Corona Virus Treatment

Discussion in 'Off-Topic Discussion' started by ricky101, Feb 10, 2020.

  1. JimmyB

    JimmyB Gardener

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    Great stat!
     
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    • Fat Controller

      Fat Controller 'Cuddly' Scottish Admin! Staff Member

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      So you are happy that people are coerced into taking a medical treatment against their will? Because that is what you are saying there - if they don't, there will be consequences.

      Also, our hospitals are NOT full of unvaccinated - that is incorrect. The last ONS stats I read had more vaccinated people in hospital than unvaccinated. The deciding factor for hospitalisation does not seem to be vaccine reliant, but instead underlying health conditions. I have a member of staff currently who's wife is in hospital due to covid, fully vaccinated - but, having had a brain tumor removed 18 months ago and having other lung conditions caused her to need treatment.

      The thing that I really don't understand is this... if someone is vaccinated, that vaccine hopefully protects them from becoming seriously ill if they catch Covid. That is it's job, and it appears that it has done so reasonably effectively, even if in reality that is only for the vulnerable folks. NO vaccine can protect other people, only the recipient, so that little slant that they put on things is utter tosh. The argument that it reduces your viral load is wholly questionable and unprovable. So, if someone has had the vaccine, they are protected. Why then are they worried about someone else choosing to go unvaccinated? It is the unvaccinated person that is taking the risk, not the vaccinated person. If you are telling someone that THEY need to get a vaccine to protect YOU who has had the vaccine, you are essentially saying the vaccine does not work.

      Indeed, one could question the efficacy of it based on the frequency of jabs being dished out - in some cases people are being asked to go back for jab number 4 only 10 weeks after number 3. That isn't even a quarter of the year!

      For someone like me, there is a significant risk to me taking the vaccine - there must be, or they wouldn't have refused me to have it (twice). Now, what happens when some smart-arse consultant comes along and says "No, he is fine, he can have the vaccine" - - but I still have major concerns.. Am I then an "Anti-Vaxxer"? Am I then to be cast out from society?
      Bear in mind that it was the actions of ONE consultant neurologist going against everyone else that put me in hospital in 2018, leaving me disabled for the rest of my life, before you answer that.

      It is NOT cut and dry for many people.

      Also, Covid is now proving to be no more deadly than influenza, especially now that the milder strains such as Omnicron have appeared and more or less wiped out the deadlier strains - and that is on top of the fact that 90% of the country is at least double vaccinated, some even triple vaccinated.

      I know, with my health being what it is, that going into certain circumstances comes with a risk, therefore it is up to me whether I put myself in those circumstances or not. I do not expect the world to have to shut down because my health is fragile. We balance risk on a daily basis in life - hell, I will be using the rotovator on Saturday and could chop my foot off. The chances are low however, so I will use the rotovator.
       
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      • pete

        pete Growing a bit of this and a bit of that....

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        I've been vaccinated and it was my choice to do so, I didn't do it for the health of the bloke down the road who I have never spoken to, or ever likely to.
        The whole way this virus has been run has been about arm twisting and trying to make you think you are doing all these things for others and not for yourself.
        It is true that the vaccine has been a big success and the take up has been high, but I can't help thinking that I stand as much chance of catching covid from someone who is vaccined as from someone unvaccinated .
        It's all part of how things seem to be going these days, the "them and us" society that they are trying to create in order to manipulate thinking and get people to comply,they certainly don't want free thinkers.
         
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        • JimmyB

          JimmyB Gardener

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          No - explicitly I am not saying that. I am deeply unhappy about it.

          I am pointing out that the unvaccinated are choosing to ignore the very real and deadly consequences they are inflicting on their neighbours. There are consquences to not being vaccinated. Serious and deadly consequences.

          I can only go with what 2 close friends, both NHS Consultants (Edinburgh and Bristol), tell me - together with the wide range of easily available credible and authoritative reports. You could try this one from the BMJ in Jan which shows that 66% of ICU beds are occupied by the unvaccinated - from a total population of 25% unvaccinated in the UK. ie massive over-representation of the unvaccinated in hospital.

          I note the personal impacts in my own family of the unavailability of treatment - including emergency treatment when my 20 year old could not breathe at night but could get neither an ambulance nor an X-ray in Bristol, precisely because the hospital was so overwhelmed by the unvaccinated in triage. My elderly Dad who sat chewing opiates in his chair for 9 months with an undiagnosed spinal fracture - because hospitals in Oxford were so overwhelmed by the unvaccinated.

          Tosh eh? Thanks.

          Let me try to make the point more simply: if I am vaccinated I will be less sick or potentially never infected by COVID. This materially reduces the risk of me infecting others. Around me there are those who are vulnerable for a wide range of reasons or immune compromised say, who I protect by being vaccinated and not infecting them either because I never got infected - because I am vaccinated - or because I was infectious for much shorter periods and so less liekly to infect others.

          I didn't make that argument so that's a bit straw man here.

          No. I am pointing out that large numbers of vulnerable people - not one or two - are effectively held hostage in their houses because of the unvaccinated. I would also point out that the continuation of this disease as long as it has been is a direcet result of the refusal of conspiracists to get vaccinated. As the WHO has pointed out repeatedly: refusal to vaccinate gives COVID a much bigger mutational hiding place.

          One could not question the efficacy of COVID vaccines if we looked at the evidence which is categoric and overwhelming. I am not an epidemiologist so I'll leave effiacy to them. And they have concluded virtually unanimously.

          Then I wouldn't take the vaccine. You are following medical advice and you are precisely the category of person that the rest of us should be vaccinated for - to protect you.

          You are an anti-vaxxer if you spread anti-evidence consipracy.

          And that is horrific. And sadly the reality of evidence based medicine being implemented by flawed humans. I would still point out that evidence based medicine has to be better than lay people making it up. Or worse - as happens now - a very well funded, politically motivated, international movement pushing anti-science.

          Agreed. And the hardest bit is how fast this moves and how fast the evidence accumulates. We still only have the evidence to go on though. The issue is people believing that they have a right to intepret the evidence when they do not have the capability to do so.

          I don't think - given the 200k or so dead from COVID in the UK, and the 5milion plus globally, that this is an argument against vaccination.

          Agree. And it isn't simple. But I don't think you being refused the vaccine twice is quite the same as someone believing COVID denialist conspiracy: you are precisely the kind of person who we should be protecting as a society by everyone who can getting vaccinated and wearing a mask.
           
          Last edited: Feb 9, 2022
        • JimmyB

          JimmyB Gardener

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          Well... there are plenty who beleive in society, who think that a minor inconvenience to protect others from long COVID or death in significant numbers is definitely a good thing.

          I'm sorry but the evidence does not support your belief.

          I agree. I just disagree - fundamentally - about who is causing the division, and likely, what a free thinker is.
           
        • pete

          pete Growing a bit of this and a bit of that....

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          A free thinker is someone who looks at all the evidence and then makes up their own mind.
          The whole covid thing has been ridiculous, people wanting to be told if it's ok to meet 1 other person but you mustn't meet 2.
          Questions like is it safe to use public transport.
          These are things you decide for yourself and no one else can tell you what is safe.
          But it's not just covid related, it's about nobody wanting to take responsibility for their own actions these days.
          So ask someone else, and then when it all goes wrong you can blame them.
           
        • JimmyB

          JimmyB Gardener

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          Where are these "free thinkers" getting their evidence from? One of the disasters of life in 2022, is that we have been infected by the disease of opinion: we are encouraged daily to hold opinions on subjects which we know nothing about - by people who have strong financial and vested interests in persuading us to be angry about them. To quote Paul Dacre: "My job is to give the British people something new to be angry about every day".

          And how well he succeeded.

          Again - I go with what the people with PhDs who have spent 30 years studying epidemiology say. If they say reduce your social contact because it reduces infection - I'll just take what they say and not try to second guess it. After all - I am entirely unqualfied in both epidemiology and virology.

          How do you know if it is safe if you are not an epidemiologist? Where does this certainty come from? Any chance it is badly misplaced? 'Safe' is of course a relative concept. But I have no place deciding what is 'safe' in a pandemic if I am not qualified to assess the evidence.

          I too could make this accusation - strongly - about those who choose which 'evidence' they want to adopt. Responsibility for my actions starts with knowing my limits and not beng persuaded to adopt grievance politics about stuff I actually know nothing about.

          In a global pandemic I don't think this really can be said to apply...
           
        • clanless

          clanless Total Gardener

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          Suspension of the AZ vaccine in the EU did have a positive side. The vaccines that the EU refused went early and in numbers to the Nepalese people. So they weren't wasted.

          Apparently AZ provides a wider ranging and longer lasting immunity than others - but then hindsight is a wonderful thing isn't it.
           
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          • JimmyB

            JimmyB Gardener

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            I didn't know that. I have some connections in West Africa and the lack of access to vaccines has been a big issue politically. They have had a very different response to COVID from us. While at one level more suscetible - potentially because of the lower level of vitamin D production in darker skin - the profile of those who died was very different I understand. They have lost more young people than we did for eg - so I am told.

            And yes: an old mate always say 'the hindsight portfolio performs well'. Well - quite! It's why I don't mind honest decisions being wrong. Its the unscrupulous or corrupt ones which make me mad.
             
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            • clanless

              clanless Total Gardener

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              I heard that the age profile in Africa leans more towards younger people than it does in the UK for example. Perhaps this was why Witters wanted to wait and not rely upon the experience of S Africa when it came to Omicron?

              Looks like Boris is getting rid of all restrictions when UK Parliament returns on the 21st. Here in Wales we will hear from Mark tomorrow if he is going to lift restrictions around covid passports and masks - he needs to do something as public good will/co-operation is running thin.
               
            • JimmyB

              JimmyB Gardener

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              Yes - we've lifted all restrictions, and interestingly, all statistical reporting in Jersey today. I understand it: but I seriously worry that this effectively creates a population of people who will feel that they cannot go out.
               
            • Fat Controller

              Fat Controller 'Cuddly' Scottish Admin! Staff Member

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              Re-read your original post. You stated that you are glad there are consequences for those not vaccinated. The only consequence should be that they are at higher risk of serious illness (often by their own choice) - those consequences should not extend to a 'show me your papers' society.


              Indeed, that is a more credible statement than "our hospitals are full of unvaccinated" which was wholly incorrect. However, the thing that a lot of people do not realise is that hospitals with ICU's, the numbers of beds in those ICU's is normally 10-15 at a maximum. Think about that for a moment - 10-15 beds in hospitals that are serving how many tens of thousands of people? The real issue here is that there is a severe lack of ICU beds and ICU trained staff. If that was say 50 beds, then that percentage would be an awful lot lower. As with everything in this pandemic, it is the way that stats are being presented with the sole aim of keeping the fear going.

              Much of this is also down to the availability of carers/care home places outside hospitals. The discharge process is woeful with hospitals often unable to discharge patients who are medically well simply because there is no care package in place or able to be arranged. This in turn means A&E departments cannot move people to wards fast enough so they clog up, not to mention that GP services are in no way doing what they should be doing and merely sending people to A&E instead further clogging A&E up, all of which means ambulances have to sit with patients on board unable to get into A&E.

              The blunt truth here is that the population of this country, one way or another, has increased by over 20 million people in the past 15-20 years and the services available have not increased to accommodate; indeed, Mr Hunt shut a lot of A&E units and GP surgeries, shifting the burden onto hospitals.

              You are welcome ;)

              The argument does not stand up despite how it is being presented. You take a vaccine for you; taking that vaccine can only help you and nobody else. With Omnicron it was reported in the news that those who were vaccinated were more likely to catch it - I suspect that is also the news being a bit stretchy with the truth to be fair and the reality is that it was simply that the variant was likely to spread much, much faster but at the same time be weaker. This trait was noted in prior viruses (Spanish flu for example) that as time went on the spread was more rapid but symptoms less harsh/deadly

              I am well aware of the impact on vulnerable people, because I am one. I have been virtually locked up for over two years. That is not because of the unvaccinated, but simply because my health dictates that if I were to get covid it would likely be severe. The same can be said of flu to be fair.

              How many other vaccines do you require a repeat dose of the same thing every 10-12 weeks?

              You intentions are honourable, but if you are carrying covid, even as a vaccinated person, there is a risk I can get it.

              The difficulty here is that scientists who question or put an alternative view are being shut out of debate/discussion entirely - hell, one of the doctors (his name escapes me currently) who was involved in the invention of the mRNA technology used in the vaccines has only recently suffered exactly that fate. When did we make the move to excluding scientists and learned people just because their viewpoint doesn't fit? The same could be said of all the doctors in the NHS who have refused to have the vaccine - these are clever people, they have made an informed and rational decision, yet effectively are called anti-vaxxer for questioning things? Come on, surely you can see there is something not right with that picture?
               
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              • Fat Controller

                Fat Controller 'Cuddly' Scottish Admin! Staff Member

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                It was and still is, and I also agree that evidence based medicine is still better than politically motivated movements - - however, you miss the point. I am in touch with three departments in hospitals who are trying to work out if I may be able to have the vaccine. This is a good thing, but at the end of the day they may be left saying that they cannot find a reason not to, but the risk could still exist. The vaccine manufacturers have been absolved of any liability, so who takes liability if I am put in a position where I am essentially forced to take it to get my life back but then I end up severely disabled needing lifelong care?

                I think the real issue is that evidence based medicine in this case is being applied in a 'one size fits all' way - - but in reality, it doesn't. That is why personal choice is vital

                People have the right to question, especially when other people's decisions are having a massive impact on their lives AND the information/data being given is little more than lies or scaremongering. Remind yourself of what SAGE and Mr Whitty etc said only a matter of weeks ago with Omnicron - - graphs saying we were going to be knee deep in bodies again and yet it was nowhere near as bad.

                Hold on there - you cannot use the total for the entire pandemic in relation to the most recent and much less nasty variant, just as I cannot argue that things were horrendous at the start and against the variants that were around then the vaccine was a much needed tool. If your car had an oil leak and you were topping it up until you got to the garage, then they sealed the leak would you keep adding oil every week? The landscape changed and continues to do so.

                Yet, I am getting treated as such and there are many in society who are screaming to have various restrictions and consequences for anyone without a vaccine. My real worry is that if I turn round in three or four months time and say that I don't think the benefits of the vaccine to me outweigh the risks, I will then suddenly be an anti-vaxxer and one of those that people want to exclude from society. We are on a dangerous path, and unless we get some sense back into this discussion and stop excluding voices just because we don't agree with them, we are finished.
                 
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                • JimmyB

                  JimmyB Gardener

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                  No - re-read it: you said coercion. I said not happy with coercion. I am happy if there are consequences for the unvaccinated, and in the light of the conversation, I'll caveat that further - and say 'deliberately and for no reason unvaccinated'. The point being, that choice not to vaccinate for no good reason has serious consequences for others.

                  But the consequence is that they risk killing their neighbours. If I live up a mountain and never see anyone - who cares! Not me. But if I'm out and about...then yes. There are consquences to others. I've lived with an immune suppressed child (through the MMR stupidity in N London too) and I was raging then about the anti-vaxxers who endangered my child's life. But it was the stupidity of believing lies that was the issue - not those who had genuine medical issues to consider.

                  Absolutely. All of the public measures have been about protecting the vulnerable, and keeping our hospitals going.

                  Knowing a few involved in presenting COVID policy to the general public I just do not beleive this. I do not think there is any agenda to keep people scared. On the contrary in fact. A serious awareness of the factual risks: we need folks to face that.

                  Absolutely. I read Allyson Pollock's excellent academic examination of what has happened to the NHS since 1997...it's an absolute tragedy, starting with the introduction of the internal market (I'm an accountant by trade way back when, and this insanity really did hurt the NHS very badly), followed by the creeping privatisation, the cuts to funding and Hunt's change to the fundamentals in 2012 when he removed the statutory obligation to provide healthcare from the Health Minister. The NHS simultaneously changed its mandate from providing excellent care, to providing adequate care. These were not small changes. The NHS is a shadow of itself and the population has been persuaded that we cannot afford a proper health service. We might note that come the moment, our current government was able to find and lose £38bn on PPE of which a staggering £20bn cannot be accounted for.

                  So yes. The state of the NHS matters. But it's not the only factor.

                  Indirectly - and that's not a small indirect, it's massive - me being vaccinated clearly protects others. Even more so with masks. Masks don't protect me: they protect others from me.

                  You'd be right to be sceptical of any 'news' source that claimed the vaccinated were more likely to catch Omicron than the unvaccinated. This is where the source of info really matters. So when I google there are a lot of sites out there talking about this topic. But the ones that are going to be evidence based and reliable are WHO, CDC, BMJ - etc. In this case, the CDC has a good article: COVID-19 Incidence and Death Rates Among Unvaccinated ...

                  It's a bit tough going but the basic them is clear: Omicron infection is MUCH higher among the unvaccinated - and the impacts of getting it are much worse.

                  But had we had better vaccine take up... you'd have been a lot safer! For those who are vulnerable and cannmot be vaccinated, it's just not that difficult for the rest of us to get the shot.

                  I worked for an aid agency for a while, and have been part of the team getting a cold-chain of yellow fever into refugee camps in Guinea (as the finance guy I had to make sure it got there and was put into peoples' arms). It makes me laugh when the uber-anti-vaxxers get going: I want to say - pop out and see what a dose of yellow fever or typhoid can do when it gets going among the unvaccinated.

                  Don't know - I'm not an epidemiologist! I'll go with what they say.

                  Yup - a much lower risk. Surely we should go with that?

                  So the guy you mention is Robert Malone - and he is effectively a flat earther. He is making a fortune out of his position - and has been rejected entirely by his colleagues and profession. Think of it this way: if he actually had a point, he'd win a nobel prize. As it is, he has zero evidence for his position, but does very nciely from the lucrative business of anti-vaxx. Blood on his hands

                  Never - and we haven't. We should though exclude flat eathers and their ilk. (Amusingly I have a young colleague with a 1st in Maths from Warwick who does actually believe the earth is flat. It's very difficult to have a social conversation with him!)

                  This is too general a group: I can't argue here against such a generalisation. But in all groups, including scientists, there are some who are irrational sadly. There is no rational reason for not getting the shot if you are medically able to do so. The evidence is absolutely overwhelmingly in favour of it. For this to be not true, we have to conclude that either 1) there is a huge conspiracy involving millions of scientists and doctors around the world or 2) these folks are wrong in an epic flat earth type way.

                  The much more likely scenario is that there are a few cranks like my colleague out there whos views are a bit inexplicable.

                  Produce some evidence to the contrary and the world is listening. I am aware of no such - just some generalised 'fears' which just is not good enough.
                   
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                  • clanless

                    clanless Total Gardener

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                    Oh Vaughan - just look at the numbers - it's time to end all restrictions. You are not making yourself 'popular' with the electorate. You're also messing up the Welsh economy - people will simply shop across the border where masks are not required.

                    Wales remaining Covid laws - including on face coverings and self-isolation - could be scrapped by the end of March.
                     
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