Coronavirus Thread (Off Topic, Politics) (138 Viewers)

Earlsdon_Skyblue1

Well-Known Member
Absence of evidence isn’t evidence of absence. Why are you starting from the hypothesis that reduction in symptomatic infection doesn’t lead to reduction in transmission?

I am just saying I am sceptical on the effect on the vaccine on transmission. Nothing anyone has posted or stated has done anything to alleviate that. I am not saying it is wrong, I am just saying that is my take on things. I would love to be proved that the vaccine reduced transmission by like 50% or whatever, and I think if it could be proved, more people would take the vaccine.
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
I am just saying I am sceptical on the effect on the vaccine on transmission. Nothing anyone has posted or stated has done anything to alleviate that. I am not saying it is wrong, I am just saying that is my take on things. I would love to be proved that the vaccine reduced transmission by like 50% or whatever, and I think if it could be proved, more people would take the vaccine.


In the BMJ

 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
I am just saying I am sceptical on the effect on the vaccine on transmission. Nothing anyone has posted or stated has done anything to alleviate that. I am not saying it is wrong, I am just saying that is my take on things. I would love to be proved that the vaccine reduced transmission by like 50% or whatever, and I think if it could be proved, more people would take the vaccine.

But why are you sceptical? It makes sense to me: viral load determines both severity of illness and transmissibility, the vaccine clearly reduces severity of illness so it follows that transmissibility would reduce as well.

I can’t think of a vaccine that doesn’t reduce transmissibility. So there’s have to be something weird with COVID for it not to behave like that.
 

Earlsdon_Skyblue1

Well-Known Member
But why are you sceptical? It makes sense to me: viral load determines both severity of illness and transmissibility, the vaccine clearly reduces severity of illness so it follows that transmissibility would reduce as well.

I can’t think of a vaccine that doesn’t reduce transmissibility. So there’s have to be something weird with COVID for it not to behave like that.

As I said, it is down to information really, and the fact that we are still in the early stages. It is unique this pandemic and the vaccine is new.

I follow your school of thought and I would assume that is correct, it seems what G posted is along those lines at least.

I think more to the point - why do I have to go on a CCFC forum to try and get that information. If this information is correct then it needs to be put out there. It will really help with the uptake in those people who are in the age ranges were the vaccine and pandemic doesn't particularly affect them otherwise.
 

chiefdave

Well-Known Member
But why are you sceptical? It makes sense to me: viral load determines both severity of illness and transmissibility, the vaccine clearly reduces severity of illness so it follows that transmissibility would reduce as well.

I can’t think of a vaccine that doesn’t reduce transmissibility. So there’s have to be something weird with COVID for it not to behave like that.
Think people are coming to this conclusion from an early study that showed that when taking nasal swabs from test subjects those who were vaccinated and positive showed similar results to those who weren't vaccinated and positive however the study didn't replicate real world conditions. It was similar to when everyone started washing their shopping and quarantining their post based off an early lab based paper.

In real world conditions it seems the vaccinated have lower viral load and are also infectious for a shorter space of time.
 

Earlsdon_Skyblue1

Well-Known Member
What do you mean? Don't choose to find out at all. Or don't come on skybluestalk.co.uk to find out about coronavirus research. To be fair to you I do go on pornhub purely to pick up plumbing tips.

I could understand you going on pornhub for plumbing tips if you had a leak and couldn't find the right information anywhere.
 

Liquid Gold

Well-Known Member
The band Kaiser Chiefs have been cancelled by the nutters for doing a shout out to vaccines at their Isle of Wight set.

Thoroughly normal people.
 
D

Deleted member 5849

Guest
The band Kaiser Chiefs have been cancelled by the nutters for doing a shout out to vaccines at their Isle of Wight set.

Thoroughly normal people.
Reading the reports, he didn't actually say anything either, just everyone decided to boo rather than cheer.
 

Sky_Blue_Dreamer

Well-Known Member
What do you mean? Don't choose to find out at all. Or don't come on skybluestalk.co.uk to find out about coronavirus research. To be fair to you I do go on pornhub purely to pick up plumbing tips.

Their advise is rubbish. I spent an hour furiously banging the missus over the washing machine and at the end the tap was still leaking.
 

Sick Boy

Super Moderator
I am just saying I am sceptical on the effect on the vaccine on transmission. Nothing anyone has posted or stated has done anything to alleviate that. I am not saying it is wrong, I am just saying that is my take on things. I would love to be proved that the vaccine reduced transmission by like 50% or whatever, and I think if it could be proved, more people would take the vaccine.
The overwhelming majority of people are taking the vaccine, many of those who aren’t won’t take it regardless of the evidence that’s put in front of them.
 

Sick Boy

Super Moderator
I won't take it (yet) BECAUSE of the evidence put in front of me.
What do you think it is that has kept the death toll so low despite the relatively high number of cases in the UK? What evidence in particular is putting you off?
 

skybluetony176

Well-Known Member
I thought overall figures were probably correct at the beginning, maybe a little bit exaggerated, a lot of elderly people died around that time. But I think, right now, Covid deaths are miscalculated.
Try telling that to the families that have lost loved ones and those that continue to lose loved ones. There is zero evidence to not get the jab and mounting evidence to get it, unless you can’t have it for medical reasons. It’s not just to protect you it’s to protect everyone around you, many of who either can’t have it or the vaccine doesn’t work for them either for efficacy reasons or again medical reasons. We need almost 100% of the adult population to get the vaccine and achieve herd immunity. You are part of the minority refusing the vaccine so therefore part of the ongoing problem of Covid. The reason I’m now having to consider getting my children vaccinated is because of people like you. Grow the fuck up and get the vaccine.
 

skybluetony176

Well-Known Member
Yes, I've heard all that before, (grow up etc) maybe we read different media. IMO, there is plenty of evidence to make me think twice about taking a vaccine and the evidence I read about why I SHOULD get the vaccine is unconvincing. I would definitely advise against my grand children (five and nine y.o) getting a vaccine. Until there is CONCLUSIVE evidence, and evidence that all professors who were discredited were actually wrong, and all trials pointing toward the probability that vaccinated people are more likely to catch Delta, and require much more serious treatment than people who had developed natural immunity, then I'll stick to the decision that protects MY family, not yours.
Media? You think I listen to the media. I do read the peer proven evidence and because I’ve got a mate with your mentality who likes to ring me and tell the latest conspiracy theory as to why I shouldn’t have got the vaccine and why he’s right to not get it I’ve very easily dismissed most if not all of the conspiracy theories.

I’ll tell you what, give me just one piece of your “evidence” and I’ll debunk it for you. After all I’ve probably already debunked it from my mate.
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
Yes, I've heard all that before, (grow up etc) maybe we read different media. IMO, there is plenty of evidence to make me think twice about taking a vaccine and the evidence I read about why I SHOULD get the vaccine is unconvincing. I would definitely advise against my grand children (five and nine y.o) getting a vaccine. Until there is CONCLUSIVE evidence, and evidence that all professors who were discredited were actually wrong, and all trials pointing toward the probability that vaccinated people are more likely to catch Delta, and require much more serious treatment than people who had developed natural immunity, then I'll stick to the decision that protects MY family, not yours.

Absolute fruitcake.

We had your sort in the 1900s as well you know.

1632214764475.jpeg
Tag yourself. I’m Mr Careless.
 

COV

Well-Known Member
I thought overall figures were probably correct at the beginning, maybe a little bit exaggerated, a lot of elderly people died around that time. But I think, right now, Covid deaths are miscalculated.

You think they're not really dead or something?
 

skybluetony176

Well-Known Member
Yes, I've heard all that before, (grow up etc) maybe we read different media. IMO, there is plenty of evidence to make me think twice about taking a vaccine and the evidence I read about why I SHOULD get the vaccine is unconvincing. I would definitely advise against my grand children (five and nine y.o) getting a vaccine. Until there is CONCLUSIVE evidence, and evidence that all professors who were discredited were actually wrong, and all trials pointing toward the probability that vaccinated people are more likely to catch Delta, and require much more serious treatment than people who had developed natural immunity, then I'll stick to the decision that protects MY family, not yours.
Just to add. If your grandchildren do end up having it that’s on you. You have the opportunity to get the vaccine meaning you are helping the country reach herd immunity and your grandchildren won’t have to have it. If you want to protect your grandchildren from not only Covid but also getting the vaccine get the vaccine yourself. It’s as simple as that.
 

COV

Well-Known Member
“As we prevent three deaths by vaccinating, we incur two deaths” Robert Mallone

That would be Robert Mallone who was criticised for spreading misinformation about the efficacy and safety of vaccinations, whose research was based on a botched sentence in a magazine article which was later deleted, who's friends with Steve Bannon?
 

COV

Well-Known Member
one piece of your “evidence"

"Pfizer vaccine does not work" scientific director of Pfizer Michael Yeadon

That would be Michael Yeadon who has atttracted widespread criticism for spreading unfounded & provably false claims about COVID and the COVID vaccine, and who has had pretty much all of his statements publicly debunked? Who said there would be no second wave in October 2020, and who said that "healthy people cannot transmit COVID?"

Who do you get your financial advice from, Boris Becker?
 

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