So, coronavirus...
- Marylandolorian
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I know it’s British and people’ shouldn’t say bad things about it but AstraZeneca aren’t helping themselves again.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2 ... pdates-us/
@lemoentje, everybody’s winning . The US bought enough vaccines for every Americans, 300 million Moderna, 300 million Pfizer, 100 million Johnson .
They also ordered a total of 300m AZ , some will go to Mexico and Canada.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2 ... pdates-us/
@lemoentje, everybody’s winning . The US bought enough vaccines for every Americans, 300 million Moderna, 300 million Pfizer, 100 million Johnson .
They also ordered a total of 300m AZ , some will go to Mexico and Canada.
I expect a country wide surge after the kids return from spring break.JM2K6 wrote: ↑Tue Mar 23, 2021 11:32 amGeorgia flipped blue for the senate seat, and given the ridiculous gerrymandering, the national election results there were v close. Calling it Trump Heartland is probably some way off the mark. The Trump heartlands are the rust belt plus Florida and a few other places.
She was excellent. Hawt too.dpedin wrote: ↑Tue Mar 23, 2021 12:44 pm Week off work and watching Politics Today on BBC now - young female journalists who knows what she is talking about getting talked over by Tory MP Steve Brine - trying to school him on difference between elimination and eradication, impact of long covid19, vaccination levels, etc and he is very unhappy about it. About sums up why we got into the feckin mess we are in.
I think you're correct. Scotland has seen the decline in cases slow down and are plateauing after school began to go back. However testing numbers and % reporting positive has stayed the same or risen slightly. 7 day case rates have gone up in 15-19, 20-24 and 25-29 age groups but continue to fall in the age groups who have been vaccinated. Given there are more folk in younger age groups the overall number of cases is relatively unchanged. This was anticipated and is being monitored - hospitalisations, ICU cases and deaths continue to go in the right direction but of course we don't know about the impact of contracting the virus or long covid in the younger age groups yet. We have to have all pupils back to school full time yet so this picture may change going forward?Fangle wrote: ↑Tue Mar 23, 2021 12:52 pmI expect a country wide surge after the kids return from spring break.JM2K6 wrote: ↑Tue Mar 23, 2021 11:32 amGeorgia flipped blue for the senate seat, and given the ridiculous gerrymandering, the national election results there were v close. Calling it Trump Heartland is probably some way off the mark. The Trump heartlands are the rust belt plus Florida and a few other places.
Calculon wrote: ↑Tue Mar 23, 2021 2:04 pmI think a lot of the critisism of the AZ vaccine has been unfair, but AZ really need to look at how they are running their trails and how they are presenting their results.Marylandolorian wrote: ↑Tue Mar 23, 2021 12:46 pm I know it’s British and people’ shouldn’t say bad things about it but AstraZeneca aren’t helping themselves again.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2 ... pdates-us/
@lemoentje, everybody’s winning . The US bought enough vaccines for every Americans, 300 million Moderna, 300 million Pfizer, 100 million Johnson .
They also ordered a total of 300m AZ , some will go to Mexico and Canada.
Regarding
.US is lobbying in Brazil to stop the Brazilians buying Sputnik
I thought the Brazilians are setting up their own production facilities for sputnik v. Anyway, at the moment demand far outstrips supply for sputnik v, as it does for all the vaccines, so I can't see the US lobbying making much practical difference.
I would agree that the AZ trials have been "messy" for all sorts of reasons; not least that some of the delays in dosages have come about as a result of holds requested of them by regulators.Calculon wrote: ↑Tue Mar 23, 2021 2:04 pmI think a lot of the critisism of the AZ vaccine has been unfair, but AZ really need to look at how they are running their trails and how they are presenting their results.Marylandolorian wrote: ↑Tue Mar 23, 2021 12:46 pm I know it’s British and people’ shouldn’t say bad things about it but AstraZeneca aren’t helping themselves again.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2 ... pdates-us/
@lemoentje, everybody’s winning . The US bought enough vaccines for every Americans, 300 million Moderna, 300 million Pfizer, 100 million Johnson .
They also ordered a total of 300m AZ , some will go to Mexico and Canada.
At this stage though the US looks a bit silly in not approving this. We now have data on over 17 million delivered doses (or whatever the number is right now) which puts the results of any Phase III trial in the shade; to be questioning the results of a 20,000-odd trial looks a bit questionable
Was thinking exactly that. We've got one of the most advanced tracking programs out there in the Siren project too. Why bother with a phase 3 trial at all at that point?Saint wrote: ↑Tue Mar 23, 2021 2:22 pmI would agree that the AZ trials have been "messy" for all sorts of reasons; not least that some of the delays in dosages have come about as a result of holds requested of them by regulators.Calculon wrote: ↑Tue Mar 23, 2021 2:04 pmI think a lot of the critisism of the AZ vaccine has been unfair, but AZ really need to look at how they are running their trails and how they are presenting their results.Marylandolorian wrote: ↑Tue Mar 23, 2021 12:46 pm I know it’s British and people’ shouldn’t say bad things about it but AstraZeneca aren’t helping themselves again.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2 ... pdates-us/
@lemoentje, everybody’s winning . The US bought enough vaccines for every Americans, 300 million Moderna, 300 million Pfizer, 100 million Johnson .
They also ordered a total of 300m AZ , some will go to Mexico and Canada.
At this stage though the US looks a bit silly in not approving this. We now have data on over 17 million delivered doses (or whatever the number is right now) which puts the results of any Phase III trial in the shade; to be questioning the results of a 20,000-odd trial looks a bit questionable
Give a man a fire and he'll be warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he'll be warm for the rest of his life.
Edinburgh's 7 day rate per 100,000 will go back above 50 tomorrowdpedin wrote: ↑Tue Mar 23, 2021 1:20 pmI think you're correct. Scotland has seen the decline in cases slow down and are plateauing after school began to go back. However testing numbers and % reporting positive has stayed the same or risen slightly. 7 day case rates have gone up in 15-19, 20-24 and 25-29 age groups but continue to fall in the age groups who have been vaccinated. Given there are more folk in younger age groups the overall number of cases is relatively unchanged. This was anticipated and is being monitored - hospitalisations, ICU cases and deaths continue to go in the right direction but of course we don't know about the impact of contracting the virus or long covid in the younger age groups yet. We have to have all pupils back to school full time yet so this picture may change going forward?Fangle wrote: ↑Tue Mar 23, 2021 12:52 pmI expect a country wide surge after the kids return from spring break.JM2K6 wrote: ↑Tue Mar 23, 2021 11:32 am
Georgia flipped blue for the senate seat, and given the ridiculous gerrymandering, the national election results there were v close. Calling it Trump Heartland is probably some way off the mark. The Trump heartlands are the rust belt plus Florida and a few other places.
And are there two g’s in Bugger Off?
US officials have complained that results on the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine, published yesterday, included “outdated” information and presented an “incomplete view” of the jab’s effectiveness.
But AstraZeneca says this was an initial analysis, based on data up to an agreed cut-off date of 17 February, and it would share further analysis with the officials - who are on a key body involved in deciding if the jab is approved in the US - within 48 hours.
Anthony Fauci, director of the US National Institute of Health, has been at pains to stress AstraZeneca is still a good vaccine, but he wants the company to issue what he calls “the correct data”.
It is worth pointing out that more people are receiving AstraZeneca every hour in the UK than in the entire US trial.
And real world evidence has confirmed that the vaccine is highly effective, and regulators in the UK and Europe have said there is no evidence of a link to blood clots.
But clinical trials are the bedrock of medicine. And it is vital that scientists and the public have confidence in them.
Fair enough.JM2K6 wrote: ↑Tue Mar 23, 2021 11:32 amGeorgia flipped blue for the senate seat, and given the ridiculous gerrymandering, the national election results there were v close. Calling it Trump Heartland is probably some way off the mark. The Trump heartlands are the rust belt plus Florida and a few other places.
I guess I'm going on Georgia's reputation for its redneck population.
I was just interested in the virus' apparent regression, given the politicisation of pandemic measures.
It’s interesting in a lot of areas of the USA, demographics are changing as cities grow and rural populations shrink. So in Georgia Atlanta is growing and there’s a corresponding increase in democratic voters.Rinkals wrote: ↑Tue Mar 23, 2021 6:14 pmFair enough.JM2K6 wrote: ↑Tue Mar 23, 2021 11:32 amGeorgia flipped blue for the senate seat, and given the ridiculous gerrymandering, the national election results there were v close. Calling it Trump Heartland is probably some way off the mark. The Trump heartlands are the rust belt plus Florida and a few other places.
I guess I'm going on Georgia's reputation for its redneck population.
I was just interested in the virus' apparent regression, given the politicisation of pandemic measures.
Texas may go the same way in the next ten or fifteen years.
And are there two g’s in Bugger Off?
I suppose the redneck areas are more sparsely populated, being rural.Biffer wrote: ↑Tue Mar 23, 2021 9:16 pmIt’s interesting in a lot of areas of the USA, demographics are changing as cities grow and rural populations shrink. So in Georgia Atlanta is growing and there’s a corresponding increase in democratic voters.
Texas may go the same way in the next ten or fifteen years.
One would have thought that the Trump rallies would be superspreader events, but there do seem to be multiple factors which affect the spread of the virus which are still not properly understood.
In India, for example, one would assume that the spread of the virus and the commensurate death toll would be out of control, given the density of population, but they seem relatively unscathed to the point where their cricket stadiums are full of people paying scant lip service to social distancing or masks. I know that the back half England series has been behind closed doors following a minor outbreak of 67 cases, but still...
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It's interesting how hard people find it to believe that Pfizer are lobbying.Saint wrote: ↑Tue Mar 23, 2021 3:58 pmUS officials have complained that results on the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine, published yesterday, included “outdated” information and presented an “incomplete view” of the jab’s effectiveness.
But AstraZeneca says this was an initial analysis, based on data up to an agreed cut-off date of 17 February, and it would share further analysis with the officials - who are on a key body involved in deciding if the jab is approved in the US - within 48 hours.
Anthony Fauci, director of the US National Institute of Health, has been at pains to stress AstraZeneca is still a good vaccine, but he wants the company to issue what he calls “the correct data”.
It is worth pointing out that more people are receiving AstraZeneca every hour in the UK than in the entire US trial.
And real world evidence has confirmed that the vaccine is highly effective, and regulators in the UK and Europe have said there is no evidence of a link to blood clots.
But clinical trials are the bedrock of medicine. And it is vital that scientists and the public have confidence in them.
'AZ is big pharma too' - yes, but it's a competitor. Just because they're in the same industry it doesn't mean they're friends.
The New York Times is reporting that the EU is considering new powers that would block any vaccine exports for a period of 6 weeks. Although no countries are mentioned (and the EU is also removing its previous exemptions to export controls), the NYT report suggests this move is aimed at the UK.
At the same time that the EU is considering banning the export of AZ vaccines, Berlin politicians are calling for the AZ shot to be made available to anyone who wants it, because so many AZ shots are going unused. This thread shows how vaccine appointments are working in Berlin at the moment. If you want a Pfizer shot, there are no appointments available until 13 May. For the AZ however, appointments are available at all times every day of the week.
At the same time that the EU is considering banning the export of AZ vaccines, Berlin politicians are calling for the AZ shot to be made available to anyone who wants it, because so many AZ shots are going unused. This thread shows how vaccine appointments are working in Berlin at the moment. If you want a Pfizer shot, there are no appointments available until 13 May. For the AZ however, appointments are available at all times every day of the week.
UK should tell the EU that we'll swap 1 of our pfizer vaccines for 20 of their AZ. They even make a bit of money off that...Lobby wrote: ↑Wed Mar 24, 2021 9:35 am The New York Times is reporting that the EU is considering new powers that would block any vaccine exports for a period of 6 weeks. Although no countries are mentioned (and the EU is also removing its previous exemptions to export controls), the NYT report suggests this move is aimed at the UK.
At the same time that the EU is considering banning the export of AZ vaccines, Berlin politicians are calling for the AZ shot to be made available to anyone who wants it, because so many AZ shots are going unused. This thread shows how vaccine appointments are working in Berlin at the moment. If you want a Pfizer shot, there are no appointments available until 13 May. For the AZ however, appointments are available at all times every day of the week.
Give a man a fire and he'll be warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he'll be warm for the rest of his life.
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Politico reporting that the Italian authorities have discovered 29 million doses of the AZ vaccine at a site in Italy. The doses are believed to have come from the Halix plant in the Netherlands.
That`s a huge quantity! If true, not sure what the implications are.
That`s a huge quantity! If true, not sure what the implications are.
Despite the whispers of EU officials, it sounds very much like they just shipped from the production site to the fill and finish site. Any AZ shipped to the UK is supposed to be bulk substance for us to fill and finish in the UK - it makes MHRA testing much easier. So it seems likely that this was intended for EU consumption, but I wonder if it's allowed to be fill and finished before the EMA sign off on the plant?Lisbon Nick wrote: ↑Wed Mar 24, 2021 10:27 am Politico reporting that the Italian authorities have discovered 29 million doses of the AZ vaccine at a site in Italy. The doses are believed to have come from the Halix plant in the Netherlands.
That`s a huge quantity! If true, not sure what the implications are.
UK officials flat out denying its anything to do with UK supply.Saint wrote: ↑Wed Mar 24, 2021 10:54 amDespite the whispers of EU officials, it sounds very much like they just shipped from the production site to the fill and finish site. Any AZ shipped to the UK is supposed to be bulk substance for us to fill and finish in the UK - it makes MHRA testing much easier. So it seems likely that this was intended for EU consumption, but I wonder if it's allowed to be fill and finished before the EMA sign off on the plant?Lisbon Nick wrote: ↑Wed Mar 24, 2021 10:27 am Politico reporting that the Italian authorities have discovered 29 million doses of the AZ vaccine at a site in Italy. The doses are believed to have come from the Halix plant in the Netherlands.
That`s a huge quantity! If true, not sure what the implications are.
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To my knowledge, the Halix plant has not yet received EMA approval, so cannot be used in the EU. So it's not that those doses can be used by the EU at the moment anyway.
Give a man a fire and he'll be warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he'll be warm for the rest of his life.
It doesn't have approval yet, but the EMA are supposed to be on the brink of approving it. So the EU has it's eyes on all the stockpile that's been produced there. Whether these doses that have been fill and finished could be appropriated by the EU would depend on EMA batch testing processes
It's had MHRA approval for ages because it was the initial production site for the trials
Why do you keep trolling me with Trump stuff? It’s easy to do a bit of research.
- Muttonbird
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You protest too much, Fangle.Fangle wrote: ↑Wed Mar 24, 2021 11:45 amWhy do you keep trolling me with Trump stuff? It’s easy to do a bit of research.
That hasn't stopped lots of European media reporting that these were destined for the UK; La Stampa, Die Zeit, Der Spiegel etc.tc27 wrote: ↑Wed Mar 24, 2021 10:56 amUK officials flat out denying its anything to do with UK supply.Saint wrote: ↑Wed Mar 24, 2021 10:54 amDespite the whispers of EU officials, it sounds very much like they just shipped from the production site to the fill and finish site. Any AZ shipped to the UK is supposed to be bulk substance for us to fill and finish in the UK - it makes MHRA testing much easier. So it seems likely that this was intended for EU consumption, but I wonder if it's allowed to be fill and finished before the EMA sign off on the plant?Lisbon Nick wrote: ↑Wed Mar 24, 2021 10:27 am Politico reporting that the Italian authorities have discovered 29 million doses of the AZ vaccine at a site in Italy. The doses are believed to have come from the Halix plant in the Netherlands.
That`s a huge quantity! If true, not sure what the implications are.
- Hal Jordan
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I'm sure Georgia will safely go back to red with all the voter suppression the GOP is undertaking there and anywhere else they possibly can, the cunts.
Meanwhile, in chumocracy latest, Jenny Harries has been appointed as the first chief exec of the UK Health Security Agency. Yes, the same Jenny Harries who said airport screening is unnecessary, big gatherings (Cheltenham, shall we say?) "are not seen to be something which has a big event. So we don't want to disrupt people's lives unduly", oh and who was an anti-masker, and who thought there was no real need to test... Ideal candidate! No doubt the peerage will follow.
Meanwhile, in chumocracy latest, Jenny Harries has been appointed as the first chief exec of the UK Health Security Agency. Yes, the same Jenny Harries who said airport screening is unnecessary, big gatherings (Cheltenham, shall we say?) "are not seen to be something which has a big event. So we don't want to disrupt people's lives unduly", oh and who was an anti-masker, and who thought there was no real need to test... Ideal candidate! No doubt the peerage will follow.
- Margin__Walker
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Nice. Same Jenny Harris that was on morning TV at the start of March last year basically calling Caprice a moron for suggesting that masks were a good idea and that a lockdown was required?
They're all claiming "EU sources"Lobby wrote: ↑Wed Mar 24, 2021 11:52 amThat hasn't stopped lots of European media reporting that these were destined for the UK; La Stampa, Die Zeit, Der Spiegel etc.tc27 wrote: ↑Wed Mar 24, 2021 10:56 amUK officials flat out denying its anything to do with UK supply.Saint wrote: ↑Wed Mar 24, 2021 10:54 am
Despite the whispers of EU officials, it sounds very much like they just shipped from the production site to the fill and finish site. Any AZ shipped to the UK is supposed to be bulk substance for us to fill and finish in the UK - it makes MHRA testing much easier. So it seems likely that this was intended for EU consumption, but I wonder if it's allowed to be fill and finished before the EMA sign off on the plant?
- Insane_Homer
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“Facts are meaningless. You could use facts to prove anything that's even remotely true.”
- Marylandolorian
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This might or might not have anything to do with the AZ vax , but this isn’t helpingSaint wrote: ↑Tue Mar 23, 2021 2:22 pmI would agree that the AZ trials have been "messy" for all sorts of reasons; not least that some of the delays in dosages have come about as a result of holds requested of them by regulators.Calculon wrote: ↑Tue Mar 23, 2021 2:04 pmI think a lot of the critisism of the AZ vaccine has been unfair, but AZ really need to look at how they are running their trails and how they are presenting their results.Marylandolorian wrote: ↑Tue Mar 23, 2021 12:46 pm I know it’s British and people’ shouldn’t say bad things about it but AstraZeneca aren’t helping themselves again.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2 ... pdates-us/
At this stage though the US looks a bit silly in not approving this. We now have data on over 17 million delivered doses (or whatever the number is right now) which puts the results of any Phase III trial in the shade; to be questioning the results of a 20,000-odd trial looks a bit questionable
Nantes, Fr.: a 24 years old student in his 6th year of medicine was found dead ( hemorrhage due to thrombosis) few days after receiving the AstraZeneca vaccine.
https://actu.fr/societe/coronavirus/mor ... 52719.html
- Hal Jordan
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Who knew that electing fascist arseholes that do nothing about the virus could lead to such appalling outcomes?
I'm not sure what AZ can do about how this stuff is being reported, but the statistical evidence simply doesn't support an causal relationship with AZ at allMarylandolorian wrote: ↑Wed Mar 24, 2021 12:37 pmThis might or might not have anything to do with the AZ vax , but this isn’t helpingSaint wrote: ↑Tue Mar 23, 2021 2:22 pmI would agree that the AZ trials have been "messy" for all sorts of reasons; not least that some of the delays in dosages have come about as a result of holds requested of them by regulators.
At this stage though the US looks a bit silly in not approving this. We now have data on over 17 million delivered doses (or whatever the number is right now) which puts the results of any Phase III trial in the shade; to be questioning the results of a 20,000-odd trial looks a bit questionable
Nantes, Fr.: a 24 years old student in his 6th year of medicine was found dead ( hemorrhage due to thrombosis) few days after receiving the AstraZeneca vaccine.
https://actu.fr/societe/coronavirus/mor ... 52719.html
Basically he is murdering the Brazilian population
I amazed there hasn't been the rumblings of a coup or an overthrow of Bolsonaro
Who the hell is trolling?Fangle wrote: ↑Wed Mar 24, 2021 11:45 amWhy do you keep trolling me with Trump stuff? It’s easy to do a bit of research.
I specifically explained my interest, namely that I was interested in the implications of the politicisation of pandemic measures. I went on to suggest that there are gaps in our understanding of the effects of the pandemic and I pointed at India as a nation that, by all logic, should have been struck a lot harder than they have been, given the density of their population and the poverty afflicting them.
I suggest that you are being a little over-sensitive.
So the Italian government are saying that these doses were heading towards Belgium - and that the Italian gov were asked to "inspect" the doses, suggesting that the EU knew they were there and were just double checking they hadn't gone anywhere else. I'm left wondering why this has even been reported other than to paint AZ in a worse light
We have an update on a story from the Italian newspaper La Stampa, which had reported that some 29 million doses of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine found at a plant near Rome may have been destined for the UK.
A UK government official has since said it was not expecting such a delivery; and the Italian government has said only that “the batches that were inspected were all aimed for Belgium”.
La Stampa reported that the European Commission asked Italian officials to inspect the doses at the Catalent plant in Anagni at the weekend.
The plant has a contract with AstraZeneca to "fill and finish" its vaccines and is set to do the same for the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, also approved for use in the EU.
The discovery comes weeks after the Italian government blocked the export of 250,000 doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine to Australia, as part of EU regulations allowing a shipment to be stopped if a company is seen to be failing to meet its obligations to the 27 member states.
Belgium’s population is only 11m, so I doubt very much that all 29m doses were intended for Belgium. The whole story seems very dodgy to me, and appears to have been planted to coincide with the EU toughening it’s criteria for preventing companies from meeting their vaccine contracts, and to continue its misinformation campaign in relation to AZ.Saint wrote: ↑Wed Mar 24, 2021 2:26 pm So the Italian government are saying that these doses were heading towards Belgium - and that the Italian gov were asked to "inspect" the doses, suggesting that the EU knew they were there and were just double checking they hadn't gone anywhere else. I'm left wondering why this has even been reported other than to paint AZ in a worse light
We have an update on a story from the Italian newspaper La Stampa, which had reported that some 29 million doses of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine found at a plant near Rome may have been destined for the UK.
A UK government official has since said it was not expecting such a delivery; and the Italian government has said only that “the batches that were inspected were all aimed for Belgium”.
La Stampa reported that the European Commission asked Italian officials to inspect the doses at the Catalent plant in Anagni at the weekend.
The plant has a contract with AstraZeneca to "fill and finish" its vaccines and is set to do the same for the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, also approved for use in the EU.
The discovery comes weeks after the Italian government blocked the export of 250,000 doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine to Australia, as part of EU regulations allowing a shipment to be stopped if a company is seen to be failing to meet its obligations to the 27 member states.