With the bans on foreign travel, our beaches are going to be busier this year than last year. Looking forward to bbc news interviewing sunbathers expressing their “surprise” that so many people are there once again. Yawn.
My mum is 73 and had the Oxford jab in Eccles today, she didn’t have to wait for the 15 minutes observation although said some people had to so presumably they had Pfizer. Could be basing it on age in some locations?I’d also add according to Scottish figures so far 45% of over 80s have been done and 96% of total vaccinations so far were with the pfizer which surprised me this afternoon. Don’t know for England.
Is it possible Pfizer is being used on the older and most vulnerable first, maybe most over 70s?
I have a quick read and it doesnt say it is extremely likely to last longer , trials report findings and not surmising past thatOnly pulling your leg - good quote but add at the end “and extremely likely to last longer”
How come none of the other 27 countries took the chance then?And yet again, we have done nothing that EU membership precluded us from.
As confirmed by the head of the MHRA.
Just a follow up to this story...
It surely wouldn't make sense to approve it at all if efficacy is only 8%? The Sanofi/GSK vaccine has had to start the whole trial process again as it was shown to be effective for younger age groups but far less for older groups. You can't imagine that one was only 8% either.I will speculate.
The UK information for healthcare professionals quotes:
The number of COVID-19 cases (2) in 660 participants ≥65 years old were too few to draw conclusions on efficacy
and
However, in this subpopulation, immunogenicity data are available, see below.
In other words, the trial proved efficacy in the overall population, but the approval depends on showing equivalent immune response (antibody generation) in older subjects rather than efficacy directly.
My guess is that the very small numbers in the older age group means there is a very large confidence interval on efficacy in that age group, and the lower limit of the confidence interval is 8%. If so, it absolutely does not mean efficacy is 8%, and the MHRA view is that the demonstration of equivalent immune response is sufficient to justify temporary authorisation.
As I said, just speculation.
God you are relentlessWith the bans on foreign travel, our beaches are going to be busier this year than last year. Looking forward to bbc news interviewing sunbathers expressing their “surprise” that so many people are there once again. Yawn.
Mines 79 and she had the Oxford (only 1 so far), my dad 82 had Pfizer, and he's had both doses.My mum is 73 and had the Oxford jab in Eccles today, she didn’t have to wait for the 15 minutes observation although said some people had to so presumably they had Pfizer. Could be basing it on age in some locations?
Sounds like the Der Spiegel hatchet job on City. Shithouses won’t fess up who their source is. Oxford/AZ should take it to CAS