Unlikely to be your immune system in such a short time. More likely you were not infected.Maybe you rejected the virus through your immune system, or the virus rejected you ;) Always good to hear of negatives.
Unlikely to be your immune system in such a short time. More likely you were not infected.Maybe you rejected the virus through your immune system, or the virus rejected you ;) Always good to hear of negatives.
I agree and you clearly clearly know more than I in this field. However, if the regulator agrees its safe at either dose as that report says then its doesn't matter, they just need to approve and get it rolled out. Delaying it needlessly to see which is the more effective does will surely result in more deaths in the interim, just go with one and half jabs? That's the point i was trying to make. Cheers
The X axis is time and the y axis is number of cases so essentially 10 days after the first dose there were very few cases in the vaccine group(8)but in the placebo group they were accumulating at a steady rate.what are the axis measuring?
See Oxford had 2 notable problematic events associated with it, would like to see more explanation on those going forward. Let's see how Pfizer does in the real world.
They have a better outcome but the incidence of symptomatic covid is not known to be different as far as I'm aware and the placebo comparator for the low dose had 68% women.The Lancet Study shows that not only was the LD regime younger in age profile it was skewed to have 65% women who as we all know have a better Covid outcome. The other populations were also skewed towards women but not so much.
The Telegraph report on the Lancet article is more negative than I expected and seems to imply that the Oxford vaccine will not be of much use in the next few months as the only dose regime likely to be approved has no established evidence of preventing onward transmission - which they think is essential in a wider use of a vaccine to prevent spread.
Given how much the UK seems reliant on this one vaccine over the next few months as the US one seems to be in shorter supply than we have been suggesting. Not 10 million doses but more than 5 is what they were seemingly saying this morning.
Then is that negativity over reaching by the paper or a genuine concern? As the mood here seems better. And some of you will understand the science much better than I do.
Two things I love about this clip, the old fella answering and comments
and at the 3:48 tume a man casually walks in the background yand in pocket carrying a door on his shoulders :-)
Thank you Hope that's it. But negative publicity will not help the drive to get people to take it and 'which one are you giving me?' will be trending no doubt!The Telegraph has gone very click baity as it chases subscribers (I have a modded app to get premium for free). I read that article before seeing your post & I thought it was shite (the article).
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Thank you Hope that's it. But negative publicity will not help the drive to get people to take it and 'which one are you giving me?' will be trending no doubt!
My daughter got her second dose of the Novavax vaccine today as part of the trial. She was chatting to the Stepping Hill nurse who was administering it and asked how soon SHE would be given the vaccine. The nurse said she would hold out for the Novavax as she knew more about it. But that could take months as the trial only started the end of September.I imagine a problem will be asking people to take a vaccine that has a 60% or so efficacy and has had doubts cast on it versus the one being used now that has a claimed much higher success.
How many are going to say they will wait until they can have the 'better' one? I can see that being an issue.
Because when she comes on tv having ago at someone for breaking the rules it willl come straight back at her.
Unlikely to be your immune system in such a short time. More likely you were not infected.