Coronavirus Thread (Off Topic, Politics) (37 Viewers)

Nick

Administrator
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Is this allowed to be asked about?

This is from up to the 12th so will be before the huge booster push so numbers may look a lot different in a couple of weeks when yeah the huge majority will be boosted. It's Omicron variant specific rather than old COVID.
 

Nick

Administrator
What are you asking about it?

That if you have never had it before and then get a booster you are much more likely to potentially get Omicron than somebody who might have had it before and is double jabbed for example.

Or are the stats just from FB loons?
 

SBT

Well-Known Member
So cool that the guy who runs this forum spends all day complaining about sensationalist media, then posts random tables about the vaccine that he’s seen online without knowing if it’s just FB loons, but hey, he’s just asking questions ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
 

Nick

Administrator
So cool that the guy who runs this forum spends all day complaining about sensationalist media, then posts random tables about the vaccine that he’s seen online without knowing if it’s just FB loons, but hey, he’s just asking questions ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

It isn't a random table, I didn't get it from Facebook. I was asking if it will just be decided that it is from FB Loons. I know it isn't from FB loons.
 

Brighton Sky Blue

Well-Known Member
That if you have never had it before and then get a booster you are much more likely to potentially get Omicron than somebody who might have had it before and is double jabbed for example.

Or are the stats just from FB loons?

I’d wait and see when we have a reliably large data set. Even if we saw those numbers repeated in tens of thousands of people, we’ve got to be wary of correlation vs causation here.

Scientifically speaking I do not see how the jab itself could lower your immunity even in the initial stages.
 

Skybluefaz

Well-Known Member
Is it that somebody who is double jabbed and not had it but just had the booster would have less anti-bodies than someone who is double jabbed and had Covid-19, taking into account the 2 week lag that the booster supposedly has to give you max protection?
 

Nick

Administrator
Is it that somebody who is double jabbed and not had it but just had the booster would have less anti-bodies than someone who is double jabbed and had Covid-19, taking into account the 2 week lag that the booster supposedly has to give you max protection?

That included the 14 days.

It's only up to the 12th December so guessing there will be lots more data when they do the updated versions.
 

Brighton Sky Blue

Well-Known Member

chiefdave

Well-Known Member
That if you have never had it before and then get a booster you are much more likely to potentially get Omicron than somebody who might have had it before and is double jabbed for example.
Aren't those stats independent of each other? You've got probabilities to various vaccination statuses, and the propability of being infected with the variant drops as expected in line with the vaccination schedule. You've then got probabilities for those previously infected, and as we already knew having covid one reduces the probability of catching it again.
 

Brighton Sky Blue

Well-Known Member
The new data shows 164 positive cases in 42,000 people who had the booster for at least 2 weeks. For unvaccinated it was nearly 700 in just 17,000 tested.

Interestingly the best performing group was 2 doses of Pfizer, up to 3 months on from the second dose.
 

Nick

Administrator
The most up to date version of the data that Nick posted is here. Head to table 2a which gives a similar breakdown as before and now gives 2 weeks after a third dose as among the lowest rates.


Yeah that's just COVID, the one I posted was "Omicron" was specific so why it was slightly different.

2 hits of Moderna the same as 2 and booster as well.

Also, bring back smoking ;)
 

Brighton Sky Blue

Well-Known Member
Yeah that's just COVID, the one I posted was "Omicron" was specific so why it was slightly different.

2 hits of Moderna the same as 2 and booster as well.

Also, bring back smoking ;)

Ok, but you would assume that all COVID would also include proportionally similar Omicron cases, particularly over tens of thousands of tests.
 

Liquid Gold

Well-Known Member
I may be being dense here but it looks to me like 3 doses is still the best, 0.35% compared to slightly more for Pfizer 2 jabs?
 

Brighton Sky Blue

Well-Known Member
There weren't that many Omicron cases in November though were there? Guessing that's mostly OG COVID.

Delta is still the most common according to the most recent ONS update that came out yesterday. There’s also some issues that not all S-gene negative tests are Omicron as if your viral load is generally low it can also be missed.

In essence the variant to me seems so different that we need to modify the PCR test accordingly.
 

baldy

Well-Known Member
That if you have never had it before and then get a booster you are much more likely to potentially get Omicron than somebody who might have had it before and is double jabbed for example.

Or are the stats just from FB loons?

My bros stepson has been triple jabbed & has had covid previously & he tested today,(when he didn’t even have to) - lo & behold…he’s up the duff with the Kung flu
What’s the point of the vaccines?
 

Tommo1993

Well-Known Member
My bros stepson has been triple jabbed & has had covid previously & he tested today,(when he didn’t even have to) - lo & behold…he’s up the duff with the Kung flu
What’s the point of the vaccines?

How bad are his symptoms?
 

Brighton Sky Blue

Well-Known Member
My bros stepson has been triple jabbed & has had covid previously & he tested today,(when he didn’t even have to) - lo & behold…he’s up the duff with the Kung flu
What’s the point of the vaccines?

Uses wrong CCFC badge
Calls COVID ‘Kung Flu’
Still questions vaccines when 150,000 have died mostly without it

Certified moron
 

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