Most particularly at Wembley - more than 2000 more than...(Football attendance had bounced back above pre covid levels)..
Most particularly at Wembley - more than 2000 more than...(Football attendance had bounced back above pre covid levels)..
Thanks. I've never used the shared post facility and never seen anyone else use it, so I had no idea it had the defects Guerney observes are there until he started using it in respondimg to my posts, producing these problems.Another way is to reset the unfurl attribute in the link from unfurl="True" to unfurl="" to avoid this kind of problem.
I hate complicated forum facilities. The simple form of Reply works adequately for my purposes and, most of the time, I have no intention of doing anything more complex.Thanks. I've never used the shared post facility and never seen anyone else use it, so I had no idea it had the defects Guernet observes are there until he started using it in respondimg to my posts, producing these problems.
I can't see the point of it when there's perfectly good, fault free reply facility. Presumably nobody else sees any point in using "share post" either, since none of them ever have.
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How is it useful if it doesn't work properly, misleading and misrepresenting? It gives no idea to others what is being responded to, while distorting the content of quotes by attributing words never posted by the quoted person.He's used to hitting "Reply", but "Share this post" is also useful. It's certainly not my fault that it doesn't work properly when linking specific posts on this website - it quotes title and page "content" tags of the page that the post resides within, not the actual linked post.
Very much the reverse here in my village. In fact I am now noticing people again wearing masks on pretty much deserted promenades. My daily walk schedule brings me along a path through an estate, through a church car park and along the shops and promenade, with a wind howling in from Blackpool, about 70 miles across the sea. Mask wearing is really unnecessary for all of this with the low density of people, but 2/3 of these few walkers are masked.Experiences at the supermarket this week indicate the compliance with the Covid protection measures won't be as good this time round.
The large sign saying masks have to be worn has reappeared outside the store, but no staff member stationed to ensure compliance was present either time. So an unmasked man just ahead of me just walked in unchallenged. Later in the crowded self checkout area there were two unmasked people present.
In addition the perspex separator screens we used to have around the self checkouts during the previous lockdowns haven't been put back.
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Look at how long it takes to make a prototype of mRNA vaccines.Personally think we should be thankful to those that developed them
Hi Woosh... Just a few points . The current vaccines are still highly effective, and have not had their recipes tweaked as of yet. The serious illness ratio to infections is proof of that. The hospitals are still filled with the unvaccinated , rather than the waning vaccinated.As far as I can make out, the current crop of vaccines are not very effective. Those based on mRNA suffer from issue of dosage and too much specificity, requiring new versions to be manufactured each time WHO identifies a variant of concern. Good business model for the producers though.
those based on vector viruses (AZ) suffer additionally risks of blood clotting. Those based on the old method of inactivating live viruses seem to cause least problems but are far from good enough.
As flecc said, we need vaccines that can stop people catching covid in the first place, something that mRNA vaccines cannot possibly do*.
*SW mentioned this in one of his recent post.
Stop feeding the conspiracy theorists Woosh. Yep, I suspect your hyperbole is to exaggerate point but many just use this type of opinion to justify a total anti vax stance.Look at how long it takes to make a prototype of mRNA vaccines.
They made a bunch of samples in just 2 days (AZ, Pfizer, Moderna) and picked the best for production candidate.
The only reason we got them so quickly is because a) MRHA waved them through acceptance quickly on emergency basis and b) goverments paid for new or enlarged production facilities. If they had to go through normal process or rely on risk capital, it would take 10 years to perfect a vaccine, even more for something like HIV.
The simple fact that previous mRNA vaccines against a range of diseases have not worked should say something about overselling, not only from the producers but also from our own governments.
Very different here in this London Borough of Croydon.Very much the reverse here in my village. In fact I am now noticing people again wearing masks on pretty much deserted promenades. My daily walk schedule brings me along a path through an estate, through a church car park and along the shops and promenade, with a wind howling in from Blackpool, about 70 miles across the sea. Mask wearing is really unnecessary for all of this with the low density of people, but 2/3 of these few walkers are masked.
I've appended a "Like" to your post, but this part simply isn't true on present knowledge and is unlikely to be true for a very long time.And, let's be straight here. Our only hope is vaccines. Yes, obviously they need to improve but if a high proportion of society chooses to not accept vaccines we will never get back to normality..
Natural selection does not need to be very intelligent. The immune system of the recipient does all the work.. Viruses don't mutate to evade vaccines, that is crediting them with more intelligence than half the human race.
I do see that point flecc and also agree it could be case but on our progress towards herd Immunity, if solely by that mechanism we would have to see hundreds of thousands of premature deaths.I've appended a "Like" to your post, but this part simply isn't true on present knowledge and is unlikely to be true for a very long time.
By then our only true hope of herd immunity will have inevitably arrived anyway, making the vaccines largely unnecessary in this country. They'll just be yet another travel abroad jab.
Just look at this post for what is happening where there's a far, far greater degree of herd immunity from prior infections.
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It's a good job he noticed before making any sudden movementsIn the Daily Mail
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I've got a problem with my arsenal, doc: Bomb Squad are called to A&E where patient turned up with two-inch-wide WWII shell lodged in his rectum which got there when he 'slipped and fell on it during a clear-out'
Well I believe him, can I have my Unicorn now please?
Thanks for that. Yes, that's the phrase I was looking for. Relative vs Absolute risk reduction. So I've now looked that up. Ta.For vaccines, you use relative risk reduction.
You run a 3 month trial with 1000 people given a placebo and 1000 given your vaccine. If 10 people in the vaccinated group and 30 people in the unvaccinated group got Covid in the trial period, the relative risk rate is 10/30 or 33.3%, the efficacy is thus 1-33.3% = 66.6%
You can see that the efficacy is based on quite small numbers of positive cases.
How many of us examine our jabs to this extent before foreign travel. Its all got rather obsessive. Just have the jab... And get out on your bike.Thanks for that. Yes, that's the phrase I was looking for. Relative vs Absolute risk reduction. So I've now looked that up. Ta.
However it appears that you're not necessarily correct when you say "For vaccines, you use relative risk reduction"
You are spot on in that's what they seem to actually BE using ... whether that is what they SHOULD be using is another matter.
I just did a search. Let me give you an example of a paper:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7996517/pdf/medicina-57-00199.pdf
In it, let me quote some sections:
"Abstract:
Relative risk reduction and absolute risk reduction measures in the evaluation of clinical trial data are poorly understood by health professionals and the public. The absence of reported absolute risk reduction in COVID-19 vaccine clinical trials can lead to outcome reporting bias that affects the interpretation of vaccine efficacy"
It seems the FDA themselves give the following advice!
" Provide absolute risks, not just relative risks. Patients are unduly influenced
when risk information is presented using a relative risk approach; this can result in suboptimal decisions. Thus, an absolute risk format should be used"
And here is one of the charts:
View attachment 44917
Hmmm. So looking at that, if you got the Pfizer Jab and thought you were getting 95% protection .... turns out, you've only reduced your absolute risk of getting symptoms by 0.7%
(yet of course you still run the same risks of adverse reactions, whether you call it 95% efficacy, or 0.7% efficacy!)
I wonder if that has caused some of us to have made what the FDA called "suboptimal decisions"
???
I understand the difference, but that's been the common basis for trials for yonks.However it appears that you're not necessarily correct when you say "For vaccines, you use relative risk reduction"