mgrlane said:
enuff_zed said:
FWIW, I think we should send any excess just about anywhere except Europe after their political shenanigans of the last week or so.
Even their own medical boards could not make them see sense!
I dunno, I believe that we shouldn't let the people suffer due to the stupidity of their Governments.
If you look at it from a humanitarian standpoint (I am going to ignore the fact that you mentioned that the under 60's "maybe not affected so much" and go by the figures) then it makes sense to vaccinate the vulnerable 1st.
if you look at it from a financial standpoint there are circa 50 million under 60's in the UK compared to around 17 million over 60's then you would want to get that big chunk.
enuff_zed said:
Whilst I can see the humanitarian logic, I believe the UK is more of the mind-set that the younger age groups, whilst maybe not affected so much, could provide the 'factories' for the virus to mutate in
Is there any evidence to suggest that the virus will only mutate in unvaccinated people? My understanding is the Jab doesn't stop you from catching it (i think it reduces you passing it on) but really stops hospitalisations and deaths from it? I really would love to see studies with vaccinated people, unvaccinated people who have had the Rona and unvaccinated people who haven't had the Rona.
A virus is always mutating wherever/whenever it replicates.
Virus mutation is brought on internally by failure to accurately copy its RNA sequence. The reason, in part, DNA exists is because the D "double" introduces a degree of redundancy so that inaccurate replications are substantially reduced.
Virus mutation can also be brought on by external factors, chemicals, ionisng radiation, interaction with complex organic entities etc
Most mutations fail due to the new virus daughter not functioning and/or inability to subsequently replicate.
The ones that can survive may confer little or negative advantages and that line dies out over time.
Its the one that gain an advantage, increased transmissablity / greater creation of viral loads / resistance to drugs / vaccines /other therapies that survive and prosper.
Public health and this virus is all about probablities.
The virus chance of a competetive advantage through chance mutation is primarily statistical probability.
The more virus particles replicating and the more generations of replication the greater the chance of a succesful mutation.
So by reducing the number of people infected, the length of time they are infected for, the degree of infection and their inability to transmit the virus to others all reduce the probability of a successful mutation.
Vaccines impact all 4 of those key variables.
Therefore irrespective of how 'good' in each of those factors its, from a PH view a 'no brainer' to vaccinate everyone in the case of a COVID type virus with its associated lethality and wider impacts on many others and the fact that PH has to mop up the wreckage from this.