The data shows that the Scottish rate is growing steadily and is pretty consistent to teh rest of the UK, so it;s just how things are going. There is still far more capacity to deliver than supply thoughRaggs wrote: ↑Fri Apr 30, 2021 9:53 amConsidering UK vaccination rates are averaging over 500k a day, and slowly increasing, I can't imagine it's due to shortage at the moment.S/Lt_Phillips wrote: ↑Fri Apr 30, 2021 9:44 amSo if the vaccination centres are empty, then the SG's system doesn't seem to be working too well (unless there's a shortage of vaccine, which I'm not hearing about).
And it's frustrating that no-one seems to be challenging the SG on this - which is the usual state of affairs up here (straying towards the Scottish politics thread here, sorry).
So, coronavirus...
So if the Scottish Government are doing so badly on rolling out the vaccine
Why amongst all 4 countries of the UK are they out performing both England and Northern Ireland in both the percentage of population vaccinated in both First & Second Doses ?
Why amongst all 4 countries of the UK are they out performing both England and Northern Ireland in both the percentage of population vaccinated in both First & Second Doses ?
Lager & Lime - we don't do cocktails
Because some people love sticking the boot in to the SG despite facts. The figures point to second doses being seen as the priority at the moment.
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My wife spends a lot of time in Angola on business and has just received today in Luanda her first AZ vaccine. She is 57 but as life expectancy is only around 60 there are no great age bands in place. Over 60 is the first band and she was invited to join that group on arrival at the vaccination centre. In and out in under an hour including a rest after the jab.
Meanwhile I will have to wait at least another month in developed western Europe.
Meanwhile I will have to wait at least another month in developed western Europe.
Wales are ahead, of the rest of us, on both 1st and 2nd doses. Scotland have slipped recently and have the lowest 1st dose % - albeit there's not much in it across the nations..
https://coronavirus.data.gov.uk/details/vaccinations
Last edited by Ovals on Fri Apr 30, 2021 11:18 am, edited 1 time in total.
Its interesting that in multiple radio interviews in the past week , both the conservatives . Labour and Lib Dims have stated that the Scottish rollout of the vaccine is lagging behind the UK - It's never been challenged by the multiple interviewers - no wonder people believe that's the case
Amway , that's my last comment here , it's a discussion that probably belongs in the Scottish Politics Thread
Lager & Lime - we don't do cocktails
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Sauce?
I can't find that data on a consistent basis (some show % of total population, some as % of adult population, which in Scotland is >16, not >18 etc).
Maybe (if your statement is true) the SG is pushing on with 2nd doses and so lagging on 1st doses? What are the comparative %ages for 1st doses between countries?
Clearly there's some maths to be done to ensure you have enough vaccine and capacity to deliver to get 2nd doses within the 12 weeks, but there's also strong evidence that 1 dose gives you a strong immunity and suppresses spread of the virus among the community. So there's a balance between the approaches. In the UK as a whole there are far now more 2nd doses being administered than 1st doses, but is is more skewed in Scotland (yesterday 89% 2nd doses in Scotland, but for the whole UK it was 77% 2nd doses).
I'm not necessarily saying the SG is doing a crap job with the vaccine rollout, but the headlines showing that 1st doses are being rolled out to younger people in the rest of the UK is borne out by the balance of 1st & 2nd doses, and the difference in Scotland is something that is not being challenged or explained by the SG.
Left hand down a bit
- S/Lt_Phillips
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Not sticking the boot in, just asking the question. Is there a difference in approach, and if so, why?
Left hand down a bit
No idea but at a guess it’s possibly thought that fully vaccinating the most vulnerable age groups ASAP is seen as a sensible approach. Bear in mind also that those who have received their first dose will need the second, with the same vaccine, within 12 weeks of the first. Imagine the stooshie if the dates for second doses with the same vaccine weren’t met?S/Lt_Phillips wrote: ↑Fri Apr 30, 2021 11:22 amNot sticking the boot in, just asking the question. Is there a difference in approach, and if so, why?
Christ Tattie, 3 or 4 posts up a possible explanation was given in a calm manner
All the money you made will never buy back your soul
Slick, as dogbert stated, the opposition parties are pushing, unchallenged, that the SG is lagging behind with vaccinations when that is clearly not the case.Slick wrote: ↑Fri Apr 30, 2021 11:45 amChrist Tattie, 3 or 4 posts up a possible explanation was given in a calm manner
Even though slightly frustrating for the younger generations, I think it’s a pragmatic approach at the moment. Could you imagine the scandal (yes especially leading up to an election) if second doses with the same vaccine were being missed.
I am no fan of the current SG but the differences between the different parts of the UK are not really substantial enough to hang much of a political point on IMO - overall the one part of this pandemic the UKG have knocked out of the park (long term vaccine procurement decisions taken last summer) and the fact the third wave has subsided means a few days/weeks difference between very low risk age groups is not a contentious issue.
If your looking for data https://www.travellingtabby.com/scotlan ... s-tracker/ is probably the best site - for both Scotland , and UK data in a single place - all sources are listed , and if you have any queries John created the site is more than happy to respond to any queries - if you do use it and find it useful - buy him a coffeeS/Lt_Phillips wrote: ↑Fri Apr 30, 2021 11:20 amSauce?
I can't find that data on a consistent basis (some show % of total population, some as % of adult population, which in Scotland is >16, not >18 etc).
Maybe (if your statement is true) the SG is pushing on with 2nd doses and so lagging on 1st doses? What are the comparative %ages for 1st doses between countries?
Clearly there's some maths to be done to ensure you have enough vaccine and capacity to deliver to get 2nd doses within the 12 weeks, but there's also strong evidence that 1 dose gives you a strong immunity and suppresses spread of the virus among the community. So there's a balance between the approaches. In the UK as a whole there are far now more 2nd doses being administered than 1st doses, but is is more skewed in Scotland (yesterday 89% 2nd doses in Scotland, but for the whole UK it was 77% 2nd doses).
I'm not necessarily saying the SG is doing a crap job with the vaccine rollout, but the headlines showing that 1st doses are being rolled out to younger people in the rest of the UK is borne out by the balance of 1st & 2nd doses, and the difference in Scotland is something that is not being challenged or explained by the SG.
Personally I think there is a barely a fag paper between the performance of all the UK countries, and they will all have their own specific issues / land mass / pop density / transport links etc - all all the different approaches are working for all the counties
Lager & Lime - we don't do cocktails
- FalseBayFC
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Oh please! This is the same country where a kleptocratic gang have stolen hundreds of billions of dollars and laundered it through crime havens like LondonLisbon Nick wrote: ↑Fri Apr 30, 2021 11:13 am My wife spends a lot of time in Angola on business and has just received today in Luanda her first AZ vaccine. She is 57 but as life expectancy is only around 60 there are no great age bands in place. Over 60 is the first band and she was invited to join that group on arrival at the vaccination centre. In and out in under an hour including a rest after the jab.
Meanwhile I will have to wait at least another month in developed western Europe.
Do you really think that the Angolans are vaccinating their citizens?
If you remember, it was just over three months ago that ScotGov was being criticised for being behind, because they'd put more priority on completing care homes and over 80s before moving down the groups. Then they really kicked in and were going at about 60k a day. The folk who got their first vax then have been getting their second one recently, which has meant there's been a pretty low rate of first doses being done. On the basis of the pattern the first doses were done in, that'll change in the next week, with us moving back to about 25-30k first doses being done daily maybe 200k a week. 40% of 40-49 year olds have been don, there's just over 400,000 left. so in the next two to three weeks I'd expect the vast majority of over 40s to be done in Scotland. You can figure this out from the graphs on the Public Health Scotland daily update hereS/Lt_Phillips wrote: ↑Fri Apr 30, 2021 9:44 amSo if the vaccination centres are empty, then the SG's system doesn't seem to be working too well (unless there's a shortage of vaccine, which I'm not hearing about).Slick wrote: ↑Fri Apr 30, 2021 8:58 amI'm guessing that the decision to do non paid carers after the 50's has slowed things up. I know from a few friends that got jabbed as a non paid carer, and my own experience, that a few of the jabbing centres were virtually empty in the last week or so.S/Lt_Phillips wrote: ↑Fri Apr 30, 2021 8:27 am
Feeling somewhat left behind in Scotland now. I'm 48 and not had a blue envelope yet, while England & Wales are forging ahead with anyone over 40 and NI is jagging people in their 30s. Not sure what the hold up is.
The SG is claiming that sending invitations by post is better than individuals being able to book their own appointment, but I have to say I would be much happier if I had the ability to set a date in the diary (even if its a fortnight hence and turns out to be no sooner than the date in the fabled blue envelope). Ho hum.
And it's frustrating that no-one seems to be challenging the SG on this - which is the usual state of affairs up here (straying towards the Scottish politics thread here, sorry).
https://public.tableau.com/profile/phs. ... 0/Overview
And are there two g’s in Bugger Off?
- S/Lt_Phillips
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Thanks - I've used that site for Scottish data (coffee duly donated), but didn't realise you could see the UK data tooDogbert wrote: ↑Fri Apr 30, 2021 12:12 pmIf your looking for data https://www.travellingtabby.com/scotlan ... s-tracker/ is probably the best site - for both Scotland , and UK data in a single place - all sources are listed , and if you have any queries John created the site is more than happy to respond to any queries - if you do use it and find it useful - buy him a coffeeS/Lt_Phillips wrote: ↑Fri Apr 30, 2021 11:20 amSauce?
I can't find that data on a consistent basis (some show % of total population, some as % of adult population, which in Scotland is >16, not >18 etc).
Maybe (if your statement is true) the SG is pushing on with 2nd doses and so lagging on 1st doses? What are the comparative %ages for 1st doses between countries?
Clearly there's some maths to be done to ensure you have enough vaccine and capacity to deliver to get 2nd doses within the 12 weeks, but there's also strong evidence that 1 dose gives you a strong immunity and suppresses spread of the virus among the community. So there's a balance between the approaches. In the UK as a whole there are far now more 2nd doses being administered than 1st doses, but is is more skewed in Scotland (yesterday 89% 2nd doses in Scotland, but for the whole UK it was 77% 2nd doses).
I'm not necessarily saying the SG is doing a crap job with the vaccine rollout, but the headlines showing that 1st doses are being rolled out to younger people in the rest of the UK is borne out by the balance of 1st & 2nd doses, and the difference in Scotland is something that is not being challenged or explained by the SG.
Personally I think there is a barely a fag paper between the performance of all the UK countries, and they will all have their own specific issues / land mass / pop density / transport links etc - all all the different approaches are working for all the counties
As you say, there's really not much between each country when looking at %age of total adults (the Welsh are absolutely nailing it though - fair play to them). If England & NI are getting the to the younger age groups first I guess it's a mixture of prioritising 2nd doses, focusing on unpaid carers, and because we have an older population up here?
Either way, as tc27 says, I'm grateful we're lucky enough to be in the position where we can be arguing about small details like this.
Left hand down a bit
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Yes, centre was open to the general public and although my wife has dual Angolan/Portuguese nationality there were no restrictions on non Angolans. In any event the ruling elite had probably already been vaccinated already in private.FalseBayFC wrote: ↑Fri Apr 30, 2021 12:17 pmOh please! This is the same country where a kleptocratic gang have stolen hundreds of billions of dollars and laundered it through crime havens like LondonLisbon Nick wrote: ↑Fri Apr 30, 2021 11:13 am My wife spends a lot of time in Angola on business and has just received today in Luanda her first AZ vaccine. She is 57 but as life expectancy is only around 60 there are no great age bands in place. Over 60 is the first band and she was invited to join that group on arrival at the vaccination centre. In and out in under an hour including a rest after the jab.
Meanwhile I will have to wait at least another month in developed western Europe.
Do you really think that the Angolans are vaccinating their citizens?
Out in the sticks it may well be a different story.
AZ, I was more achy overall and foggy first dose. No real fog this time but I couldn't sleep in injection arm side last night, can't raise my arm more than 90deg without it becoming really quite painful. Suggestion for men - don't have it in the arm you use for wanking.
BnM wrote: ↑Fri Apr 30, 2021 8:34 pmAZ, I was more achy overall and foggy first dose. No real fog this time but I couldn't sleep in injection arm side last night, can't raise my arm more than 90deg without it becoming really quite painful. Suggestion for men - don't have it in the arm you use for wanking.
Thanks, I had what I can only describe as a bad hangover followed by a mini flu on the day after my first dose of AZ. Hoping the second jab goes better.
The arrivals of large Pfizer deliveries have raised concerns that it will be harder to use up stocks of Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine. The Anglo-Swedish product suffers not only from an image problem in France but is also banned for those under the age of 55 because of concerns about rare incidents of dangerous blood clotting.
Currently, a quarter of AstraZeneca stocks remain unused in France, a figure that could increase as more Pfizer jabs become available.
On Friday, Health Minister Olivier Véran said he had asked the French health watchdog to examine whether it would be possible to offer the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine to those under 55. Volunteers for the vaccine would be required to sign a release form.
Patrick Vogt, a general practitioner in the city of Mulhouse, said he is desperate for the government to change its recommendations after he was forced to throw away doses of AstraZeneca last week.
“I managed to vaccinate 6 patients in 3 days. The others said they didn’t want to, or wanted to wait for another vaccine,” said Dr. Vogt. “So my vials were going out of date, I had to throw them away.”
After posting a video of himself throwing doses in the bin, Dr. Vogt received dozens of calls from volunteers in their forties who wanted to get a jab — people he is not allowed to vaccinate.
“I’m angry and disheartened,” said Dr. Vogt. “We need to accelerate the pace of the vaccinations as it’s the one thing that protects us from new variants developing.”
About 22 percent of the French population has received at least one vaccine dose, a figure which still lags the likes of Germany, the U.K. and Belgium, according to the POLITICO vaccination tracker.
Denmark is not using AZ at all ... in a lot of country the crazy norwegian/danish reaction has fucked it up.
at any rate even with AZ not delivering/being shunned the vacc numbers are on the expected paths. 2 weeks before I get it. (no english muck for me )
PS don't look at the stats to closely (Germany has more 1st shot 26/22 and less 5/9 2nd than France)
There's low up take but some younger people clearly will take it to be vaccinated earlier, it seems such a shame to waste it. Hopefully this Dr's video will push for change. I wonder if other countries are having the same issue and are wasting doses.
Are you doing 3 weeks between jabs?laurent wrote: ↑Fri Apr 30, 2021 9:16 pmDenmark is not using AZ at all ... in a lot of country the crazy norwegian/danish reaction has fucked it up.
at any rate even with AZ not delivering/being shunned the vacc numbers are on the expected paths. 2 weeks before I get it. (no english muck for me )
PS don't look at the stats to closely (Germany has more 1st shot 26/22 and less 5/9 2nd than France)
Up to now yes they have lengthened it i think.BnM wrote: ↑Fri Apr 30, 2021 10:09 pmAre you doing 3 weeks between jabs?laurent wrote: ↑Fri Apr 30, 2021 9:16 pmDenmark is not using AZ at all ... in a lot of country the crazy norwegian/danish reaction has fucked it up.
at any rate even with AZ not delivering/being shunned the vacc numbers are on the expected paths. 2 weeks before I get it. (no english muck for me )
PS don't look at the stats to closely (Germany has more 1st shot 26/22 and less 5/9 2nd than France)
The French vaccination rate is above the EU average at this stage
Immunity from death by Covid because you are higher risk. It’s not the same thing as everyone being immune. And Long Covid in younger, unvaccinated people is not nice either.
I agree I posted about arrhythmia earlier in the thread. I was merely answering Fangles query/statement regarding herd immunity.
Cool. Although I think Fangle is right: millions of loons in USA will mean their vax program will probably stall at 80% complete. UK will finish in the 90s IMO.Openside wrote: ↑Sat May 01, 2021 8:19 amI agree I posted about arrhythmia earlier in the thread. I was merely answering Fangles query/statement regarding herd immunity.
I know twitter is a cess pool but there are plenty of UK nut jobs on that too. I read a thread about this person refusing to take their child in to Hospital for an operation because they wanted to take a swab first, and they would not consent to that... Fucking Hatstand.Sandstorm wrote: ↑Sat May 01, 2021 8:24 amCool. Although I think Fangle is right: millions of loons in USA will mean their vax program will probably stall at 80% complete. UK will finish in the 90s IMO.
All over there is no need for appointments trying to get people in.Sandstorm wrote: ↑Sat May 01, 2021 8:24 amCool. Although I think Fangle is right: millions of loons in USA will mean their vax program will probably stall at 80% complete. UK will finish in the 90s IMO.
Trump must stand up and push for it, but his feet were cut out from under him because Kamala said, before Christmas, that she wouldn’t trust what he says about the safety of the vaccines. But he should still make a public safety announcement and hopefully get more in.
Yeah, but the people who trust Trump wouldn’t trust Harris.Fangle wrote: ↑Sat May 01, 2021 10:06 amAll over there is no need for appointments trying to get people in.
Trump must stand up and push for it, but his feet were cut out from under him because Kamala said, before Christmas, that she wouldn’t trust what he says about the safety of the vaccines. But he should still make a public safety announcement and hopefully get more in.
And are there two g’s in Bugger Off?