boolybooly
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
I think that's still a "may be" rather than a definite "is" at the moment, isn't it?
I'm pleased to see, though, that the UK Government's advisers are taking advice from elsewhere and having a rethink about waiting up to 12 weeks to administer the booster shot: it sounds as though that may be brought down to about half that, which I think I'd be rather happier with.
"Realistic possibility" they said, while settling in for a long sit on the fence. Presumably they feel duty bound to report adverse findings ASAP.
The three UK analyses appear to based on the same data set which nervtag say has "limitations".
The BBC News article I saw this morning said the variant data was gathered for 8% of known infections, which leaves 92% unknown. We spectators have no way of knowing whether there are any systematic biases in the data gathering. Independent data from other countries about the same variants should help to clarify eventually, might take a while.
The booster shot is being discussed this morning by the BBC in relation to "senior doctors" calling for frontline health workers to get the booster on time to ensure their immunity.
If the UK variant has evolved higher infectivity then it is significant for the delayed booster strategy which, as the "pissed off virologist" discussed, will increase the population of active virus under high selection pressure for vaccine survival, making it more likely that vaccine resistant variants will evolve, along the same lines as antibiotic resistance, by which logic its best to complete the course as it were and knock the virus out with maximum efficacy wherever vaccines are employed.