Reply by Anthony William Sloman December 29, 20212021-12-29
On Wednesday, December 29, 2021 at 8:44:55 PM UTC+11, Martin Brown wrote:
> On 28/12/2021 19:35, Lasse Langwadt Christensen wrote: > > tirsdag den 28. december 2021 kl. 20.05.58 UTC+1 skrev Martin Brown: > >> On 28/12/2021 03:03, Anthony William Sloman wrote: > >>> On Tuesday, December 28, 2021 at 3:31:12 AM UTC+11, Martin Brown wrote:
<snip>
> That said I was not going to turn down a free booster vaccination. > >> It is much more important to triple vaccinate the most vulnerable. Two > >> jabs has almost no effect on preventing you catching Omicron. > > > > three jabs might not either, https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.12.22.21268021v1
> UK statistics suggest that at least once it has created the full immune > response a booster jab is 75% effective at preventing symptomatic Covid. > You may be infected and PCR positive but with little harm done to you. > > It still remains unclear how infective such individuals are. Infective > for less time but with masked or no symptoms is a double edged sword.
There's nothing special about it. Everybody who get Covid-19 is infectious before the show symptoms, and there are suggestion that you are most infectious just before you show synmptoms (if you get to the point of showing symptoms - about 30% of the infected didn't ever show symptoms, even amongst the unvaccinated).
> The main effect of Covid vaccination though is to prevent serious illness and hospitalisation and so far that line is holding.
The main effect of Covid-19 vaccination is to make your immune system react faster the presence of Covid-19 virus particles, once the immune system has run into them. If you immune system is in good order, that does speed up the response and makes it less likely that you will get seriously sick, but everybody has a different immune system. Averaged over the population that's fewer hospitalisations of people who do get infected, but if you clear the infection faster you are less likely to infect anybody else, and from some points of view this may be "the main effect".
> The problem in the UK is that our government is taking a very high stakes gamble for New Year parties with the health of the entire English population.
The problem in the UK and in lots of other places is that politicians are more sensitive to business people complaining that lock-downs are reducing their turnover than they are to medical people complaining inadequate lock-downs are overloading the hospitals and the mortuaries. -- Bill Sloman, Sydney
Reply by Martin Brown December 29, 20212021-12-29
On 28/12/2021 19:35, Lasse Langwadt Christensen wrote:
> tirsdag den 28. december 2021 kl. 20.05.58 UTC+1 skrev Martin Brown: >> On 28/12/2021 03:03, Anthony William Sloman wrote: >>> On Tuesday, December 28, 2021 at 3:31:12 AM UTC+11, Martin Brown wrote: >>>> >> >>>> It will be crazy if they exactly repeat the mistake of last year by mixing it all up in school for just one day and then hard lockdown. (schools have been the locus of infection for a few months now). >>> >>> Kids don't get very sick, but they are great at infecting other people. Australia is getting on with vaccinating the 5- to 11-year-olds >> I'm not convinced that is ethically justifiable on medical grounds. >> >> Once you get down to about age 10 or under the benefit to the individual >> patient of being vaccinated is less than the very rare risk of serious >> side effects from the vaccine. It is probably wasted on the under 12's. > > you'd be labeled as an antivaxer nutcase if you even mention that you understand > that parents are not sure if they want to take the risk
I think it is important to understand the statistics to make a rational decision. Third jabs in many healthy first world individuals would be better off going to older and vulnerable patients in the third world. That said I was not going to turn down a free booster vaccination.
>> It is much more important to triple vaccinate the most vulnerable. Two >> jabs has almost no effect on preventing you catching Omicron. > > three jabs might not either, https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.12.22.21268021v1
UK statistics suggest that at least once it has created the full immune response a booster jab is 75% effective at preventing symptomatic Covid. You may be infected and PCR positive but with little harm done to you. It still remains unclear how infective such individuals are. Infective for less time but with masked or no symptoms is a double edged sword. The main effect of Covid vaccination though is to prevent serious illness and hospitalisation and so far that line is holding. The problem in the UK is that our government is taking a very high stakes gamble for New Year parties with the health of the entire English population. 130k and still rising with new record case numbers broken daily. A modest protection factor of 4 doesn't last long against exponential growth in daily cases that appears to be doubling every week. -- Regards, Martin Brown
Reply by David Brown December 29, 20212021-12-29
On 28/12/2021 20:35, Lasse Langwadt Christensen wrote:
> tirsdag den 28. december 2021 kl. 20.05.58 UTC+1 skrev Martin Brown: >> On 28/12/2021 03:03, Anthony William Sloman wrote: >>> On Tuesday, December 28, 2021 at 3:31:12 AM UTC+11, Martin Brown >>> wrote: >>>> >> >>>> It will be crazy if they exactly repeat the mistake of last >>>> year by mixing it all up in school for just one day and then >>>> hard lockdown. (schools have been the locus of infection for a >>>> few months now). >>> >>> Kids don't get very sick, but they are great at infecting other >>> people. Australia is getting on with vaccinating the 5- to >>> 11-year-olds >> I'm not convinced that is ethically justifiable on medical grounds. >> >> >> Once you get down to about age 10 or under the benefit to the >> individual patient of being vaccinated is less than the very rare >> risk of serious side effects from the vaccine. It is probably >> wasted on the under 12's. > > you'd be labeled as an antivaxer nutcase if you even mention that you > understand that parents are not sure if they want to take the risk
Parents are, for the most part, laymen. No one goes to university to study parenting - it is all made up as we go along. (I speak as a parent myself.) The great majority of people - parents or not - have very little understanding of statistics, risk assessment, virology, epidemiology, or any other medical matters. The only thing that makes a parent different from other people is a tendency to throw any trace of reason or rationality out the window when it comes to /their/ child. So the people /least/ qualified to make a sensible rational decision about medical matters in respect to a child, are usually parents. (There are exceptions - some parents really do understand the issues, and some children really are medically unusual in some respect.) That does not mean I don't think parents should be involved in decisions and consents - merely that they are rarely able to do so well. Parents make all sorts of decisions for their children that are not purely in the best interests of the child (even the most rational, informed and selfless parent can't see the future). The alternatives to parents being able to decide things for their children is far worse. Of course we can also say that the "powers that be" have not done a good enough job of informing parents of the pros and cons of vaccines - they have not found a way to beat the idiot social media grapevine that spreads lies and conspiracies at such speed. Whether it is actually a good idea to vaccinate 5 - 12 year olds against Covid is a balance. You have to look at the chances of getting Covid, the risks of it being a problem for the child, and the consequences of it being a problem. This must be balanced against the risks of side-effects and their consequences. You have to decide if it is ethically correct to consider the risk of them spreading Covid to other people, or if children should be considered purely on their own basis. You have to consider the wider aspects, such as an unvaccinated child not being allowed to visit their granny, or to go on holidy. You have to consider the medical facilities in a country when evaluating risks and consequences, and the spread of the disease in that country. You have to consider Omicron and Delta independently as they have very different profiles. You have to consider where else those vaccines could be used. No parent will do that. No politician will do that (though they will claim to do so.) The health authorities in a country can do it - or provide best guesses that change as we get more information, and the situation changes over time. /Only/ the qualified health authority experts are in a position to give recommendations here, and even they might get it wrong (predicting the future is hard). For everyone else, the single rational reaction is "follow the advice of the health authorities".
> >> It is much more important to triple vaccinate the most vulnerable. >> Two jabs has almost no effect on preventing you catching Omicron. > > three jabs might not either, > https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.12.22.21268021v1 >
Vaccines are not, and never have been, 100%. It is all about reduction of the risks, and reduction of the consequences, balanced against the disadvantages (cost, inconvenience, and side-effects). Maybe more boosters will be the sensible choice, but it seems that for most age groups, three jabs is the appropriate balance at the moment.
Reply by Anthony William Sloman December 28, 20212021-12-28
On Wednesday, December 29, 2021 at 6:05:58 AM UTC+11, Martin Brown wrote:
> On 28/12/2021 03:03, Anthony William Sloman wrote: > > On Tuesday, December 28, 2021 at 3:31:12 AM UTC+11, Martin Brown wrote: > >> > > >> It will be crazy if they exactly repeat the mistake of last year by mixing it all up in school for just one day and then hard lockdown. (schools have been the locus of infection for a few months now). > > > > Kids don't get very sick, but they are great at infecting other people. Australia is getting on with vaccinating the 5- to 11-year-olds > I'm not convinced that is ethically justifiable on medical grounds. > > Once you get down to about age 10 or under the benefit to the individual > patient of being vaccinated is less than the very rare risk of serious > side effects from the vaccine. It is probably wasted on the under 12's.
Vaccination may not protect the kids, but it does protect their parents and relatives. That's a benefit to the kids. Concentrating on the direct health benefits to the kid has blinded you to the environmental benefit to the kids of having a complete set of healthy relatives. Ethics isn't just about the patient in isolation.
> It is much more important to triple vaccinate the most vulnerable. Two > jabs has almost no effect on preventing you catching Omicron.
But it does seem to shorten the period when you are infectious with it.
> There is also some interesting evidence reported in Nature a year ago > now that children under the age of about 7 can catch it but never become > infectious themselves.
Some children. What the paper actually mentioned was that the children developed antibodies to the Covid-19 virus - so they clearly got infected - but never had a high enough virus level to register on a PCR test for the virus, so they were unlikely to infect anybody else. That isn't "never become infedctious themselves". The Omicron virus in Australia is clearly is infecting school-children and they are infecting other children, so your interpretation of the Nature paper is dangerously misleading.
> They are all riddled with other coronaviruses > causing sniffles when younger - that was one of the other odd results. > > https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-020-03496-7 > > It is the teenagers that are driving infection in UK schools - not > helped by the fact that the incidence of Covid was already high enough > that in a class of 30 the odds were 50:50 someone would have it. Now it > is high enough that a class of 20 would be in the same ballpark. > > England seems determined to break the daily Covid case rate until at > least the New Year (by when I expect we may be at 200k/day or more). > > It is presently 130k today according to the BBC. Government Covid > dashboard website is down failing "internal server error" probably > because there is no one left there who knows how it works. All techies > off with Covid or isolating after their myriad of Xmas parties...
New South Wales is now at 6500-odd cases per day with about a tenth of the population. Omicron changed the odds, but the politicians have been slow to recognise this. -- Bill Sloman, Sydney
Reply by Rick C December 28, 20212021-12-28
On Tuesday, December 28, 2021 at 2:35:39 PM UTC-5, lang...@fonz.dk wrote:
> tirsdag den 28. december 2021 kl. 20.05.58 UTC+1 skrev Martin Brown: > > On 28/12/2021 03:03, Anthony William Sloman wrote: > > > On Tuesday, December 28, 2021 at 3:31:12 AM UTC+11, Martin Brown wrote: > > >> > > > > >> It will be crazy if they exactly repeat the mistake of last year by mixing it all up in school for just one day and then hard lockdown. (schools have been the locus of infection for a few months now). > > > > > > Kids don't get very sick, but they are great at infecting other people. Australia is getting on with vaccinating the 5- to 11-year-olds > > I'm not convinced that is ethically justifiable on medical grounds. > > > > Once you get down to about age 10 or under the benefit to the individual > > patient of being vaccinated is less than the very rare risk of serious > > side effects from the vaccine. It is probably wasted on the under 12's. > you'd be labeled as an antivaxer nutcase if you even mention that you understand > that parents are not sure if they want to take the risk > > It is much more important to triple vaccinate the most vulnerable. Two > > jabs has almost no effect on preventing you catching Omicron. > three jabs might not either, https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.12.22.21268021v1
Even if the risk is about even, there is benefit to the population as a whole to not spread this disease. We require a number of vaccinations for kids to go to school. If you don't want your kids to be vaccinated, you don't have to do that. You just can't send them to public school where they run a greater risk of spreading the disease to others. It's like a lot of things, you have choices and sometimes none of them are what you want, but we live in a society where we sometimes have to sacrifice for the greater good. I'm expecting omicron to eventually have its own vaccine. But it will take some time to bring it out. Then there will be people complaining that it didn't come out soon enough and others complaining they didn't spend enough time testing it. The disease is bad. Dealing with all the assholes is worse! Fuck 'em all. -- Rick C. +-- Get 1,000 miles of free Supercharging +-- Tesla referral code - https://ts.la/richard11209
Reply by Lasse Langwadt Christensen December 28, 20212021-12-28
tirsdag den 28. december 2021 kl. 20.05.58 UTC+1 skrev Martin Brown:
> On 28/12/2021 03:03, Anthony William Sloman wrote: > > On Tuesday, December 28, 2021 at 3:31:12 AM UTC+11, Martin Brown wrote: > >> > > >> It will be crazy if they exactly repeat the mistake of last year by mixing it all up in school for just one day and then hard lockdown. (schools have been the locus of infection for a few months now). > > > > Kids don't get very sick, but they are great at infecting other people. Australia is getting on with vaccinating the 5- to 11-year-olds > I'm not convinced that is ethically justifiable on medical grounds. > > Once you get down to about age 10 or under the benefit to the individual > patient of being vaccinated is less than the very rare risk of serious > side effects from the vaccine. It is probably wasted on the under 12's.
you'd be labeled as an antivaxer nutcase if you even mention that you understand that parents are not sure if they want to take the risk
> It is much more important to triple vaccinate the most vulnerable. Two > jabs has almost no effect on preventing you catching Omicron.
three jabs might not either, https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.12.22.21268021v1
Reply by Martin Brown December 28, 20212021-12-28
On 28/12/2021 03:03, Anthony William Sloman wrote:
> On Tuesday, December 28, 2021 at 3:31:12 AM UTC+11, Martin Brown wrote: >>
>> It will be crazy if they exactly repeat the mistake of last year by mixing it all up in school for just one day and then hard lockdown. (schools have been the locus of infection for a few months now). > > Kids don't get very sick, but they are great at infecting other people. Australia is getting on with vaccinating the 5- to 11-year-olds
I'm not convinced that is ethically justifiable on medical grounds. Once you get down to about age 10 or under the benefit to the individual patient of being vaccinated is less than the very rare risk of serious side effects from the vaccine. It is probably wasted on the under 12's. It is much more important to triple vaccinate the most vulnerable. Two jabs has almost no effect on preventing you catching Omicron. There is also some interesting evidence reported in Nature a year ago now that children under the age of about 7 can catch it but never become infectious themselves. They are all riddled with other coronaviruses causing sniffles when younger - that was one of the other odd results. https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-020-03496-7 It is the teenagers that are driving infection in UK schools - not helped by the fact that the incidence of Covid was already high enough that in a class of 30 the odds were 50:50 someone would have it. Now it is high enough that a class of 20 would be in the same ballpark. England seems determined to break the daily Covid case rate until at least the New Year (by when I expect we may be at 200k/day or more). It is presently 130k today according to the BBC. Government Covid dashboard website is down failing "internal server error" probably because there is no one left there who knows how it works. All techies off with Covid or isolating after their myriad of Xmas parties... -- Regards, Martin Brown
Reply by Fred Bloggs December 28, 20212021-12-28
On Monday, December 27, 2021 at 9:47:17 PM UTC-5, bill....@ieee.org wrote:
> On Tuesday, December 28, 2021 at 1:29:17 AM UTC+11, Fred Bloggs wrote: > > On Sunday, December 26, 2021 at 9:23:13 PM UTC-5, bill....@ieee.org wrote: > > > On Monday, December 27, 2021 at 12:17:33 AM UTC+11, Fred Bloggs wrote: > > > > On Saturday, December 25, 2021 at 3:10:28 PM UTC-5, gnuarm.del...@gmail.com wrote: > > > > > On Saturday, December 25, 2021 at 9:58:11 AM UTC-5, Fred Bloggs wrote: > > > > > > On Thursday, December 23, 2021 at 10:36:34 PM UTC-5, bill....@ieee.org wrote: > > > <snip> > > > > > This will be a new peak like we haven't seen before and many, many people will die. We can hope I am wrong and the reports of lower severity are not exaggerated. At some point, I expect the larger infection numbers will overtake the lower severity and the death counts will rise significantly. > > > > > > > > I don't care what you think, you're an ignorant moron. > > > > > > Fred does like to post that about other people. It save him from the effort of explaining why he disagrees with their opinions which is frequently because he has got something wrong and lacks the capacity to work out why. > > > > Go take your park bench musings to some other NG. > > > If only Fred would take his own advice. He still seems to think that "a highly conserved domain " means "a domain that doesn't mutate" when it actually means "a domain where most mutations are lethal so we never get to see them". > > > > You can't explain anything to morons. They just need to be told to get lost. > That's Fred's excuse for not explaining anything. It is transparently self-serving. > > You're another weasel who thinks he's caught someone in a mistake. But you're just another useless jackass of no consequence. > You made the mistake, and proceeded to refuse to acknowledge that you'd made an ass of yourself. That makes you the useless jackass of no consequence, but you are too dim to realise it. You could aspire to be a weasel but you lack the native cunning.
I'm not really in your assessment since you're a proven lifelong unaccomplished idiot, along with that David Brown character and other brainless types like you. You obviously thought you were going to dominate the discussion based on your advanced education in an unrelated field, and it just didn't work out for you. In the present instance you you have been told time and time again that I was merely repeating the wording of a medical author/ reporter. You're too stupid to understand this. In addition to being functional ignorant beyond salvage , you're functionally incapacitated by an inordinate level of old fashioned stupidity.
> > -- > Bill Sloman, Sydney
Reply by Tom Gardner December 28, 20212021-12-28
On 28/12/21 09:41, Martin Brown wrote:
> On 27/12/2021 22:04, Tom Gardner wrote: >> On 25/12/21 12:23, Martin Brown wrote: >>> Yes. We are at 120+k/day on a 60M population. It is likely even more than >>> that since some selfish people are deliberately not getting tested. Many have >>> deleted the contact tracing app from their phone. >> >> I know one that has even blocked the contract tracing number on >> his phone. Why? Because if they called him, he would become >> homeless. >> >> Hence his is a rational response to the situation and its >> irrational pressures. > > Many people block the entire 0300 code block since in normal times they are cold > calling telesales spammers that you never want to talk to!
In most cases when I give a company my phone number (or address), it is a false one. That reduces the chance of me being bothered when the details are illegally sold. Doesn't affect the "random" robodiallers, though.
Reply by Martin Brown December 28, 20212021-12-28
On 27/12/2021 22:04, Tom Gardner wrote:
> On 25/12/21 12:23, Martin Brown wrote: >> Yes. We are at 120+k/day on a 60M population. It is likely even more >> than that since some selfish people are deliberately not getting >> tested. Many have deleted the contact tracing app from their phone. > > I know one that has even blocked the contract tracing number on > his phone. Why? Because if they called him, he would become > homeless. > > Hence his is a rational response to the situation and its > irrational pressures.
Many people block the entire 0300 code block since in normal times they are cold calling telesales spammers that you never want to talk to! -- Regards, Martin Brown