He said a small sense of normality, so that would include pubs re-opening .Pubs re opening, really?
He said a small sense of normality, so that would include pubs re-opening .Pubs re opening, really?
I concur. I had my first ever flu jab yesterday. Took 2 weeks to get an appointment date but was in and out of the GP surgery in a couple of minutes. Assume the Covid vaccine will be just as easy to administer. As long as they all have the supplies, it ought to run as smoothly I’d imagine.There has been a huge increase in people eligible to receive the flu jab this winter and record numbers have had it. This didn't involve any special measures and it was delivered by the normal routes...hospitals, health centres and pharmacies. The vaccine jab is just as simple to administer so with the large scale centres being set up all around the country we should be able to do huge numbers very rapidly. It is far simpler than testing people too.
Don't think infertility is an issue with the majority of people in about the top 7 priorities on the list, I mean 50''s+ with underlying health conditions wouldn't be too arsed. All the conspiracy dick heads will be out in numbers, fuck em, I'd definitely get the vaccine passport going and leave those lot to a miserable life, could be banned from working in certain environments as well.The list of things that can make us infertile or at least make us struggle with fertility is already longer than Arsene Wenger's coat, and that's assuming the list font size is the same size as those hobbyists use to write on rice grains with a feather.
Not in the Moss.Pubs re opening, really?
Is her GP surgery participating?See I wonder how people are selected. If it's age then an 89 year old should be vaccinated first. I would have thought they'd have been given some indication but they've heard nothing. I doubt there are thousands made it over eighty in with but I might be wrong.
That’s absolutely fine with mejust spoke with a lad i know and apparently the oxford one has something in it to make you infertile.i just laughed and said shame it wasnt about when your mum was childbearing age.
Full protection is two weeks after the second doseBrilliant, ta. Do you have a source for that? Just wanna read more about it.
Monday is a decent turnaround mate, given that it’s Wednesday and the vaccine has to be delivered and extra workforce capacity deployed above that for dishing out the Pfizer and flu vaccines. People also have to be contacted to attend to receive the vaccine.
Got a link to that? Trying to find it.BBC
Both the Pfizer and Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccines require two doses to provide the best possible protection.
Initially, the strategy for the Pfizer vaccine was to offer people the second dose 21 days after their initial jab - full immunity starts seven days after the second dose.
But when approval was announced for the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine on 30 December, it was also announced that the policy would now change - the new priority would be to give as many people a first shot of either vaccine, rather than providing the required two doses in as short a time as possible.
Everyone will still receive their second dose, but this will now be within 12 weeks of their first.
So does this mean the Pfizer goes to 12 weeks from now for dose 2?
I drink a double JD every day and have not had flu since 1970 and never get colds.I wasn’t saying it prevents Covid.
just saying running every day from my personal experience has prevented me from getting a cold, headache or anything really, may just be a coincidence but before I took up running I was always getting ill all the time