Sanjuro wrote: » Just off the phone with my mam. 72. Booked in for Saturday April 3rd. She was so excited she was getting tongue tied trying to blurt out all the details. I haven't heard her this excited about something since her first grandchild was born 7 years ago. Absolutely delighted for her. Made my Monday.
Micky 32 wrote: » From RTE, probably a little optimistic but i’ll throw it out there:Herd immunity in Europe possible by July “” Europe could have herd immunity against Covid-19 by July, as incoming vaccines are expected to speed up the continent's vaccination roll-out, an EU Commissioner has said. Thierry Breton, the commissioner for the internal market, told French broadcaster TF1: "Let's take a symbolic date: by 14 July, we have the possibility of achieving immunity across the continent. We're in the home stretch, because we know that to beat this pandemic there's just one solution: vaccination. The vaccines are arriving."“
funnydoggy wrote: » All the rage about vaccine rollout, when (AZ aside), the crowds involved with creating & manufacturing these vaccines have been doing absolutely groundbreaking, backbreaking work from day one. Outstanding.
stephenjmcd wrote: » There really is a mountain of possibilities also with mRNA, Ozlem Tureci (who along with her husband Ugur Sahin who are the force behind BioNtTech) did an interview at the weekend where she said that her hope was within a few years we could see the mRNA technology in cancer vaccines whereby the immune system is trained to take on tumours
Azatadine wrote: » This looks promising:https://twitter.com/H_Rossman/status/1373932554261303296?s=09
RavenBea17b wrote: » I read somewhere that the spread of cancer had been halted in mice, that tumours stopped and no spread in lab test - using the new vaccine mRNA technology. Lots of potential in theory. Interesting times ahead. - targeted treatments etc.
Qrt wrote: » My grandmother is 79 and the GPs surgery don't have a clue when she'll get done. Very mixed picture around the country evidently.
Jimbee wrote: » Interesting but I wonder if the vaccine was administered to the younger group first would it have been even faster. Younger group being more likely to spread the virus and cause mutations. Especially when there is a shortage of vaccines. Excuse my emotionless analysis but makes sense to put water water on the base of the fire rather than the flames.
celt262 wrote: » My parents are of similar age and not a peep yet to when they might get it.
is_that_so wrote: » GP vaccinations seem to depend on numbers of age groups in individual practices and whether they've signed up to a larger group of GPs.