ACitizenErased wrote: » BioNTech are just incredible. The fact they had that vaccine made not even 3 months into the pandemic is insanity.
hynesie08 wrote: » https://twitter.com/COVID19DataIE/status/1369991502752059392?s=20 Is that a Monday record?
cameramonkey wrote: » https://covid19ireland-geohive.hub.arcgis.com/ Just under 11% of the Irish population have had their first or second jab.
Pete_Cavan wrote: » Is there a reason why Monday vaccinations are always quite low (not being critical, genuinely curious)?
lucernarian wrote: » There's 500k doses administered, that's not 11% of the population. Some of the doses were used for the second round of vaccinations with Moderna and Pfizer/BioNTech.
I thank the Deputy. I will get him a detailed note on the number of corrections or revisions from AstraZeneca. Last week over a seven-day period, it revised down its deliveries at the very last minute three times. The reasons are down to production. It is not my area of expertise but we are told that the production of these compounds is very complex and things can go wrong. However, I agree with the Deputy; what is happening with AstraZeneca is not good enough. Ultimately the people it is causing anxiety for, the only people who matter in any of this, are the public. Vulnerable people are waiting and it is not good enough.
trellheim wrote: » From the Dail earlier this morning https://www.oireachtas.ie/en/debates/debate/dail/2021-03-11/2/ ( I see its front splash on rte.ie as well ) Also note that pfizer and moderna are more or less bang on, as a comparison.
JDD wrote: » I'm sure their vaccine production is equally complex, yet they are able to deliver on time. AZ are a sh*tshow. We should be disregarding them entirely and trying to source additional vaccine elsewhere, even if it is someone else's stockpile of AZ. I mean the vaccine itself is fine, it's just the company who are screwing us over. I'd happy take the Sputnik or Sinopharm vaccine tomorrow if it was offered to me.
josip wrote: » You'd have to have some sympathy for Professor Gilbert and all the people in Oxford responsible for getting an effective vaccine out there early. They've been totally let down by their choice of company to productify it.
ACitizenErased wrote: » Interestinghttps://twitter.com/rtenewspaulc/status/1369997505455390721?s=21
JDD wrote: » I'm sure their vaccine production is equally complex, yet they are able to deliver on time.
VG31 wrote: » https://www.theguardian.com/society/2021/mar/11/denmark-pauses-astrazeneca-vaccines-to-investigate-blood-clot-reports A bit concerning to be honest. Even a bad batch rather than an issue with the vaccine itself would severely damage public confidence in it.
Chris_5339762 wrote: » J&J one-dose has just been approvedhttps://www.thejournal.ie/eu-medicines-agency-approves-johnson-johnson-one-shot-vaccine-5378150-Mar2021/ TheJournal are all on the ball, just avoid the comments section as usual
Irish Stones wrote: » A few sudden deaths have been reported in these past few days of people vaccinated with AZ a few hours earlier, in different countries. And apparently they were always due to blood clots. Can a bad batch have been delivered to different countries?
stephenjmcd wrote: » The batch Austria initially reported is 1 million doses in 17 countries. EMA have cleared the batch. As of Tuesday, there had been 22 reports of blood clotting conditions among the three million people to receive the AstraZeneca jab in the European Economic Area. Its not outside expected numbers within the population
astrofool wrote: » Yes, same batches have gone to multiple countries, but I'd hold off on jumping to conclusions early, and let the investigation happen calmly.
stephenjmcd wrote: » J&J approvedhttps://twitter.com/EMA_News/status/1370002324605853701?s=19
eoinbn wrote: » Can you post some official figures that aren't nonsense?
Rebelbrowser wrote: » Yeah, its nearly becoming a bad news story for Oxford at this stage - talk about grabbing defeat from the jaws of victory