by Suff » 18 Nov 2020, 09:08
Two or three things screwed Christmas.
The end of the last lockdown as if Covid had gone away, even though it clearly had not, just to keep businesses running over the summer and people sweet with summer holidays.
The caution over vaccine testing which occurred when adverse reactions were seen.
The re-opening of schools and universities without a clear idea as to how they would control the virus that was clearly transmitting invisibly
Now we are where we are. If we lock down till Dec 20th, we can have Christmas. But the upshot of unlocking for Christmas is that the critical vaccine times of Jan and Feb will be right in the middle of an increasing virus curve again. Perhaps vaccination will stop it. Perhaps it won't.
If we wanted Christmas we needed a vaccine mid October. It could have been done but nobody wanted to take the risk. Now we are where we are and nobody is happy.
One day, someone is going to go through the results of the vaccine, how it worked to stop the pandemic, when it/they could have been started and just how many people died before because we didn't start on it. Hopefully that will filter back into policy when dealing with a pandemic. After all, in the UK, if we try to avoid a 1 in a million serious adverse reaction, likely to impact 67 people in the UK, but 20,000 people die as a result, this is not a good balance.
Of course the risk is that it is not a 1 in 1 million but 1 in 100,000. But, even then, that is an adverse reaction for 670 people. Even at 1 in 10,000, that is 6,700 adverse reactions. More people have died since September than would be impacted from adverse reactions to the vaccine. We are geared to zero risk but in a situation where the risk of not vaccinating is higher than the risk of vaccinating, pragmatic decisions need to be taken. They have not. We have already tested more than 10,000 people on the Oxford Covid vaccine. We have had one adverse reaction which was also recorded for the fully certified MERS vaccine back in 2010. That adverse reaction responded to treatment.
As ever, time will tell.
There are 10 types of people in the world:
Those who understand Binary and those who do not.