Ed.Straker said:Well as a recently retired PH professional and currently working with my old employer on next winter's contingency plans I can say that there is almost no evidence that has been peer reviewed to substantiate your views.
https://publichealthmatters.blog.gov.uk/2021/02/23/covid-19-analysing-first-vaccine-effectiveness-in-the-uk/
Thanks for that will have a look
Ed.Straker said:If you read what I said
"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."
I described 4 pathways to reduce viral multiplication..I did not say vaccines stop transmission, what I said was that vaccines impact that ability, which they do..by at least 50% according to current research.
You clearly stated that someone who is vaccinated would have the inability to transmit the virus. :?
What argument would that be? I am not against the use of the vaccine or people having it...Ed.Straker said:Your argument to use an analogy is:
With a 1000 bomber raid, we can only shoot down 50% of them with AA guns...so some will get through so lets not bother...
