Yep but I'm not sure which segments of viral rna the pcr amplifies and detects if they are bits that code for spike I guess a vaccine could in theory of itself be detected by pcr but I see no way it could get to the swab.
All of which is to say I don't know the answer for sure but it sounds highly improbable.
This is not flu , unless i have misread and you are talking about flu not covid ?In this particular instance we are. Some people get Flu twice in a season
No way , those are weekend and holidays figures , meaningless today really , the worst is yet to come , mid jan will be worse , sadlycould we have seen the peak?
I get that but both tested negative with the short test.I'm gonna guess that's normal either way given it doesn't stop people from catching it. Just prevents severe illness right?
I’m not convinced Christmas Day will be the big spreader a lot think. Most families I know only seemed to see grandparents if anyone from outside their households, and then only for a few hours with precautions. There doesn’t seem to much meeting through the rest of the holiday period.27 are now dead in Belgium in that care home I mentioned the other day where an unaware but then already infected Santa visited them as a treat on 5 December.
Turned out to be a super spreader.
What a tragic tale of why we should never have sanctioned a normal Christmas Day as that will have happened to families all over the UK but the consequences of it are two or three weeks away.
I don’t think by any objective analysis, Christmas Day just gone could be described as ‘normal’.27 are now dead in Belgium in that care home I mentioned the other day where an unaware but then already infected Santa visited them as a treat on 5 December.
Turned out to be a super spreader.
What a tragic tale of why we should never have sanctioned a normal Christmas Day as that will have happened to families all over the UK but the consequences of it are two or three weeks away from being realised.
like you say AstraZeneca seem confident in being able to deliver a couple of million per week so fingers crossed, hopefully it works as intended and we can start more widespread vaccinations early Spring. The data will be coming in and hopefully reinforcing the trial results and providing more evidence of longevity and efficacy and hopefully re-assure the rest of the population and give us a solid path forward with which we can prepare for next winter, ideally maybe working to combine it into 1 shot as a flu jab top-up in September/October.So 530,000 Oxford jabs available Monday that's how many per GP surgery?
Until more arrives I can see why they are giving those 530,000 one jab - otherwise they would run out in a day or two.
Hope the plan for 2 million a week from mid January does not slip.
With it we might have a chance of reverting to the planned regime.
But these next 8 or 9 weeks are going to be cruel on many families whilst we race to play catch up. with the virus
A lot of people I know treated it as such - going house to house to see family.I don’t think by any objective analysis, Christmas Day just gone could be described as ‘normal’.
I think the main way point mutations get identified is through whole genome sequencing with genomics done on a sampled basis rather than by pcr testing.Good point.
I think the PCR probably does the whole lot that is there - it's the way the point mutations get identified.
I'd therefore hope that testing would be able to demarcate between the spike only and the whole thing.
Daughter‘s school emailed, mailed, all parents last Wednesday to tell them school was closed next week, 11-16.I assume we’ll have to wait until the papers tonight to see if there’s going to be a change in the school issue. Surely they won’t leave it until literally the night before...
I could have told them it was closed on 16th ffs!Daughter‘s school emailed, mailed, all parents last Wednesday to tell them school was closed next week, 11-16.
My personal experience is most of my family and friends had a quiet, limited Christmas. A few broke the rules and did Boxing Day instead (as that’s what they had planned). However, with children aged between 18 and 30, nieces and nephews of the same age, I don’t feel so optimistic about NYE. My son was working, but most of his friend were at parties. A lot of his mates who are at uni went back to their student accommodation for get togethers. I went running with a teacher friend this afternoon and her late-teenage kids were all at parties.I’m not convinced Christmas Day will be the big spreader a lot think. Most families I know only seemed to see grandparents if anyone from outside their households, and then only for a few hours with precautions. There doesn’t seem to much meeting through the rest of the holiday period.
I’m sure there were instances of bad behaviour, however I wonder if that will be counter balanced by most of us off work, and schools on holiday. Pubs and restaurants in most places shut except takeaway.
Not saying there won’t be Christmas spread, just not sure we will see it as a big rise from where we are with cases from the last few weeks.