I don't know what to do. As an over 70 in the UK, I'm likely to be invited to turn up somewhere and wait in a queue for the vaccine sometime in the next month.
I have been having the flu vaccine at home for the last few years with the GP agreeing I'm not well enough to go to the doctors' surgery for it, and she's been doing my daughter at the same time. But this year that wasn't offered, so we haven't had a flu vaccine either.
That means, even if I were well enough to sit up in a wheelchair possibly for hours in a queue, which I'm not, I would have to find someone to take me. I don't have any home helpers at the moment because of covid, so I don't have anyone to take me.
So it looks realistically like I would have to wait until someone can do me at home. That means, as I understand it, it would have to be the inferior astra zeneca vaccine, since it seems to be the only one robust enough to be taken to people's homes.
The Pfizer one is so delicate, I gather from a medical radio program last night, is that once in the last stages of preparation before injecting, it can't even be carried up stairs, let alone taken on a car journey to someone's house.
And then there's the added complication of needing to persuade the health authorities that my daughter comes in one of the vulnerable illness categories to be allowed to have the vaccine at all.
I want us both to have it, but it looks like we'll be at the end of the list, so a lot more months of isolation without any help or visitors ahead.
I will be getting the vaccine when offered. Any side effects are better than getting the bug and it should make any infection less serious if I do catch it. We are not interacting with people except a weekly shop but that is still a slight risk.
At our local hospital things are falling apart. Wards are having to be closed because so many people are coming in infected, the covid wards are full and they are sending emails to all retired staff asking for volunteers. My worry is that hospital treatment may just not be available as there is a physical limit to resources.
Then the world is full of idiots. One auxiliary went to work after being tested but before the result came back so that was another ward closed and staff in quarantine.
What are the stats on how effective the Astra Zeneca vaccine is / what’s the likelihood of becoming immune to covid after having the vaccine 3 months apart? And after one dose?
There was some stuff around the same time about a half second dose raising efficacy - I cannot be certain that this related to that vaccine or if it was about the Oxford one.
When administered as per my statement above, the manufacturers claimed that it was, I think, 94% effective?This was largely before the Oxford one was approved so I'm reasonably certain that is the vaccine referenced (well that and the fact that as far as I know no one has ever claimed more than 70% efficacy for the Oxford vaccine - it's 'selling' point was that it was local, we had control over it, and that it didn't need ridiculously low temperatures to store it - not it's efficacy)
The Moderna vaccine should also be an option for home vaccination - the news from BBC etc. is that the Moderna vaccine should be available in the "spring"!
When administered as per my statement above, the manufacturers claimed that it was, I think, 94% effective?
A question re vaccines please.
I gather the vaccines basically expose a person's immune system to either a weakened form of the virus, or the spike protein, so that when the immune system is first challenged by it, and takes time to ramp up its defences, the vaccine does this without exposing the person to the virus itself, which would take advantage of the immune system's delayed response while it learns how to deal with it. And so if the real virus then comes along, the immune system's response time is much faster and more robust.
But we also know that vaccines are well short of 100% effective. So in the cases where a vaccine fails to protect, what part(s) of this mechanism is it that fails?
Would be interested to know.
I came down with ME after a hepatitis A+B vaccination, got worse after the booster shot. I'm greatful for Shepherd's work on this. I feel it's important to talk about it and find out more, but I understand it's a "sensitive topic" especially now in the context of a pandemic.Years ago I knew a retired nurse whose ME had actually been triggered by being given the Hepatitis B vaccine at work and there seemed to be a lot of other healthcare workers similarly affected.
I think the ME Association & Charles Shepherd have had a longstanding interest in the role of vaccines as a cause of ME and did a poll which can be found here: We’re collecting information on hepatitis B vaccination and ME/CFS – can you help? | 13 January 2016 | The ME Association
There are other vaccines listed there as well and I'm quite surprised at the numbers.
As I understand it, you won't become immune to Covid, but the vaccination will reduce your chance of being severely hit by it. Allegedly.
That was the Oxford one, but it was the first dose administered as a half dose, and then the second as a full dose. All allegedly, of course.
When administered as per my statement above, the manufacturers claimed that it was, I think, 94% effective?
I think it was around Eastertime (Easter being the beginning of April this year).
Given the poor efficacy of the AstraZeneca vaccine compared to the Pfizer/Moderna alternatives, I'd rather wait a little longer than be given the inferior vaccine.
Years ago I knew a retired nurse whose ME had actually been triggered by being given the Hepatitis B vaccine at work and there seemed to be a lot of other healthcare workers similarly affected.
They are no longer claiming that the low-dose high-dose thing has 90% efficacy. That claim never had much statistical confidence anyway.
The Moderna vaccine should also be an option for home vaccination - the news from BBC etc. is that the Moderna vaccine should be available in the "spring"!
If you check on-line the shelf life in the fridge is long - so no issues with transporting it on normal (i.e. water) ice.the Moderna vaccine needs -20 - wonder if it will be ok for housebound
I had the earlier Oxford figs in my head (62% vs 90%) but do not recall having seen a figure that just may be reliable for the proposed delivery roll out method- 2 full doses up to 3 months apart. I have read 70%, 80% and 89% but with no explanation of where the figures come from.