Boris is a big picture person famously uninterested in minutiae. The best person for this is a real adminstrative bore. The last person we need is Boris Johnson.tc27 wrote: ↑Wed Dec 30, 2020 9:48 pm
Which is sounds a bit better but the fuzzy language and information coming out reminds me (as others said) of testing earlier this year.
Honestly I cant believe the government are not aware this really is their chance to save themselves after having an awful epidemic! If I was Boris I would be on this personally 24/7.
Sam Bowman has suggested paying the GPs massive bonuses per vaccine administered - that would get them going.
So, coronavirus...
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I like neeps wrote: ↑Wed Dec 30, 2020 10:05 pmBoris is a big picture person famously uninterested in minutiae. The best person for this is a real adminstrative bore. The last person we need is Boris Johnson.tc27 wrote: ↑Wed Dec 30, 2020 9:48 pm
Which is sounds a bit better but the fuzzy language and information coming out reminds me (as others said) of testing earlier this year.
Honestly I cant believe the government are not aware this really is their chance to save themselves after having an awful epidemic! If I was Boris I would be on this personally 24/7.
Sam Bowman has suggested paying the GPs massive bonuses per vaccine administered - that would get them going.
If I were a GP I'd be hugely insulted by the idea that I'd need a bonus to incentivise me to "get the vaccination programme going" - decent working conditions and not deliberately running down the entire health service in order to make the case for profiteering from the general health of the population would be a start.
Lets not pander to the publicity, no one that know him calls him Boris, that is a manufactured public image, "Johnson" will do.
The very least you'd expect from a CEO would be the knowledge of where they need help, where they need the details people etc, Johnson fails on every level, yet people voted for that party in knowledge that he'd be PM.
I've looked at the choice of emojies, there isn't really one for "throwing one's hands up in despair"
Tichtheid wrote: ↑Thu Dec 31, 2020 12:08 amI like neeps wrote: ↑Wed Dec 30, 2020 10:05 pmBoris is a big picture person famously uninterested in minutiae. The best person for this is a real adminstrative bore. The last person we need is Boris Johnson.tc27 wrote: ↑Wed Dec 30, 2020 9:48 pm
Which is sounds a bit better but the fuzzy language and information coming out reminds me (as others said) of testing earlier this year.
Honestly I cant believe the government are not aware this really is their chance to save themselves after having an awful epidemic! If I was Boris I would be on this personally 24/7.
Sam Bowman has suggested paying the GPs massive bonuses per vaccine administered - that would get them going.
If I were a GP I'd be hugely insulted by the idea that I'd need a bonus to incentivise me to "get the vaccination programme going" - decent working conditions and not deliberately running down the entire health service in order to make the case for profiteering from the general health of the population would be a start.
Lets not pander to the publicity, no one that know him calls him Boris, that is a manufactured public image, "Johnson" will do.
The very least you'd expect from a CEO would be the knowledge of where they need help, where they need the details people etc, Johnson fails on every level, yet people voted for that party in knowledge that he'd be PM.
I've looked at the choice of emojies, there isn't really one for "throwing one's hands up in despair"
- fishfoodie
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GPs have in the past refused to carry out activities such as vaccines etc with out incentivisation.Tichtheid wrote: ↑Thu Dec 31, 2020 12:08 amI like neeps wrote: ↑Wed Dec 30, 2020 10:05 pmBoris is a big picture person famously uninterested in minutiae. The best person for this is a real adminstrative bore. The last person we need is Boris Johnson.tc27 wrote: ↑Wed Dec 30, 2020 9:48 pm
Which is sounds a bit better but the fuzzy language and information coming out reminds me (as others said) of testing earlier this year.
Honestly I cant believe the government are not aware this really is their chance to save themselves after having an awful epidemic! If I was Boris I would be on this personally 24/7.
Sam Bowman has suggested paying the GPs massive bonuses per vaccine administered - that would get them going.
If I were a GP I'd be hugely insulted by the idea that I'd need a bonus to incentivise me to "get the vaccination programme going" - decent working conditions and not deliberately running down the entire health service in order to make the case for profiteering from the general health of the population would be a start.
Lets not pander to the publicity, no one that know him calls him Boris, that is a manufactured public image, "Johnson" will do.
The very least you'd expect from a CEO would be the knowledge of where they need help, where they need the details people etc, Johnson fails on every level, yet people voted for that party in knowledge that he'd be PM.
I've looked at the choice of emojies, there isn't really one for "throwing one's hands up in despair"
I know a few practice nurses who found out how much the GP surgeries got and had a few words.
All part of the QOF
Lot of part time GP'sTichtheid wrote: ↑Thu Dec 31, 2020 12:08 amI like neeps wrote: ↑Wed Dec 30, 2020 10:05 pmBoris is a big picture person famously uninterested in minutiae. The best person for this is a real adminstrative bore. The last person we need is Boris Johnson.tc27 wrote: ↑Wed Dec 30, 2020 9:48 pm
Which is sounds a bit better but the fuzzy language and information coming out reminds me (as others said) of testing earlier this year.
Honestly I cant believe the government are not aware this really is their chance to save themselves after having an awful epidemic! If I was Boris I would be on this personally 24/7.
Sam Bowman has suggested paying the GPs massive bonuses per vaccine administered - that would get them going.
If I were a GP I'd be hugely insulted by the idea that I'd need a bonus to incentivise me to "get the vaccination programme going" - decent working conditions and not deliberately running down the entire health service in order to make the case for profiteering from the general health of the population would be a start.
Lets not pander to the publicity, no one that know him calls him Boris, that is a manufactured public image, "Johnson" will do.
The very least you'd expect from a CEO would be the knowledge of where they need help, where they need the details people etc, Johnson fails on every level, yet people voted for that party in knowledge that he'd be PM.
I've looked at the choice of emojies, there isn't really one for "throwing one's hands up in despair"
My local surgery, none of them do more than 2 days a week
Regarding Viagra SmithKline Beecham discovered it first when running clinical trials for headache tablets. The affect on the males in the study was reported and the drug was not taken any further.
Pfizer picked up on the API a year later and reaped the benefits.
Some strong words from the frontline
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-55479018People who do not follow social distancing rules or wear masks "have blood on their hands", an intensive care doctor has warned.
Prof Hugh Montgomery told BBC Radio 5 Live hospitals were facing a "tsunami" of Covid cases and he feared it would get worse after New Year's Eve.
He urged people to accept that it was going to be a "miserable" occasion this year and not to gather in groups.
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https://t.co/IqMGpRWGOE?amp=1
30% of the student athletes at Ohio State who had covid now have heart damage. Eeesh that's bad.
30% of the student athletes at Ohio State who had covid now have heart damage. Eeesh that's bad.
- Uncle fester
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Have enormous sympathy for frontline workers dealing with the consequences of people's stupidity. My sector is busy and the last year has been the most stressful of my life but it's nothing compared to the people who are directly in harm's way.SaintK wrote: ↑Thu Dec 31, 2020 12:48 pm Some strong words from the frontlinehttps://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-55479018People who do not follow social distancing rules or wear masks "have blood on their hands", an intensive care doctor has warned.
Prof Hugh Montgomery told BBC Radio 5 Live hospitals were facing a "tsunami" of Covid cases and he feared it would get worse after New Year's Eve.
He urged people to accept that it was going to be a "miserable" occasion this year and not to gather in groups.
- fishfoodie
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So if they didn't have a pre-existing condition for Round 1; they will have for Round 2.I like neeps wrote: ↑Thu Dec 31, 2020 1:09 pm https://t.co/IqMGpRWGOE?amp=1
30% of the student athletes at Ohio State who had covid now have heart damage. Eeesh that's bad.
Shows the madness of even contemplating a herd immunity, plan, at the start of this; when the medical community had zero idea of what the long term consequences of even a mild infection would be.
- Uncle fester
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And this is one of the reasons I gave up on most social media (incl PR).fishfoodie wrote: ↑Thu Dec 31, 2020 2:42 pmSo if they didn't have a pre-existing condition for Round 1; they will have for Round 2.I like neeps wrote: ↑Thu Dec 31, 2020 1:09 pm https://t.co/IqMGpRWGOE?amp=1
30% of the student athletes at Ohio State who had covid now have heart damage. Eeesh that's bad.
Shows the madness of even contemplating a herd immunity, plan, at the start of this; when the medical community had zero idea of what the long term consequences of even a mild infection would be.
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My wife went into Waitrose yesterday (John Lewis click and collect combined with the need for a bottle of cider for the gammon I'm cooking at the moment - it's furious about Lewis Hamilton - and some sundries) and there were people loading up on the booze, the thick end of 20 wine bottles on several trollies.
I know Waitrose customers are often retirees who are too refined to be alcoholics even though they plough through the drink like Prohibition is coming back but no way were they buying for just themselves.
Boom! Headshot for that tool Bimbo, plus idiot Scots like NL and OS.I like neeps wrote: ↑Thu Dec 31, 2020 1:09 pm https://t.co/IqMGpRWGOE?amp=1
30% of the student athletes at Ohio State who had covid now have heart damage. Eeesh that's bad.
“It won’t kill people under 80 or even harm them”
I'm a retiree and I do if they've got 25% off the really good stuff and stock up my wine storeHal Jordan wrote: ↑Thu Dec 31, 2020 4:17 pmMy wife went into Waitrose yesterday (John Lewis click and collect combined with the need for a bottle of cider for the gammon I'm cooking at the moment - it's furious about Lewis Hamilton - and some sundries) and there were people loading up on the booze, the thick end of 20 wine bottles on several trollies.
I know Waitrose customers are often retirees who are too refined to be alcoholics even though they plough through the drink like Prohibition is coming back but.no way were they buying for just themselves
Hugh supervised my MScSaintK wrote: ↑Thu Dec 31, 2020 12:48 pm Some strong words from the frontlinehttps://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-55479018People who do not follow social distancing rules or wear masks "have blood on their hands", an intensive care doctor has warned.
Prof Hugh Montgomery told BBC Radio 5 Live hospitals were facing a "tsunami" of Covid cases and he feared it would get worse after New Year's Eve.
He urged people to accept that it was going to be a "miserable" occasion this year and not to gather in groups.
really really clever guy.
- Margin__Walker
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Childcare bubble or not, the adults shouldn't be going in.
I posted the study on the 6th of december....Sandstorm wrote: ↑Thu Dec 31, 2020 4:26 pmBoom! Headshot for that tool Bimbo, plus idiot Scots like NL and OS.I like neeps wrote: ↑Thu Dec 31, 2020 1:09 pm https://t.co/IqMGpRWGOE?amp=1
30% of the student athletes at Ohio State who had covid now have heart damage. Eeesh that's bad.
“It won’t kill people under 80 or even harm them”
yermum wrote: ↑Sun Dec 06, 2020 10:10 am High prevalence of cardiac imaging anomalies in otherwise healthy college athletes recovering from COVID.
https://www.jacc.org/doi/10.1016/j.jcmg.2020.10.023Although the immediate and long-term clinical relevance of these findings remains unclear, our study underscores that mild or asymptomatic COVID-19 is not a benign illness, considering that more than one-half of the younger individuals showed subclinical myocardial and pericardial disease.
Raises some interesting questions about long term screening.
Is this the beginnings of another UK government balls up or a risky attempt to get around production/supply issues?
There are well-qualified posters on here that may be able to give a decent view of this.
There are well-qualified posters on here that may be able to give a decent view of this.
LONDON (Reuters) - British doctors have said a government decision to delay giving a coronavirus vaccine booster shot to vulnerable patients who have already had a first dose will be distressing and disruptive, their trade union said on Thursday.The government said on Wednesday it wanted to give a first dose to as many people as possible before starting to administer boosters at 12 weeks, in an effort to provide more people with a degree of protection more quickly.
But Dr Richard Vautrey, chair of the British Medical Association (BMA) committee for local family doctors, said it was “grossly and patently unfair to tens of thousands of our most at-risk patients to now try to reschedule their appointments”.
For the newly approved vaccine developed by Oxford University and made by AstraZeneca being rolled out in Britain next week, the plan is consistent with a finding that waiting 12 weeks maximises protection against the virus.
But in the case of the Pfizer/BioNTech shot that is already being given, the manufacturer said the shot had not been evaluated on dosing schedules different from the recommended 21 days.
The BMA said scores of doctors had told it that the new approach would distress vulnerable patients and create logistical problems for healthcare staff.
“The BMA believes these are patients that have already been promised ... that they will receive a second dose of Pfizer vaccination next week; they have given their consent to receive it and, quite rightly, are expecting to have it,” the BMA said.
More than 616,000 people had been given the Pfizer vaccine by Dec. 20, and the first follow-up injections were given this week, at an interval of 21 days.
The BMA said it would support any doctors who decided to honour existing booster appointments, and urged the government to provide a “scientifically validated justification” for its new approach.
After the British government’s announcement on Wednesday, Pfizer said it had no data to demonstrate that protection after the first dose was sustained after 21 days.
A spokeswoman for the National Health Service said the new guidance would “increase the number of vulnerable people protected against COVID over the next three months, potentially saving thousands of lives”.
She said financial and practical help was being provided to help accelerate vaccinations.
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The bottleneck is the ability to vaccinate, not the vaccines (hopefully) Twice as many people with a lower level of protection should give a better outcome WRT deaths/hospitalisations.The Druid wrote: ↑Thu Dec 31, 2020 5:59 pm Is this the beginnings of another UK government balls up or a risky attempt to get around production/supply issues?
There are well-qualified posters on here that may be able to give a decent view of this.
LONDON (Reuters) - British doctors have said a government decision to delay giving a coronavirus vaccine booster shot to vulnerable patients who have already had a first dose will be distressing and disruptive, their trade union said on Thursday.The government said on Wednesday it wanted to give a first dose to as many people as possible before starting to administer boosters at 12 weeks, in an effort to provide more people with a degree of protection more quickly.
But Dr Richard Vautrey, chair of the British Medical Association (BMA) committee for local family doctors, said it was “grossly and patently unfair to tens of thousands of our most at-risk patients to now try to reschedule their appointments”.
For the newly approved vaccine developed by Oxford University and made by AstraZeneca being rolled out in Britain next week, the plan is consistent with a finding that waiting 12 weeks maximises protection against the virus.
But in the case of the Pfizer/BioNTech shot that is already being given, the manufacturer said the shot had not been evaluated on dosing schedules different from the recommended 21 days.
The BMA said scores of doctors had told it that the new approach would distress vulnerable patients and create logistical problems for healthcare staff.
“The BMA believes these are patients that have already been promised ... that they will receive a second dose of Pfizer vaccination next week; they have given their consent to receive it and, quite rightly, are expecting to have it,” the BMA said.
More than 616,000 people had been given the Pfizer vaccine by Dec. 20, and the first follow-up injections were given this week, at an interval of 21 days.
The BMA said it would support any doctors who decided to honour existing booster appointments, and urged the government to provide a “scientifically validated justification” for its new approach.
After the British government’s announcement on Wednesday, Pfizer said it had no data to demonstrate that protection after the first dose was sustained after 21 days.
A spokeswoman for the National Health Service said the new guidance would “increase the number of vulnerable people protected against COVID over the next three months, potentially saving thousands of lives”.
She said financial and practical help was being provided to help accelerate vaccinations.
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From what I have read, the vaccine provides >50% protection with a single dose however that's misleading as if effectively provides almost no protection for the first couple of weeks after vaccination. So, provided you can avoid catching it then, it's >80% effective and also reduces the severity if you do catch it.
Overall effects of just using a single dose, or increasing the time between 1st and 2nd doses hasn't been tested much and so isn't currently known.
Looks like jabbing everybody in the UK ASAP is the best strategy for the current circumstances.
I have heard they are our future and parents would do anything to give them the best start in life....
Apparently, so far unpublished data from the AZ study that MHRA have access to shows that a larger gap between dose 1&2 produces a much higher level of efficacy. The reason that the data exists is partly down the the holds that went into place during the study, which forced a large percentage of participants to receive their second dose outside of planned period.Dinsdale Piranha wrote: ↑Thu Dec 31, 2020 6:33 pmFrom what I have read, the vaccine provides >50% protection with a single dose however that's misleading as if effectively provides almost no protection for the first couple of weeks after vaccination. So, provided you can avoid catching it then, it's >80% effective and also reduces the severity if you do catch it.
Overall effects of just using a single dose, or increasing the time between 1st and 2nd doses hasn't been tested much and so isn't currently known.
Looks like jabbing everybody in the UK ASAP is the best strategy for the current circumstances.
The Pfizer study though went exactly to plan. There is literally zero data on efficacy for Pfizer for receiving a second dose outside of the planned 21 day period.
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Let the record show that the witness made the "drinky drinky" motion.SaintK wrote: ↑Thu Dec 31, 2020 4:46 pmI'm a retiree and I do if they've got 25% off the really good stuff and stock up my wine storeHal Jordan wrote: ↑Thu Dec 31, 2020 4:17 pmMy wife went into Waitrose yesterday (John Lewis click and collect combined with the need for a bottle of cider for the gammon I'm cooking at the moment - it's furious about Lewis Hamilton - and some sundries) and there were people loading up on the booze, the thick end of 20 wine bottles on several trollies.
I know Waitrose customers are often retirees who are too refined to be alcoholics even though they plough through the drink like Prohibition is coming back but.no way were they buying for just themselves