Szero wrote: » Could Ireland lift our suspension tomorrow afternoon too if updated EMA guidance is issued then?
seamus wrote: » It amuses me all of the armchair commentators throwing out these numbers about thrombosis, as if the medical authorities aren't aware of it. These people might rely on Twitter and Facebook for their information and think others haven't seen it, but the authorities don't. Just because we may not see the events as being particular risky, doesn't mean that those responsible for approved & distributing vaccines should ignore it as well. If there's something unexpected, you pause, you look at it, you confirm that you're still happy, you move forward. It's really easy for someone online to go, "Ag shure fvck it, look 14 events out of ten million. Be grand, bull on there". If the actual health of 400 million Europeans rested on your shoulders, you would consider a small delay a worthy price to pay to make sure everything is OK.
timsey tiger wrote: » I don't think anybody has assigned a risk of thrombosis to any of the covid vaccines.
ACitizenErased wrote: » Depends on when NIAC have their meeting
ACitizenErased wrote: » https://twitter.com/DarrenEuronews/status/1371488463112040454?s=20
quartz1 wrote: » As an Irish Citizen how long would I need to take up residency in Northern Ireland or England to qualify for a NHS vaccine . ....it's getting to the point where its clear our Government are running around in circles lol.
stephenjmcd wrote: » Could do but I believe the process is NIAC & HPRA look at whatever the EMA say and then make recommendations to Dept of Health & Government
brickster69 wrote: » What after calling them all the names under the sun, now they want Sputnik. If i were Putin i would tell them to f..k off !
Wolf359f wrote: » Exactly the same number of doses the UK are getting from India at about the same time. Looking more likely that AZ had no intentions of using that for EU supply.
ACitizenErased wrote: » EMA don't sound worried, again. Benefit outweighs the risk. Looks like it'll be given the all clear tomorrow.
is_that_so wrote: » Hasn't it been suggested it will take 4-5 days to look at this particular situation?
ninebeanrows wrote: » Very disappointed NIAC were so weak on this tbh. Does not bode well, appears we will jump at anything.
brickster69 wrote: » Sounds promisinghttps://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20210315005197/en/UK-Clinical-Trial-Confirms-SaNOtize
Irish Stones wrote: » It's clearly unlikely that these deaths are related to the vaccines. We all know that each patient is held under observation for 15 minutes post jab, in the case of ADR's. When in this forum I had asked why they do not extend this observation time to, say, 30 minutes, someone here told me that 15 minutes is the typical time during which any ADR shows up, past that time it is unlikely something may happen. Given that all these deaths post AZ vaccine occured one day or even a week after the vaccination, it is clear that they are not related.
robinph wrote: » The whole hanging around for 15 minutes thing only happened because a couple of nurses with extreme allergies such that they carried epipens on them seemed to forget that detail and took the Pfizer vaccine despite the instructions saying "not for people with severe allergies".
ACitizenErased wrote: » EMA have released a statementhttps://twitter.com/DarrenEuronews/status/1371505078104903683?s=20
I am suspicious of this study or more specifically its use to suggest that B117 is deadlier for the following reason: The key assumption used in the methodology is as follows: "Absolute risks of death (case fatality rate) within 28 days were estimated by age group and sex using data on individuals tested during August–October 2020; this is referred to as the baseline risk" Yes, the CFR rose a lot from this period, which is attributed to the 117 variant in this study. But I) CFRs are currently falling, why? https://www.cebm.net/covid-19/recent-falls-in-age-specific-estimates-of-the-case-fatality-ratio-in-england/ And ii) the CFR fell massively from c. Apr20 through to Aug20. Like enormously: https://www.cebm.net/covid-19/the-declining-case-fatality-ratio-in-england/ Why is it that the rise is so easily attributable to the new variant, but a fall is unexplained and investigated. In a relative sense that fall was much more significant than the rise (although much of the fall is explained by changes in testing)? The following note in the discussion is really important, but it will be missed in reporting: "We do not identify any mechanism for increased mortality here. B.1.1.7 infections are associated with higher viral concentrations on nasopharyngeal swabs, as measured by Ct values from PCR testing (Extended Data Fig. 6). Higher viral load could therefore be partly responsible for the observed increase in mortality; this could be assessed using a mediation analysis." I think similar arguments can be made regarding the R number findings of this study. I really wonder whether it will be looked back on as using a really unfortunately timed and underexplored baseline for comparison.