I would have reviewed it if they did.So I gather they didn’t have any pies?
I would have reviewed it if they did.So I gather they didn’t have any pies?
Your daughter is suffering from long covid, but somehow you think it is better that young people get infected, than wait couple of weeks, so that they are vaccinated?Is the Indian variant a chance to speed up herd immunity without impacting deaths or serious illness? The above chart seems to suggest vaccines are working.
I'm going to reply to your holier-than-thou post with the respect it deserves, none. I mentioned the queuing because they packed out the place due to trying to keep it moving. The stuffy, packed room was also due to this mismanagement. Tell me smooth brwned, do you think it's a prudent and sensible thing to keep a group of people packed in an area with shite ventilation for 15 minutes?
Your second paragraph is just santimonious horseshit. You sound exactly like the guys who say you shouldn't waste clean drinking water because somewhere in Africa there's children dying from thirst. My situation and the situation you compared it to aren't in any way related. To try and make a comparison like that is completely disengenuous.
Looking forward to next update in couple of months.I would have reviewed it if they did.
Your daughter is suffering from long covid, but somehow you think it is better that young people get infected, than wait couple of weeks, so that they are vaccinated?
It has not.Agreed, but she caught the early (stronger) strain. The virus has evolved many times over to harm the host less. This is not a scientific opinion, it's a sort of question.
My daughter was also in a minority that never really registered on any newsworthy Richter scale, not for long anyway. Even now the clinics that are/were supposed to be looking after long covid sufferers seem to have dwindled or probably been defunded. This could be an indication long covid is now less serious.
Any person getting the vaccine should receive it in a safe environment.We’re all in the middle of a pandemic. It’s a global thing. If you don’t feel any connection to that then that’s why you’ve taken first world problems to a ludicrous degree.
Any person getting the vaccine should receive it in a safe environment.
Agreed. My take is waiting 15 mins in a somewhat crowded room is a safe environment. If you were genuinely afraid of virus transmission in that moment then I would blame the media reports more than anything. It isn’t that transmissive, but caution isn’t a bad thing. Ignoring medical advice is kinda dangerous though, and the people advising you to wait 15 minutes were no less aware of the risks than you. Anaphylactic reactions are legitimately more common than getting covid while sitting in a chair a few metres from a stranger.
Surely you can see why some people would kill to be in your situation, though? It’s not even that far from home. I’ve got family friends in their 60s in Donegal that are seriously at risk and still waiting on a vaccine. Never mind South Africa, India and co...which don’t feel that far away to me, right now, in unprecedented global circumstances.
Just had my Pfizer vaccine. Thought it would be a sort of euphoric moment but was kind of spoilt by there being so many people there. Had to queue for 20 mins to get into the church and then when I was in there it seemed like social distancing was just something other people did. I was then asked to wait in a packed stuffy waiting area for 15mins just in case I had a bad reaction to the jab. No thanks - not gonna catch me doing that, ta.
Agreed, but she caught the early (stronger) strain. The virus has evolved many times over to harm the host less. This is not a scientific opinion, it's a sort of question.
My daughter was also in a minority that never really registered on any newsworthy Richter scale, not for long anyway. Even now the clinics that are/were supposed to be looking after long covid sufferers seem to have dwindled or probably been defunded. This could be an indication long covid is now less serious.
What's the rate of anaphylactic reactions? I understood them to be quite uncommon. Your statement may still be true because the UK has controlled covid well.
Yeah very uncommon - more details here - but much more common than contracting covid after spending a very brief period at a safe distance from the average person. The characteristics of super-spreader events should provide some clarity on that. At this point the majority of people in the UK have experienced that same 15 minute wait P-Ro is talking about. It is clearly not risk free, bringing large circulations of people into an enclosed space, but it isn't dangerous. The people designing the vaccination centres aren't stupid, and the regulations are pretty straightforward. The country is operating under a 1m+ rule, which is still pretty consertative given the average length of interaction. The post-vaccine waiting areas are much more conservative than that.
You're allowed to complain, but not too much, because on the risks-benefits scale the staff at the centre would have been right. Back in the early days of the vaccine rollout (when case rates were really high) they did things like leaving people sitting outside (under big marquee tops if they were lucky) for the safety check. Near where I live, the centre had a big (closed) pub carpark next door and they had a nurse roaming around it as people did their 15 minutes sat in their cars, so the pedestrians had more space - which was a luxury solution.Any person getting the vaccine should receive it in a safe environment.
You are being quite conservative and under serving to those health care professionals that screen everyone before a jab. A vaccination site is a pretty safe place.
Agreed. Not sure which part you were picking up on but the vaccination centres are clearly set up safely. They have to balance complete safety with the need to process large volumes of people, but they’re not even close to creating undue risks.
If anything the UK variant was more deadly than the original. As far as we can tell the only things making covid less harmful are the vaccines and prior infection, and some of the knowledge that the hospitals have obtained in how to treat the seriously ill. Herd immunity through infection, even if the infection only spreads through the under 40s is not just dangerous for those infected, it's an impossibility from what we've seen so far - the vaccines seem to offer better protection against mutations than prior infection does.Agreed, but she caught the early (stronger) strain. The virus has evolved many times over to harm the host less. This is not a scientific opinion, it's a sort of question.
We're given extensive and detailed information sheets about each vaccine here in Italy, and the AZ sheet said the most "at-risk" group for adverse side-effects are women under 60.Getting my first shot (Pfizer) at the end of the month. My other half has a friend who is a doctor and recommended she avoid the AstraZeneca one for now.
The room where I was supposed to wait for 15mins had about 30 seats and 60 people waiting in there, most of whom were unmasked. I really don't care about any of your opinions on whether you believe this place was safe based on what should have been adhered to and wasn't.
That does sound problematic. And there’s been plenty of reports of people getting infected shortly after their first dose. Which raises the possibility of transmission at vaccination centres.
To be honest, I think you’ve been getting unfair stick here. Not every centre will be run perfectly and it sounds like the place where you got the jab has some issues that need to be sorted.
The room where I was supposed to wait for 15mins had about 30 seats and 60 people waiting in there, most of whom were unmasked. I really don't care about any of your opinions on whether you believe this place was safe based on what should have been adhered to and wasn't.
In general heavy alcohol use does reduced your immune response, including from vaccines, but there is no specific data to suggest that a beer will do much of anything.Having one beer during the tonight's game, day after a jab shouldn't interfere much with the immunity building? I know it is recommended not to consume alcohol around three days before and after, but one beer shouldn't matter much I would think.
The advice posted at the place I went to said no smoking, coffee or alcohol for 2 hours afterwards. The guy next to me went right out for a cig after his jab!In general heavy alcohol use does reduced your immune response, including from vaccines, but there is no specific data to suggest that a beer will do much of anything.
When I had my jab on Friday morning, I noticed quite quickly how brilliantly it was run. This was at the largest vaccination centre in my area and they were vaccinating around 20 people at a time (there were 20 booths with nurses at each). There was someone in the car park to greet, help you find a good space and give you your consent form. There were three people at the door who asked if it was your first or second jab and how you’re feeling that day and made sure you were wearing a mask. Then there were two more on “reception” who checked you in and told you what to expect. Following that I was seated by our current MP and knight of the realm, which I was shocked at because he has a reputation (like a lot of MPs I guess) for not doing much!
He then told me to go to my booth where a really lovely nurse eased my fears, told me about the Pfizer jab I was getting, did some things on the computer then stabbed me with the needle, all very painless, gave me my card and told me to go back to the MP, who sat me down for 15 minutes on a seat that was probably just over a metre away from the next person. Everyone was masked, everything was safe. In and out in 20 minutes max.
Thought I’d post that to show a more positive view of the experience. I suffer with quite a lot of anxiety and if sharing that helps ease the mind of someone also worried about it, then hopefully it’ll have done some good.
Well now I do feel shortchanged! A bloody sticker and a lolly? Lucky sod. Glad it all went well.nice to hear a good story. It’s not all doom and gloom.
mine was equally as easy, albeit on a much smaller scale as it was at a pharmacy, so only a couple of people in at a time.
i got a sticker and a lolly - so well looked after!
in and out in 10-15 mins. Was told I didn’t need to wait the 15 mins as I wasn’t driving.
Well now I do feel shortchanged! A bloody sticker and a lolly? Lucky sod. Glad it all went well.
Not had any symptoms to date either and this is day three. Bit of a sore arm and that’s it. Some of my mates who blagged it early and had AZ have had a bit of a nightmare with sweats, headaches etc
in and out in 10-15 mins. Was told I didn’t need to wait the 15 mins as I wasn’t driving.
When I had my jab on Friday morning, I noticed quite quickly how brilliantly it was run. This was at the largest vaccination centre in my area and they were vaccinating around 20 people at a time (there were 20 booths with nurses at each). There was someone in the car park to greet, help you find a good space and give you your consent form. There were three people at the door who asked if it was your first or second jab and how you’re feeling that day and made sure you were wearing a mask. Then there were two more on “reception” who checked you in and told you what to expect. Following that I was seated by our current MP and knight of the realm, which I was shocked at because he has a reputation (like a lot of MPs I guess) for not doing much!
He then told me to go to my booth where a really lovely nurse eased my fears, told me about the Pfizer jab I was getting, did some things on the computer then stabbed me with the needle, all very painless, gave me my card and told me to go back to the MP, who sat me down for 15 minutes on a seat that was probably just over a metre away from the next person. Everyone was masked, everything was safe. In and out in 20 minutes max.
Thought I’d post that to show a more positive view of the experience. I suffer with quite a lot of anxiety and if sharing that helps ease the mind of someone also worried about it, then hopefully it’ll have done some good.
I'm guessing you got AZ? The advice regarding waiting is different depending on what vaccine you receive.
yes the AZ. Just on that side of the cutoff, as I was 40 last year. Ultimately very happy to be guided by the pros issuing the vaccine.
the nurse joked I had to guard the vaccination card with my life, and people were getting mugged for them. But then this was South London…
all the details were emailed through about 30 mins later. Very smooth.
the only bit they can and should improve is by having a reminder sent through the day before and on the day.
clearly I put it in my diary, but I expect there’s quite a few no shows from people who simply have forgotten the appointment.
I'm assuming the reminders must change per system or location or something as I did get a reminder the day before, but it was the sent from the number by GP usually sends things from.
Yeah certainly feels like AZ has been put on the shelf for now.We're given extensive and detailed information sheets about each vaccine here in Italy, and the AZ sheet said the most "at-risk" group for adverse side-effects are women under 60.
I had my first Pfizer a couple of days ago at a big vaccination centre, everyone there was 60-64 years old. Even though the Italian government said they'd be reserving AZ for the over-60s, the vast majority of people were in the Pfizer queue after they'd had their medical consultation. The powers that be seem to have given up on AZ, now they've finished vaccinating the very elderly people.
About 8.5 million people are fully-vaccinated, around 18.5 million have had one dose (out of a population of c. 60 million). It's not great and there are large regional differences, which reflects the way health services are organised here.Yeah certainly feels like AZ has been put on the shelf for now.
Where are Italy at in terms of population having a dose? Is there any anti-vaccine sentiment there?
Wow. I agree with you. Any chance you could have waited outside?The room where I was supposed to wait for 15mins had about 30 seats and 60 people waiting in there, most of whom were unmasked. I really don't care about any of your opinions on whether you believe this place was safe based on what should have been adhered to and wasn't.