seamus wrote: » So really what you're saying here is that if frontline workers couldn't practically avail of these doses, then nobody should have, and they should have gone in the bin rather than be given to someone lower on the priority list. Sacrificing doses in the pursuit of perfect fairness. Cutting off your nose to spite your face. Gotcha.
plodder wrote: » They can be kept in a regular fridge for 5 days after thawing. If they have any left over, leave them in the fridge and call the HSE the following day to send more people to use them up.
Christy42 wrote: » The at a certain point you accept optics are better than practicalities. Which is what bugs me. If someone was left waiting I would agree. If there was someone obvious who wasn't contacted I would agree. But as far as I know no one who could have easilybeen contacted gotten there and was ahead of the two sons on the vaccine list exists. Until then I can't find a flaw in the decision. Yes it would be preferable to have someone not related from an optics point of view. But if the only way to make something look better is to make it worse than it is just idiocy and pandering to permanently outraged.
Miike wrote: » Not what I'm saying at all and you're fully aware that it's not what I'm trying to say. I'm saying there is people throughout this country at very serious risk of contracting this virus and his story of "not being able to find people" doesn't hold water for me. I'd love to know who and how many people he contacted who were not available or unwilling to attend a clinic for vaccination. I respect you as a quality poster on this forum but using a straw man argument to defend this embarrassing display of nepotism is low.
Amirani wrote: » We already know that the number contacted that night is well over 100. That's in addition to informing the HSE.
seamus wrote: » Your starting point is irrational. You're suggesting that he should have just started randomly contacting....people. What people? Where would he get their details? Do you think there's a HSE database of "high risk people" that someone can log onto and get phone numbers?
steddyeddy wrote: » seamus wrote: » Your starting point is irrational. You're suggesting that he should have just started randomly contacting....people. What people? Where would he get their details? Do you think there's a HSE database of "high risk people" that someone can log onto and get phone numbers? Yes there's a HSE database of frontline workers. It's easy to find those in surrounding hospitals. Yes, and they did that. What then?
seamus wrote: » Your starting point is irrational. You're suggesting that he should have just started randomly contacting....people. What people? Where would he get their details? Do you think there's a HSE database of "high risk people" that someone can log onto and get phone numbers? Yes there's a HSE database of frontline workers. It's easy to find those in surrounding hospitals.
steddyeddy wrote: » - the HSE were slow in facilitating back ups (they were) or there WERE no back ups suggested prior to reconstitution of the vaccine -
jill_valentine wrote: » Once it's reconstituted you've only got 6 hours with it. You're racing the clock to find 120 people before the day's out, after the thousand you've already done.
jill_valentine wrote: » This is where there's an argument to be made, and it feels quite deliberate to me that the master of the Coombe is being hung out to dry for having to make the best of the situation instead.
seamus wrote: » steddyeddy wrote: » Yes, and they did that. What then? No they didn't Seamus, not effectively anyway. A nurse has said that she felt sick when she learned that the Covid-19 vaccine was given to family members of staff at a Dublin hospital. Ms Morgan-Walsh and her colleagues made headlines last week when they made a video appealing for the Government to vaccinate the frontline workers at the hospital. Speaking about the situation at the Coombe Hospital this morning on RTÉ Radio's Today with Claire Byrne, Ms Morgan-Walsh said: "I actually felt sick, to think that we had to go online, we had to do our own video and beg for vaccines because on Friday morning we had zero vaccines. "We're not the only frontline workers in hospitals that had zero vaccines. "I felt sick to think that there were 16 vaccinations left over that could have been given to 16 frontline workers. There doesn't seem to be any accountability in this.
steddyeddy wrote: » Yes, and they did that. What then?
A nurse has said that she felt sick when she learned that the Covid-19 vaccine was given to family members of staff at a Dublin hospital. Ms Morgan-Walsh and her colleagues made headlines last week when they made a video appealing for the Government to vaccinate the frontline workers at the hospital. Speaking about the situation at the Coombe Hospital this morning on RTÉ Radio's Today with Claire Byrne, Ms Morgan-Walsh said: "I actually felt sick, to think that we had to go online, we had to do our own video and beg for vaccines because on Friday morning we had zero vaccines. "We're not the only frontline workers in hospitals that had zero vaccines. "I felt sick to think that there were 16 vaccinations left over that could have been given to 16 frontline workers. There doesn't seem to be any accountability in this.
plodder wrote: » They don't need to be reconstituted/diluted until they are about to be used. I'm only reading this off Pfizer's own instruction leaflet by the way.https://www.fda.gov/media/144413/download
jill_valentine wrote: » This is where there's an argument to be made, and it feels quite deliberate to me that the master of the Coombe is being hung out to dry for having to make the best of the situation instead. But that said - this is very early in an unprecedented rollout. Stuff like this will happen, and the article states the vaccine booking system went online the next day. I am far more worried about the effects of the backlash than I am about this actual incident or ones like it.
GreeBo wrote: » Isnt the whole vial diluted though? And assuming the have more than one person giving the vaccines, you are going to have more than 1 vial on the go at once. Also the entire tray is taken from -70 storage and put into a regular storage, the vaccine has a limited lifespan from that point, diluted or not.
steddyeddy wrote: » No they didn't Seamus, not effectively anyway.
steddyeddy wrote: » Do you also not see anything wrong with launching a vaccine dispensing program before a booking system was available?
steddyeddy wrote: » seamus wrote: » No they didn't Seamus, not effectively anyway. If nenagh hospital can spare 16 staff for 5 hours on 10 minutes notice, they're not as bad off as they're claiming to be.....
seamus wrote: » No they didn't Seamus, not effectively anyway.
Bass Reeves wrote: » I do have an issue how the Coombe got so many doses for all staff however I can understand mistakes will be made. The person who never made a mistake never did f@@k all as long as I was working with people. You make the decision and he did that. In one way they did well in the Coombe. Whoever allotted them doses for all staff members needs to answer questions not the Coombe.
Miike wrote: » and how exactly do we know this?
Billgirlylegs wrote: » There was a lady on a radio program explaining that the vaccine was transported in vials containing 5 doses. (she said there was slightly more, possibly six per vial) That means that fairly late on there were 20/24 vials over and above what was needed, I don't know how these vials are packaged, or how long it takes to prepare them for use, but that seems a lot to explain away as miscalculation. It appears that they got 200 vials in total to administer Does this happen everyday, or was this their first day? HSE don't have a great record at scheduling treatment, appointments or counting patients.
seamus wrote: » That nurse, is in Tipperary. You think what they should have done is ring frontline staff in Tipperary at 9:30 at night, find out which ones were off-duty, and tell them they had two hours to make it to Dublin if they wanted to be vaccinated? And you think that that sounds less like "unmitigated shambles", than giving it two hospital workers who were available to get it within minutes. Right.
steddyeddy wrote: » Seamus is ringing up another hospital (in Dublin even) is "chaos" then you expect very little of your healthcare system.
CIARAN_BOYLE wrote: » I think this happened on their last day. If it happens in day 1 it's a lot easier to pull other hospital staff in by moving up appointments.
Kaisr Sose wrote: » I have and do work with these types.. Frustrating souls. Indecision is generally a decision. A decision not to waste them was a good decision, better than waste. The main story here is how the Coombe staff recieve vaccination over or ahead of other frontline hospitals dealing with Covid patients (e.g. Nenagh Hospital initially told there was no vaccine for them — apologies if this is already stated in thread). That surely is a bigger story when trying to suppress this virus than the 16 doses, that in fairness, went to use.