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Thread: Covid-19 Politics
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01-29-2021 #241
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Re: Covid-19 Politics
Good news, pleased to hear it - I haven't been given a date for my second vaccination yet.
The news I am frustrated with has been on tv broadcasts and in the online press, and concerns those people who think the vaccination will make them infertile, or insert a micro-chip into their brain, or 'God knows what'! The NHS is recruiting prominent people from the Black and Asian community on the grounds that vaccination sceptics are more commonly found in these social groups, usng what data I do not know. It seems to me that there are plenty of 'Whte British' people who are just as sceptical as others, for whatever reason, and none of it based on science.
Either the number of people across the world who reject science is growing, or they are not as great as we think but have captured the media's attention, a few seats in Congress (we have the dapper dimwittery of Sir Desmond Swayne in the House of Commons), and are thus attempting to shift extreme views from the fringe into the centre ground. With the Taliban resurgent in Afghanistan, and some indivduals appearing to share their outlook on life even if they live in the UK or the US, I feel we are not just involved in a campaign against Covid-19 but a strugge for the preservation of the Truth.
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01-29-2021 #242
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01-29-2021 #243
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Re: Covid-19 Politics
This just came up on my twitter feed. I will look into it later and post an article or two but former fda head says that Johnson and Johnson data just came in and is very good. This would change supply very quickly if it gets approved. It's a one shot vaccine also which makes the doses go twice as far.
https://twitter.com/ScottGottliebMD/status/1355139722646081537
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01-29-2021 #244
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Re: Covid-19 Politics
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/johnson...se-researcher/
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/artic...ainst-covid-19
The Johnson and Johnson vaccine uses the same technology as the Oxford/Astrazeneca vaccine but it delivered in one shot with no booster. It is probably effective enough to get an emergency use authorization from the fda.
If I recall correctly, both Moderna and Pfizer were over 90% effective in preventing symptomatic disease. That includes mild, moderate, and severe. Johnson and Johnson is 66% effective in preventing moderate to severe disease, prevented 85% of severe cases, and 100% of hospitalizations and deaths.
If given the choice I think most people would much rather have the two shot vaccines from Pfizer or Moderna. Those shots also show pretty good efficacy 14 days after the first shot (though with limited data). It's unclear how long any of the vaccines will provide immunity for but the benefit of the second shot is to prime the immune system and raise antibody response far higher than in those who have recovered from covid. So as a layperson I would have some concern about how long immunity lasts after the J&J shot but perhaps I will read something positive about antibody responses etc. Edit: in the Scott Gottlieb tweet I posted above he says "people showed sustained and increasing immune protection over time". So I'm sure we'll hear more about what data shows that.
Johnson and Johnson says it can produce ten million doses in February and that's ten million more people vaccinated. I imagine they can ramp up much further after that. Since the government is paying for vaccines, I'm not sure who would choose a vaccine that is 66% effective rather than 95% effective at preventing covid cases but maybe it has a better side effect profile or maybe some people in a lower priority group would prefer to get some protection earlier.
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01-29-2021 #245
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01-30-2021 #246
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01-30-2021 #247
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Re: Covid-19 Politics
I guess it's a trade-off. When the virus is spreading rapidly now, is it better to wait for more supplies of the more effective vaccine or to vaccinate as many as you can with what you have now? Does getting the less effective vaccine now preclude getting the other one later?
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01-30-2021 #248
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01-30-2021 #249
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01-30-2021 #250
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Re: Covid-19 Politics
For the last several months we knew that Johnson & Johnson's one shot vaccine was in the pipeline and a promising candidate. They received 1 billion dollars for research from Operation Warp Speed. It's kind of tough for me to believe that they shouldn't have been given a lot of money to produce their vaccine at risk. That's the entire post. It was fairly obvious that it would be a worthwhile risk/gamble. Their supply is starting at 2 million doses. I haven't read any critiques yet but was that the smartest approach when they could have been given money to produce tens of millions of doses at risk?
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