brickster69 wrote: » Germany has a 750,000 Az gathering dust as the population don't want to use it for some reason. Why don't the government get in touch to take some fro them and get half a million under 65's jabbed
ninebeanrows wrote: » yea that type of innovation could really help a small country like ours. It wouldn't take too many small side deals with large nations to get us all sorted!
Gael23 wrote: » How will a medical condition be verified for group 7?
iamwhoiam wrote: » Can I ask you a favour ? I cant read it properly but can see reference to Anaphylaxis ? Could you read what it asks and write it out for me ? Thanks in advance
AdamD wrote: » Have you had anaphylaxis (serious systemic allergic reaction requiring medical intervention) following a previous dose of the vaccine or any of its constituents?
Yevon wrote: » Is there any sort of date for further trial data from AZ? I think they were doing one in the US. If we got further data, particularly on the over 60s, it would be a great help.
lbj666 wrote: » I can remember who said it not the NIAC but another body involved in vacination said a few weeks ago during the big fuss over data, that the further data they were waiting on would be available end of March, which i presume is the US trial data cause the UK would only be a few weeks into their 2nd doses at that point.
Pete_Cavan wrote: » Do we know if all or only certain vaccines will be administered in MVCs? Presumably the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines will have their stocks tightly controlled for a while to ensure that those in the vulnerable groups can get their second dose within the period, could that mean AZ and J&J (assuming it is approved) being predominantly used in MVCs?
Happydays2020 wrote: » Was it Colm Henry?
lbj666 wrote: » It was a woman, not Karina Butler. Her role escapes me ,was on news at one during the efficacy fuss.
Gael23 wrote: » Was talking to an 81 year old lady a while ago who has been told not to expect a vaccine until around Easter
ACitizenErased wrote: » 80-85s will be vaccinated within the next 3 weeks, thats bs anyway
embraer170 wrote: » Germany is really not doing a great job at the rollout. There are still widespread infections in some care homes that have had delayed vaccinations. Dozens of mass vaccination centres have been ready since before Christmas.
lbj666 wrote: » The vulnerable groups are the priority, what they can do with AZ and JJ in the meantime is a bonus. Based on the rigours they are going through to ensure the mRNA vacines can be rollout to GPs and their conglomerations, theres no reason the mRNAs cant be administered at MCVs , it should be easier for 39 MVCs compared to 100s of GP clinics. its going to be interesting once the vulnerable groups are done, the Pfizer vacine will almost be as plentiful as the others with no clear hierachy left for who should get them.
Deleted User wrote: » Do you understand that over 18% of their population is over 65 while in Ireland it is just 13%. 83million people in Germany so that means 15 million people over 65.
embraer170 wrote: » In theory the vaccines are allocated proportionate to the total population so there is no reason why Germany is far behind other Member States (or has 750,000 vaccines sitting in fridges). Plenty of German teachers, police officers, etc. would surely be happy to get the AZ vaccine. If all states (and local health authorities) were equally competent with the same policies and approaches, they should be able to vaccinate at broadly similar rates. Of course, the reality is far different and even then there are huge outliers (like Malta!). I have been quite critical of some things in Ireland's COVID handling but the vaccine rollout has not been going bad .... so far.
[Deleted User] wrote: » Considering the demographics of Germany its death rate at 799 per Million is excellent. It is well below most of the rest of Western Europe and even below Ireland's figure even though Ireland has a much lower average aged than Germany. Here are their stats for vaccination as of today.https://www.rki.de/DE/Content/InfAZ/N/Neuartiges_Coronavirus/Daten/Impfquoten-Tab.html
Happydays2020 wrote: » Ireland is 812 so not a massive difference.
[Deleted User] wrote: » It is a virus that kills older people so, yes, it is a huge difference.