MyQul
Chairman of the Bored
Totally beyond comprehension, who are these people, what is their agenda?
No idea. Just another day in the hamlet. These are just 'normal' peckhamite nutters. Nothing unusual for around here
Totally beyond comprehension, who are these people, what is their agenda?
I have always said, you can never have a good working democracy without you shoot a few peopleNo idea. Just another day in the hamlet. These are just 'normal' peckhamite nutters. Nothing unusual for around here
Serious question ;
If a Vaccine was made available next week would you have it?
I am in no way an anti vaxer and always would have a vaccine ext, however have to say I understand the trepidation shared by the nation.. How do we know this in such a short amount of time without the years of testing is actually safe?
Russia are supposedly pushing their out in a few weeks.
It is mad the world we live in this thing wreaks havoc across the globe and rather than we all work together as a species with various knowledge and trials collaboratively, instead we all keep secrets to win the race so which pharma can make the most money.
Short answer no, but if I was 80 and had other health issues and my options are to shield for potentially the rest of my life or have a vaccine then i'd take the Russian one now. While if in a year the Oxford one is there and they claim no side affects I would not give it to a healthy child as covid has virtually no risk to them and if its still around when the become more vulnerable they can have it then.Serious question ;
If a Vaccine was made available next week would you have it?
I'd have a bit of a problem taking the Russian one for that reason, I don't have confidence in their testing regime. But you have to remember that *no* pharmaceutical is 100% "safe", it's *always* a balance of risk and benefit. So I would take one that had been tested in the West and approved - they are massively accelerating development but they are going through the usual tests as far as possible. And one thing that is speeding things up is that they're taking a punt to manufacture millions of doses before the testing has finished, that wouldn't happen normally. At least vaccines are relatively "easy" to test, at least for safety - the averages are skewed by things like Alzheimer drugs where you have to wait years for the disease to run its normal course in the control patients before you can tell if the drug is having any effect.
If you think that, then you need to reconsider where you get your news, you're getting the propaganda version. See eg here :
"As part of the agreement signed in April between the University of Oxford and AstraZeneca, AstraZeneca continues to build a number of supply chains in parallel across the world, including for Europe. The Company is seeking to expand manufacturing capacity further and is open to collaborating with other companies in order to meet its commitment to support access to the vaccine at no profit during the pandemic. "
Or here :
"GSK today confirmed its intention to manufacture 1 billion doses of its pandemic vaccine adjuvant system, in 2021, to support the development of multiple adjuvanted COVID-19 vaccine candidates...Given the unprecedented need to develop COVID-19 vaccines, GSK has started manufacture of the adjuvant at risk...GSK is committed to making its adjuvant available through mechanisms that offer fair access for people across the world. Making the adjuvant available to the world’s poorest countries will also be a key part of these efforts, including donations, by working with governments and the global institutions that prioritise access...Overall GSK does not expect to profit from sales of its portfolio of collaborations for COVID-19 vaccines made during this pandemic phase"
And arguably, one of the reasons we are where we are is because companies haven't been making enough money out of vaccines, after governments went back on deals for vaccines for SARS, MERS etc most companies decided that it wasn't worth their while making the slow, long-term investments in research that 95% of the time generates no income. There's a good argument that one of the best investments government could make is just to bung say £50m/year in maintaining that capability in case it's needed, in the same way that eg some defence manunfacturers are given a fixed sum each year to maintain our capability to make missiles etc.
We're seeing unprecedented collaboration and sharing of data between companies - and having multiple candidate vaccines is very much a strength of the system, it gives us fall-backs in case one doesn't work.
I would argue that their are very good reasons to give an effective vaccine to a healthy child, Its the same logic for vaccinating young children against the flu, as it helps reduce the risk of them catching it and passing it onto grandparents or other higher risk groups.Short answer no, but if I was 80 and had other health issues and my options are to shield for potentially the rest of my life or have a vaccine then i'd take the Russian one now. While if in a year the Oxford one is there and they claim no side affects I would not give it to a healthy child as covid has virtually no risk to them and if its still around when the become more vulnerable they can have it then.
I would not give it to a healthy child as covid has virtually no risk to them
Before I answer I would like to say I highly respect your opinion on this thread and you obviously know alot more than me on the issue. But the number of under 15's who have died from covid in England and Wales is 2, my previous post was short and I didn't mention I would consider the facts at the time but with what I know at the moment I stick with "I would not give it to a healthy child".Thirteen-day-old Covid-19 victim is believed to be youngest person to die from coronavirus in the UK
Child, 5, announced as UK's youngest coronavirus victim as death toll reaches 4,313
An 11-year-old boy is Florida's youngest person to die from Covid-19 complications
If that's not bad enough, try :
Adults may not be the only Covid 'long haulers.' Some kids still have symptoms, months after falling ill
Fourteen-year-old Indiana Evans...fell ill with a cough in early March...She was never ill enough to be hospitalized...Nonetheless, the teenager -- who planned to audition for prestigious dance schools -- can now barely manage a trip to the supermarket...
a tiny proportion of children and teenagers have been hospitalized in the US, United Kingdom, Italy and elsewhere with a rare condition known as multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children, or MIS-C, a potential complication following Covid-19 infections...."what is an issue in a small minority of children is hyper-inflammatory syndrome, where they get quite unwell and get admitted."
But the number of under 15's who have died from covid in England and Wales is 2
But just looking at deaths rather misses the point, which is that this thing is more like polio - if you get bad, you pray that it kills you because the long-term disability is worse. It's not like flu where you walk away after a few days in bed.
Yes I would give children the measles jab but I would not give them a Covid one until I was happy there are no possible side effects which at the moment I wouldn't until its been used for many years.Actually it's 5 - see what I mean about getting your news from dodgy - or at the very least very out-of-date - sources? And there's no need to rely on those sources when you can get the current figures direct from ONS (ie from death certificates, not from neighbours making things up for the papers).
It's not many, but it's still 5x the death rate from measles, and you'd give your kid a measles jab, right?
But just looking at deaths rather misses the point, which is that this thing is more like polio - if you get bad, you pray that it kills you because the long-term disability is worse. It's not like flu where you walk away after a few days in bed.
Thats the thing about c-19 that scares me. I'd hate to be one of those 'long haulers'
Yes I would give children the measles jab but I would not give them a Covid one until I was happy there are no possible side effects which at the moment I wouldn't until its been used for many years.
Fair point N.B. But I think what SImon 12 is saying is that when the new vaccine comes out, it will have been through the required number of trials, but who knows what may turn up in the future. Thalidomide being an extreme example of this. Let those who want to take the risk (and it shouldn't be a great risk) go for it, and those who want to wait let the others be the guinea pigs. You pays your money and you takes your chance. I'm not sure that the first releases of a vaccine will be used with children, though, as they're apparently not the most vulnerable. The question I have to ask myself is whether I would risk having a jab.That's a much higher standard of risk-prevention than you presumably use in the rest of your life. Do you eat fishcakes? Go to the zoo? Use an umbrella? All these things have a possible side-effect of ... death, but you still do them, right? Do you use Lemsip, Calpol or Gaviscon? They all have side-effects.
Just getting a child to school involves running a gauntlet of risks from an incredibly dangerous mix of electricity and boiling water just to make a cup of tea, to braving one-tonne death machines on the road to school. Definitely Patiencepossible side-effects there, but you think that on balance the risks are worth it for the benefits.
So if you take risks just for a cup of tea or to cross the road what is your logic for insisting on no possible side-effects, for something that could prevent death or long-term disability?
Fair point N.B. But I think what SImon 12 is saying is that when the new vaccine comes out, it will have been through the required number of trials, but who knows what may turn up in the future. Thalidomide being an extreme example of this. Let those who want to take the risk (and it shouldn't be a great risk) go for it, and those who want to wait let the others be the guinea pigs. You pays your money and you takes your chance. I'm not sure that the first releases of a vaccine will be used with children, though, as they're apparently not the most vulnerable. The question I have to ask myself is whether I would risk having a jab.
I'm not saying i'm looking for no risk just balancing the risk of vaccine vs no vaccineThat's a much higher standard of risk-prevention than you presumably use in the rest of your life. Do you eat fishcakes? Go to the zoo? Use an umbrella? All these things have a possible side-effect of ... death, but you still do them, right? Do you use Lemsip, Calpol or Gaviscon? They all have side-effects.
Just getting a child to school involves running a gauntlet of risks from an incredibly dangerous mix of electricity and boiling water just to make a cup of tea, to braving one-tonne death machines on the road to school. Definitely possible side-effects there, but you think that on balance the risks are worth it for the benefits.
So if you take risks just for a cup of tea or to cross the road what is your logic for insisting on no possible side-effects, for something that could prevent death or long-term disability?
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