NinjaFletch
Full Member
- Joined
- Sep 30, 2009
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I think I feel more stupid for having some hope that they wouldn't feck up the vaccine than annoyed they're fecking up the vaccine.
I think maybe they have the army involved. There’s probably a degree of pre-existing organization there which is helping facilitate progress.
You may add:On a different note, Israel has now given first jabs to over 1m people, about 12% of the population, and are currently dispensing about 125k/Pfizer vaccines per day.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-55514243
Anybody know how logistically their rollout is being done? Mass vaccination centres, minimal paperwork? Or something else?
Pfizer presumably? Let us know what aches and pains you get!Got my first jab just now.
Pfizer presumably? Let us know what aches and pains you get!
Got my first jab just now.
It's a nice change to see a graph where having a steep upward slope is good news.Here’s some good data on vaccine rollout for us all to get competitive about. Dunno what the hell they’re doing in Israel but I’m deeply jealous of them anyway.
I'm sure the CEO of Pfizer appreciates your devotionTwo doses, exactly 21 days apart. Vaccination as God intended.
Maybe it will. Maybe it won’t. We don’t know. All we can go on is an educated guess. I’m assuming they’ve looked at the level of immune response from the Pfizer vaccine and the Oxford one from Phase 2/3 and determined that if the latter lasts 12 weeks then there’s nothing to suggest the former won’t either. Also the fact one dose was 52% after 10 days and second was 96% after 7 (you’ve got to think the effects of the first dose had an impact in that... ) My understanding was both vaccines after one dose provided a bigger antibody level than someone with severe covid - I could be wrong on that as this was way back in august which feels like a lifetime ago now! The reason we don’t know is like you’ve said - the data isn’t there because they didn’t test for it. All the initial green book said was you can’t give the second dose under 19 days.
Also your assertion in your previous post that they haven’t factored in the trade offs is just wrong. Of course they’ve thought about the negatives when making the decision. Everything to do with COVID is about taking the least worst option. Nobody WANTS to take this course but looking at the bigger picture of a new highly contagious variant, a less compliant public, hospital admissions already through the roof and an already jaded/depleted NHS workforce they’ve decided prioritising first dose over second is the course to take. What people aren’t getting is they’ve been holding back distribution of the Pfizer vaccine because they couldn’t guarantee the second dose would be available. This 40m doses you hear in the news is bollocks. The supply isn’t there. After April hopefully it will be. If the evidence from other countries is our immunity is likely to wane based on this dosing regime then we’ll just start over again with the supply and infrastructure in place and hopefully COVID not quite so rampant. This is all about getting through the next 12 weeks. The CMOs will have access to data we don’t and will be looking at the bigger picture - I’m choosing to trust them and being closer on the ground to this than most on here I seriously think it’s a no-brainier giving what we know now. It may be the start of a chain of events that result in a new vaccine resistant variant that completely screws up the world but I’m going to choose to not think about that for now.
Im a healthy 32 year old with no underlying conditions,
5 million people in Ireland which means we have to vaccinate over 13k people a day to get to me who is probably last on the list
I dont see myself getting this until 2022 as its just not matemathically or logistically possible to do that many people every day
Im a healthy 32 year old with no underlying conditions,
5 million people in Ireland which means we have to vaccinate over 13k people a day to get to me who is probably last on the list
I dont see myself getting this until 2022 as its just not matemathically or logistically possible to do that many people every day
I was thinking to myself last night that they should use this latest lockdown to vaccinate 20% of the population. I mean go thermonuclear on it. Working 12 hour days, hiring double or triple what they would normally employ.
Feels like a lack of urgency in Ireland right now. I wonder do we actually have the supplies to move faster? And if not, why not?
Not sure really. My aunt in a nursing home said she was been vaccinated in early January.
Apparently we’re due to receive 40,000 doses per week. Surely that’s nowhere near enough?
Why though? The issue is a lack of supply right now but once that's sorted I don't see an issue. 13k a day shouldn't be a problem even for a small country like Ireland.Im a healthy 32 year old with no underlying conditions,
5 million people in Ireland which means we have to vaccinate over 13k people a day to get to me who is probably last on the list
I dont see myself getting this until 2022 as its just not matemathically or logistically possible to do that many people every day
Feels like a lack of urgency in Ireland right now. I wonder do we actually have the supplies to move faster? And if not, why not?
Apparently we’re due to receive 40,000 doses per week. Surely that’s nowhere near enough?
The equivalent story for EU procurement is outlined in:
https://www.spiegel.de/internationa...es-a-3db4702d-ae23-4e85-85b7-20145a898abd-amp
Their report is on the pessimistic side - it assumes no AZ, and doesn't really look at the (likely) ramp up of J&J and Novavax, which could be ready for approval/shipment late Q1/early Q2. But according to what I've seen the EU are really in no better shape than the UK when it comes to Pfizer/Moderna. Everyone is hoping for AZ, and relying on J&J/Novavax as backups for Q2 onwards.
There is a significant element of (bad) luck involved in picking and choosing winners
I think she's trying to explain what the real plan is.Does this not contradict the UK's current plan? Unless I'm mistaken, this feels like a very real/public/tragic soap opera unfolding in front of us.
EU should have bet on all the horses. The money to buy the vaccines is meaningless compared to the gdp losses not to mention health aspects. Then if you end up with too many, just donate it. Huge unforgivable feck up from EU.I think it's more of an EU thing than an Ireland thing. And there is good reason to believe more vaccines will be added to the supply early-ish this year. These two stories provide some good context for the current supply issues, which roll down to every country because a limited supply in the early stages is spread out equally. There is a significant element of luck involved in picking and choosing winners, but the EU's approach was particularly cautious, with lower risks and more options but a slower roll-out. The US got a little lucky that they picked the right winners early, but they also took a lot of risk and invested a lot of money to have that kind of supply if things went as they expected. The EU wanted to wait a little longer and spread it out over more vaccines.
Im a healthy 32 year old with no underlying conditions,
5 million people in Ireland which means we have to vaccinate over 13k people a day to get to me who is probably last on the list
I dont see myself getting this until 2022 as its just not mathematically or logistically possible to do that many people every day
Why though? The issue is a lack of supply right now but once that's sorted I don't see an issue. 13k a day shouldn't be a problem even for a small country like Ireland.
If I’m reading it right, the Der Spiegal article kind of implies it may not have been entirely down to bad luck:
“Why were only 300 million doses of a vaccine secured that had already demonstrated 95 percent efficacy in clinical trials at the time? One that had been hailed as a sensation and was already on its way to regulatory approval? German Health Minister Spahn pushed for more to be purchased, but he failed to prevail in the end due to opposition from several EU member countries -- in part, apparently, because the EU had ordered only 300 million doses from the French company Sanofi. "That’s why buying more from a German company wasn't in the cards,” says one insider familiar with the negotiations. The European Commission has denied that version of events, saying it isn’t true that Paris took massive steps to protect Sanofi.”
EU should have bet on all the horses. The money to buy the vaccines is meaningless compared to the gdp losses not to mention health aspects. Then if you end up with too many, just donate it. Huge unforgivable feck up from EU.
Easy to say now because we all know which vaccines won the race. Even so, if Pfizer had been able to ramp up production as fast as they hoped, the timing wouldn't be looking as bad - basically all their Q1 delivery quantities (for the early adopters/buyers) have been halved.I read last night somewhere that the EU did not order enough.
I think the cost/benefit/risk scenarios were so asymmetric that it was no-brainer to order enough of every top5-8 vaccines. But I don’t think either of us will change our view on this, so happy to leave it hereThe Der Spiegel article is particularly critical and does involve a bit of vaccine nationalism in the Germany vs. France point there, but yeah it is unquestionably true that it wasn’t wholly or even majorly down to bad luck. It was a calculated decision that so far they appear to have misjudged. But as @jojojo says that could change with J+J and Novavax. With a bit of luck there will be some very positive results in the next month and it could change the equation a lot. But the challenges of the vaccine rollout that experts warned about but decision makers hopefully dismissed are becoming more clear every week. The seamless rollout is a fantasy and the reality is still quite tough.
I do agree they should have made a different call and they misjudged the financial risk of too many early failures vs too few early successes. But I can understand their decision making. Europe’s finances had taken a big hit by Q3 and I think they expected countries to manage the winter wave better, so the risks vs rewards seemed a little different. So I wouldn’t say it was unforgivable at this point. Things might turn around.
I actually think the administration of the vaccines has been worse than the procurement in some European countries at this point. France for example need to do a lot more quickly.
I heard from a friend at the ECB (who tends to be pretty clued up on all things EU) that Paris acted like absolute morons in shaping the EU vaccine purchasing strategy.If I’m reading it right, the Der Spiegal article kind of implies it may not have been entirely down to bad luck:
“Why were only 300 million doses of a vaccine secured that had already demonstrated 95 percent efficacy in clinical trials at the time? One that had been hailed as a sensation and was already on its way to regulatory approval? German Health Minister Spahn pushed for more to be purchased, but he failed to prevail in the end due to opposition from several EU member countries -- in part, apparently, because the EU had ordered only 300 million doses from the French company Sanofi. "That’s why buying more from a German company wasn't in the cards,” says one insider familiar with the negotiations. The European Commission has denied that version of events, saying it isn’t true that Paris took massive steps to protect Sanofi.”
I think the cost/benefit/risk scenarios were so asymmetric that it was no-brainer to order enough of every top5-8 vaccines. But I don’t think either of us will change our view on this, so happy to leave it here
Im a healthy 32 year old with no underlying conditions,
5 million people in Ireland which means we have to vaccinate over 13k people a day to get to me who is probably last on the list
I dont see myself getting this until 2022 as its just not matemathically or logistically possible to do that many people every day
Yes, it is. The army supports the healthcare system by taking care of civilians. Newly medical centres co-managed by both parties.. parkings transformed into health centres for routine procedures...
You may add:
(1) They started to buy vaccines last June while clinical trials were note over.
(2) Political agility of a country in permanent state of war/political insecurity
(3) Authoritarian management style typical of the Middle East
Apparently there are loads of “spare” vaccines being touted round on whatsapp groups and the like at the end of every day. Clinics are defrosting a certain amount at the beginning of each session but (amazingly!) not everyone is turning up. So they’re left with a load of doses that will have to get chucked out unless they find a spare arm to stick them in. Hospitals are offering any available staff the chance to rock up at the end of the day and community centres are looking round for someone, anyone, who is available/interested, via whatsapp groups, message boards, whatever. All completely ad hoc. Trying to do the right thing but making it up as they go along.
I’m sure everyone is doing their level best but how in the name of FECK could contigency plans not have been put in place for these scenarios weeks ago? Soul destroying to hear of potentially wasted doses when we know supply is going to be so tight in weeks/months ahead.
Apparently there are loads of “spare” vaccines being touted round on whatsapp groups and the like at the end of every day. Clinics are defrosting a certain amount at the beginning of each session but (amazingly!) not everyone is turning up. So they’re left with a load of doses that will have to get chucked out unless they find a spare arm to stick them in. Hospitals are offering any available staff the chance to rock up at the end of the day and community centres are looking round for someone, anyone, who is available/interested, via whatsapp groups, message boards, whatever. All completely ad hoc. Trying to do the right thing but making it up as they go along.
I’m sure everyone is doing their level best but how in the name of FECK could contigency plans not have been put in place for these scenarios weeks ago? Soul destroying to hear of potentially wasted doses when we know supply is going to be so tight in weeks/months ahead.
There's a vaccination centre near me, and they planned for this by having a call list of local health care and other key workers that they'd call up for any spare doses. There's always going to be people who don't turn up, especially the very old and infirm who might come down sick, or have a fall, or be reliant on transport from someone else that falls through, so I don't find it that surprising.
Feels like a lack of urgency in Ireland right now. I wonder do we actually have the supplies to move faster? And if not, why not?
Why though? The issue is a lack of supply right now but once that's sorted I don't see an issue. 13k a day shouldn't be a problem even for a small country like Ireland.