Stheno wrote: » Also from the article:
Wolf359f wrote: » It is and always had been 3 weeks for Pfizer, 4 weeks for moderna and 12 for astrazenca (AZ was going to be 4 weeks ago for 70+ age group but that's changed) As the 70+ are getting mRNA it doesn't make a difference. This 12 week gap being new news is incorrect. It was always going to be 12 week gap. All the literature around the AZ jab states 12 weeks for you second dose etc...
Qrt wrote: » I’d understand this...but... Seven of the largest Tesco’s in the country also have pharmacies, examples being Naas, Newbridge, The Square too. Going by the Boots rationale, all the Tesco staff should be getting them soon. I’m just speaking as a shop worker, working in an environment where social distancing went out the window a long, long time ago.
tommyamnesia wrote: » I had my 1st. jab yesterday ( Pfizer). 2nd. due 4 weeks later.
Chris_5339762 wrote: » I appreciate it is a supply issue, but my parents are getting very frustrated now. They are 73 and 74, so down the list a little (although one has an undiagnosed possibly neurological condition which she won't get checked until vaccinated). Absolutely no word from the GP apart from "a couple of weeks time" three weeks ago. With word of 70+ rollout slowing down due to the need to keep Pfizers for Dose 2 for the 85s they seem to be getting pushed back further and further and further. Its very frustrating for them. Its frustrating for me too as I'm living with them and despite being vaccinated back in January I'm still limited as to what shops etc I go in until they have been vaccinated completely too. Just seems to be dragging a bit now and there really is absolutely no good supply news from ANY manufacturer at the moment. Meanwhile because we're next to the UK we compare ourselves to them constantly.
iamwhoiam wrote: » British Columbia have almost finished phase 1 and are moving to phase 2 nowhttps://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/covid-19/vaccine/plan#updatehttp://www.bccdc.ca/health-info/diseases-conditions/covid-19/covid-19-vaccine/bcs-plan-for-vaccine-distributiIts is also not mandatory Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry seemed to agree with that assessment Wednesday. “We have no mandatory immunization programs in this country and in this province, and we do not expect COVID immunization will be mandatory either,” she said during a news conference. That’s true even at high-risk workplaces like hospitals and long-term care facilities, Henry said.
is_that_so wrote: » The ineptitude is not of our making, we're pretty much putting anything we get into arms but of course it's the government or HSE to blame regardless.
salmocab wrote: » I have 2 weeks away booked in July and should be group 4 which could well mean second jab due whilst I’m away (still in Ireland) so whilst I’m very keen to get vaccinated I’d like to know that it’d not be an issue to get a second jab just before or after the trip.
Leftwaffe wrote: » When could a teacher expect to receive a vaccine here? Extremely low on the list. Will it be before September?
Deleted User wrote: » We keep being told we could buy outside of the EU programme. If we'd offered triple price for our share directly I'm pretty sure the issue we'd be having now would be getting people out quick enough.
astrofool wrote: » Honestly, people shouldn't be booking weeks away until they have been vaccinated, or have the timeline confirmed. You probably will be fine for July if you're in group 4, but no one will have sympathy with you if you miss your dates due to being away. I don't know if you're travelling for important reasons, or a holiday, but unless it was life and death, I wouldn't be booking anything.
astrofool wrote: » Probably June (possibly May) for first dose, then 4-12 weeks later for dose 2 if it's needed.
iamwhoiam wrote: » If you read the post you would have seen the poster is staying in Ireland .
ACitizenErased wrote: » Reuters now reporting that the AZ delivery schedule is relying on this factory being approved
JTMan wrote: » BioNTech Forms New Manufacturing Alliance, WSJ reports here (paywall). - New alliance of 13 companies, including Novartis AG , Merck KGaA and Sanofi SA, in an effort to meet—and perhaps exceed—an ambitious target of making two billion doses of vaccine this year. - Pfizer struggling to meet production targets so new alliance designed to jolt production of the vaccine and speed up vaccinations in Europe and elsewhere. - BioNTech is also increasing its own production. Its German factory, expected to come on line in April, should produce 750 million doses a year.
Danzy wrote: » Britain and American will be at near full vaccination of adults within 8 weeks. With full reopening a few weeks later. Hard to see compliance with lockdowns and restrictions surviving that. Especially when it may be well in to October,or longer, for much of Europe to have 70% done. I hope people will still but that's not going to happen. Will it mean another surge in the Summer.
Danzy wrote: » Britain and American will be at near full vaccination of adults within 8 weeks. With full reopening a few weeks later. Hard to see compliance with lockdowns and restrictions surviving that.
Russman wrote: » Britain won’t be anywhere near full vaccination in 8 weeks, it’ll be closer to 8 months.
Bit cynical wrote: » Private compliance (people obeying the household rule for example) may well end but public compliance such as rules on pubs and so forth can be enforced and so will continue.
PCeeeee wrote: » This is an interesting point. I wonder at what point do lockdowns begin to become ineffective through overuse.
Monster249 wrote: » That's just flat out untrue.
hynesie08 wrote: » They're saying every one will have the first dose by the end of July, add on 12 weeks and you're talking Halloween.
[Deleted User] wrote: » Late last year at some point.