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Re: Coronavirus
Manage the response to the Covid 19 pandemic. The same as always.
Pierre says zero Covid is an unachievable ambition. However there is no “living with the virus” in the short term. The idea that we hit a magic number of vaccinations and the Government just open the floodgates and say “we did all we could do” continues to be fanciful. As I’ve said consistently throughout the thread the decision making that led to lockdown 1 makes another one inevitable unless something significant changes. The vaccine should be a game changer. However the basics will still apply for some time - finding cases, identifying contacts, identifying who is at risk among those contacts. This should be much easier with the vaccines reducing transmission. There’s still a significant amount of unknowns. Vaccine performance against known variants, vaccine performance against as yet unknown variants, vaccine performance over time. Complacency now risks making all the same mistakes all over again and undoing significant achievements to date. Then again. Some people haven’t considered Covid that serious for 15 months so I’m unsurprised some haven’t grasped this either. |
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And with that, can we get back to the topic please.
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Iain “get back to the office and buy a coffee you plebs” Duncan-Smith isn’t happy about the MHRA advice.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/20...ers-say-tories That’s good enough for me. If we can get a quote from Steve Baker of the (I presume ironically named) Covid recovery group I’ll sleep easy tonight. |
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He doesn’t understand what they thought they were doing ... well, they were doing exactly what they do with every drug that starts to produce post-marketing data. The only problem is that in this case there’s extreme scrutiny of the whole process, which is understandable and unavoidable under the circumstances. The only slightly different line they could have taken would be to advise alternative vaccines without actually acknowledging that there’s a likely risk factor with the Ox-AZ vaccine but again, given the level of scrutiny this whole process is under, that probably wouldn’t have flown - it would just have looked like a fudge, which of course it would have been.
Jonathan Van Tam’s presentation this afternoon was erudite, balanced and very reassuring. |
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Steve Baker is out retweeting folk scaremongering about vaccinating kids.
That’s reassuring that our Conservative backbench MPs have the health of the nation at heart. Remember, as always, there’s no economic recovery without solving the health issue. ONS data shows kids driving all but the first wave (data not available), and no doubt the next one too as schools return with pitiful non-pharmaceutical interventions. ---------- Post added at 23:45 ---------- Previous post was at 23:37 ---------- Quote:
It’s laughable really to think so-called credible scientists peddled the line a mere few weeks ago that there were less of these rare types of clots among those vaccinated than would be expected to be seen in a population of similar size. Including a release on the MHRA website that lasted a mere two days before being taken down. The timeline can be traced from 15 March to the Telegraph article on 30 March. At some point between those dates the 15 March statements became demonstrably false to such a clear extent the story was put out on that basis. |
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