but one person had already had Covid, who do you give it to?
odyssey06 wrote: » I have no idea where you are coming from which "something that does not exist". Waning immunity from viruses is an established concept in medicine. The only question is about how long it lasts. So that seems like a rather reckless strategy... and why rely on it when we have vaccines.
Micky 32 wrote: » That could be a demand thing. More people are booking this summer with the vaccines being rolled out. You may have simply missed out on the cheaper seats. To keep myself positive i have booked a flight to USA for next November. It was actually 20 euro cheaper than when i was there last November.
BryanMartin21 wrote: » Established concept in medicine is your fallacy. You are adding 2+2 and getting 5. With respect to covid, if anything we are seeing the opposite; that severe reinfection does not happen. Not sure how you can call it reckless. In fact, that hyperbole seems hysterical.
odyssey06 wrote: » The clock is still running. So yes it is reckless, given that time is a factor in how long immunity lasts in response to coronaviruses, to assume that because we didn't have severe reinfections within X months than that maps out to X years.
odyssey06 wrote: » What previous viruses? Common cold coronavirus immunity wanes after 12 months. Other coronaviruses can last for years. So which one will covid be like? So I'm saying we should not give vaccine certificate to someone who was infected or exclude them from vaccination programme.
BryanMartin21 wrote: » And a vaccine is a silver bullet to these concerns?
schmoo2k wrote: » I do agree and we won't know how long natural immunity will last until detailed longitudinal studies are performed. But so far we do know that natural immunity is still holding. My point is simply folks with natural immunity (active anti bodies for example) should be afforded the same luxuries as those with a vaccine.
brisan wrote: » I have flights booked for Italy (June ) Canaries (July ) and Lisbon (August ) All rearranged from this year and all dearer than when I originally booked Yes it may be down to demand but no one knows