Paul O Mahoney
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The headline says that but its denied by ministers in the first paragraph.Macron accused of holding out for French Covid vaccine
President Macron’s government has been accused of delaying its Covid-19 inoculation campaign to give a French company time to prepare its vaccine.Ministers havwww.thetimes.co.uk
Some people like to defend incompetence for whatever reasons.
The repeated hint that other countries possibly are not successfully distributing the vaccine in a correct way is baseless.
Ireland is "a bit behind"...
The BBC had an interesting report on this saying that in France the delay is largely due to elaborate protocols for obtaining informed consent among the elderly/mentally impaired who are first in the vaccination queue. Like in Ireland, they take these issues seriously as both countries have had various scandals in the past with people receiving treatment without their informed consent and in response to this they enacted stringent regulations. That's a very good thing and respectful of people's human dignity. But what I don't understand is why they don't just start vaccinating people whose consent is less problematic to obtain while working with those for whom it takes a bit longer and then vaccinate them if and when their consent is forthcoming. There's no logical need for the consent issue to hold up everything else.Doubt it's that. There is a high level of vacine sceptisim in France (only 40% say they will take the vaccine). I think I read that the French were slow rolling it out initially to ensure there were no issues and negative publicity. I believe they intend to ramp up.
Might go to France to get the jab if they don't want it - more availability
I know - German politicians and French Opposition say similiar as the headline thoughThe headline says that but its denied by ministers in the first paragraph.
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L'eurodéputé EELV Yannick Jadot a dénoncé lundi 4 janvier le «fiasco» de la stratégie vaccinale française, dont Emmanuel Macron est selon lui responsable, et de l'industrie hexagonale avec un vaccin de Sanofi qui ne devrait pas être disponible avant fin 2021.
Il a fustigé sur Radio Classique et Le Figaro un gouvernement qui a lancé «à reculons» la campagne de vaccination avec le vaccin de Pfizer/BioNTech, et évoqué «le bruit qui court à Bruxelles que la France a joué Sanofi au maximum, a contraint d'ailleurs l'Europe probablement - c'est ce que dit la presse allemande - à privilégier Sanofi contre les autres vaccins, d'où le fait qu'on ait cette forme de réticence vis-à-vis de Pfizer». Le député européen a, à cet égard, dénoncé un «fiasco industriel français», puisque le vaccin français ne devrait être prêt qu'à la fin 2021. Il juge que cette situation met la France «dans une situation dramatique» et est le résultat d'un «mélange d'amateurisme, d'incompétence, de prétention, d'arrogance».
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15314 as of today according to Paul Reid this afternoon4000 as per 4th of January
9000 over 3 days seems reasonable at this stage15314 as of today according to Paul Reid this afternoon
9000 over 3 days seems reasonable at this stage
Not really since their stated aim was 35-40,000 a week. They are only on track for half that. What is being attempted is a huge logistical operation. There are going to be delays and I can only imagine how much stress the people involved in this are feeling. The issue is that you have HSE Management and Politicians making promises that other people who are relying on other people who are relying on other people have to deliver. The supply and delivery chains are huge. They need to completely honest here and tell us if and where the delays are. I think people will accept supply constraints as being out of control but I don't think people will accept logistical issues around delivery that no-one will admit to because they are somehow afraid of negative publicity or being protective of their jobs. I don't want to be hearing about IT system issues causing a delay and still be talking about it in 3 months.... We need to throw the full resources of public and private sector at this. We can't control the physical delivery of vaccines but we can control a lot other things.
A nurse on the radio yesterday from an ICU ward and she has no idea when she will be getting her vaccine. She hasn't been told yet!
Considering that the vaccine may only last a year or two we might never get out of lockdown. We're all doomed!!!"Vaccine target would need a miracle as current jab rate would take us YEARS to complete"Vaccine target would need a miracle as current jab rate would take us YEARS to complete - Extra.ie
A Promised August target for anybody who wants to be vaccinated 'would be miraculous', a leading health expert said last night.extra.ie
Israel meanwhile might be finished with the Vaccination campaign by end of March:
Israel, already leading the world in rolling out the COVID-19 vaccines, aims to immunize entire country by the end of March
"We will be the first country in the world to emerge from the coronavirus," Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said.www.businessinsider.com
Considering that the vaccine may only last a year or two we might never get out of lockdown. We're all doomed!!!
Paul Reid was stating at the weekend that the HSE are planning on the basis of delivering 1 million doses per month of the Astra Zeneca vaccine (which falls into the category of one of those that can be much more easily transported) if it is approved. This might sound optimistic on the basis of evidence to date but if this can be delivered at that rate then the picture could look very different in a month or two's time.What we really need is a single dose vaccine that doesn't need the special handling of the Pfizer one, and can be rolled out like flu vaccine easily through the GP and pharmacy network to the vast majority of the population. There are candidates in development along those lines.
Paul Reid was stating at the weekend that the HSE are planning on the basis of delivering 1 million doses per month of the Astra Zeneca vaccine (which falls into the category of one of those that can be much more easily transported) if it is approved. This might sound optimistic on the basis of evidence to date but if this can be delivered at that rate then the picture could look very different in a month or two's time.
The Oxford vaccine is cheap and easy to distribute.That's good news for year 1.
For next year and the years after, if we have to get into a cycle of annual vaccinations like the flu vaccine, then to be practicable we need a cheap and easy to distribute vaccine.
The Oxford vaccine is cheap and easy to distribute.
Just reading an article on Barrons, this is usually behind a pay wall but Ugur Sahin CEO of Biontech said yesterday that they are working on the temperature issue and should have "an improved termostable formulation later this year"Johnson & Johnson have a 2-dose and 1-dose trial, and can be stored in the fridge. Interim report due on 1-dose trial by month end:
I would think that Isreal is unique in that all the data it holds on its population.Yes some countries manage to have a a much more efficient health system...
Plea for faster vaccine rollout as six die with Covid-19 at Laois nursing home
Five residents at Droimnín Nursing Home in Stradbally died in less than a weekwww.irishtimes.com
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