mean gene wrote: » Barely a mention on the thread of the jnj vaccine I think people know at this stage it's not going to be a game changer not that the vaccine doesn't work but we are gonna get screwed again on the supply. The silence says it all
Skyfloater wrote: » I do wish people would stop with this fantastical nonsense.
Apogee wrote: » https://www.irishexaminer.com/news/arid-40241837.html
Irish Examiner wrote: An antigen test has been cleared for use in meat plants while trials are continuing for other workplaces, the national clinical director for Health Protection has said. Dr Lorraine Doherty said the HSE has been working with the Department of Agriculture on the tests, which can rapidly detect the presence or absence of the Covid-19 antigen. They validated and trialled a number of different antigen tests by using them in parallel with the gold-standard PCR tests. She told the Oireachtas Health Committee: “We have now validated one test which can be used in that [meat plant] setting.” Testing will ramp up to twice a week using antigen tests, she said, though she warned it would not be a straightforward process.
chrisbonnie wrote: » I agree with what you're saying except for the bit about not being able to knock on Vlads door If there's one thing you could count on it would be putins love of notoriety and money. Not saying we should do this, but hypothetically speaking, if we did offer him a hefty price per dose you'd bet your bottom dollar he'd sell to us. Or anyone for that matter
ACitizenErased wrote: » Good news about AZ for over 70s. Will significantly simplify the process for GPs.
muddypuppy wrote: » Because it's not like Russia has warehouses full of it around to sell. They have vaccinated a very small portion of their population, and the doses sent outside of the border are very few and mostly a geopolitical ploy more than anything else. I'm all for looking into using all the vaccines, the EMA is looking into Sputnik and they're looking into increasing manufacturing (they have deals to do that around the world) but it's not like we can knock on Vladimir's door and have a few million doses shipped to us tomorrow.
Aegir wrote: » why should the UK get involved, it has nothing to do with them. I tried to come up with a response to that, but it is so ridiculous it only deserves a LOL to be honest.
astrofool wrote: » It's completely hypocritical, your argument basically boils down to the UK being allowed to hoard vaccines, but the EU not being allowed to hoard vaccines and being bombastic about the UK, and criticising the EU, you can't be on both sides, either the EU is bailing out the UK by allowing the Pfizer vaccine to be exported there, and the UK isn't reciprocating, or the EU is wrong in allowing the Pfizer vaccines to be exported while the UK locks down supply for itself, it can't be both no matter how you try and twist it around in your own head.
Breaston Plants wrote: » Probably asked ( and answered) already, but why are we not going with the Russian vaccine Sputnik? And are any European countries planning on using this?
Aegir wrote: » why should the UK get involved, it has nothing to do with them.
astrofool wrote: » But they are, the EU has specifically asked for AZ to make up the shortfall, using UK facilities if necessary, and the UK refused. (forgot to add about bojo's hurried call to the EU to keep the Pfizer supply going when the EU announced export controls, wonder how much shoe licking went on there).
Micky 32 wrote: » “”Pfizer/BioNTech's coronavirus vaccine offers more protection than earlier thought with effectiveness in preventing symptomatic disease reaching 97%, according to real-world evidence published by the pharmaceutical companies.””
is_that_so wrote: » It's under rolling review by the EMA, so probably at least April. A few are planning to use it now.
DubLad69 wrote: » With all of these other EU countries halting the use of the Astrazenica vaccine, is there any chance of us getting the doses that they are not using?
Melanchthon wrote: » I would hazard that Ireland is likely spending more per capita on Covid restriction costs at the minute than Switzerland is.
Aegir wrote: » but they aren't though. What makes you think they are?
Aegir wrote: » Nothing hypocritical about it at all.
hynesie08 wrote: » A single market country not in the EU with one of the wealthiest populations on the planet........ Fair comparison.
Tippbhoy1 wrote: » Read section 5.4 of the contract for yourself and note EU included UK.
Pete_Cavan wrote: » The initial doses are the full 300m ordered, further doses are the 100m optional doses. It is for AZ to fulfill the order they signed up to, whereverthe doses come from. AZ even sent a few million doses produced in the EU to the UK, the first deliveries the UK got, contributing to their EU deficit. They were apparently unable to replace them with UK produced doses.
brickster69 wrote: » The contract never mentions best efforts it mentions " reasonable best efforts " which means try it's best. Page 41 of the contract clearly states the delivery is an estimation not a guarantee and monthly doses are subject to approval. So the first two dates get pushed back because approval was not granted until the end of January.https://www.rai.it/dl/doc/2021/02/19/1613725900577_AZ_FIRMATO_REPORT.pdf