hmmm wrote: » They're not being ignored though, the government scientific advisory committee has told the government that apparently they're no more likely to get the virus than anyone else.
I'm relieved at the decision because I think the next two months would have been filled with special interest groups all flexing their muscles to be first in line for vaccinations, and it would have been pretty unpleasant.
dominatinMC wrote: » Teachers are perpetually annoyed. They need to just accept it and get on with the job they are paid to do like everyone else.
eoinbn wrote: » 1.1m doses by the end of Q1 - likely to be less than that. 3.8m delivered in Q2. Need to round up to get 5m. Need to find 1m doses to get to 6m. It is possible that the UK could give us doses in June but it is highly unlikely that we could admin 3m doses in June.
is_that_so wrote: » It's that catch-all of "holding the government responsible".
seansouth36 wrote: » Given that we are constantly told by posters on here that case numbers don't matter, only hospitalisations/ICU, surely it makes total sense to prioritise those who COVID effects the most, rather than those most likely to get it? That's the whole point of the rollout it seems. It will also be quicker and save loads of lobbying and ****wittery from the HSE, who could barely organise a BBQ never mind a complex roll out.
hmmm wrote: » I think people are underestimating what incredible news this is. A complete game-changer. RTE haven't mentioned it have they? The vaccines also seem to be handily dealing with known variants. The news this week has been amazing - we're getting out of this once enough get vaccinated.
KrustyUCC wrote: » True but I can imagine the outcry if the government went against NIAC advice That advice has pushed out my first vaccine date but I can accept the advice
Bridge93 wrote: » Have they decided the order of ages once those at risk are done? I know there was talk of doing the younger cohort before the older once they got below under 50 if evidence showed the vaccine stops transmission. Given that's been shown to be largely true, whats the gameplan? Is it just chronological from 65-youngest or any nuance?
Deleted User wrote: » So basically, they ****ed up organising Cohort 4 and now have pushed them back down the list. I was hoping to be vaccinated in the next six weeks or so, but it now looks like I'm back down to level 7 so can look forward to spending another summer stuck indoors, while case numbers remain high - so no reduced risk to me. Great.
RavenBea17b wrote: » Any updates about vaccine deliveries up and coming ? Need some good news, - please...
namloc1980 wrote: » TDs kicking off all over the place in the Dáil about the teachers not getting priority. This is going to be a joke for the next few weeks to be honest and quite possibly the unions will say teachers aren't going back after Easter unless they get prioritised. It's all very unseemly.
GLaDOS wrote: » Pfizer/BioNTech are bloody amazing.
giveitholly wrote: » Are the teachers ever happy? A lot of them will be finishing up work in less than two months,they are all off again next week. Surely staff of supermarkets should have more of a gripe. Any teacher under 40 with no underlying condition should be quite happy to see people in the 40-65 bracket vaccinated before them
hmmm wrote: » As someone mentioned earlier, groups like meat factory workers are probably higher at risk. Either way the government is in a no-win situation with every group trying to get to the front of the line, and they can only rely on the medical advice. I don't think opposition TDs should be using this to try and whip up social division as they know full well the problem the government faced.