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Friend of mine (journalist) flew back here from Sau Paulo friday via madrid. he is in a hotel for two weeks. Personally I would be in favour of him and anyone else returning from S America being refused entry.
Difficult to do with a uk citizen
well if a professor said its no big deal thats fine then
Theres the potential for the vaccine to not work on new strains which is the problem. Could potentially make the 20m vaccinations redundantToday we've seen UK hit 20million vaccines given so far
Cases and deaths drop to lowest figures in months
Roadmap giving his possible dates we can go back to parts of normal life again
Media focus on the six cases instead
Theres the potential for the vaccine to not work on new strains which is the problem. Could potentially make the 20m vaccinations redundant
That’s not quite what they’ve said. They said for all current mutations, the vaccine is still effective and they can theoretically change the recipe if they needed to. There’s always the potential for it to mutate into something immune to the vaccine and we can’t get away from that. Whole thing could go tits up tomorrow and we’re back to where we started. Obviously we all hope it won’t and the chances aren’t high that it will, but to rule it out as a possibility is naive at bestScientists have said it's never going to be a problem.
If it mutates so much it loses it's spike protein, it's game over for the virus.
If the vaccine becomes less effective then they change the recipe and have said this can be done easily and within a few months.
Booster shots will likely be required.
If a professor said its going to evade the vaccine you would be salivating and stomping all over the thread waving it around like an excited puppy.
Dont be a silly little boy
Theres the potential for the vaccine to not work on new strains which is the problem. Could potentially make the 20m vaccinations redundant
Of course there is. That’s how every virus in the world works. Only need to see the flu virus each year and the need for an updated vaccine to see this happening in the world. Your pedantic reply is unnecessary though, obviously it’s not something that could be quantified and you know that.It's true tho. You know it ya lil tinker!
Is there? Can you quantify the % potential. Are we talking 20%, 10%, 0.0000000009%
How worried should we be?
Of course there is. That’s how every virus in the world works. Only need to see the flu virus each year and the need for an updated vaccine to see this happening in the world. Your pedantic reply is unnecessary though, obviously it’s not something that could be quantified and you know that.
Very different yet very similar at the same time. I’m not suggesting they are comparable in mutation frequency or likelihood, but they are comparable in the fact that they will both mutate and change and it’s very naive to suggest our vaccine is perfect and will kill all mutations ever likely to exist.Influenza mutations and corona virus mutations are very different.
Theres the potential for the vaccine to not work on new strains which is the problem. Could potentially make the 20m vaccinations redundant
Absolutely the opposite is true. It takes nanoseconds for the virus to mutate in a random event and to “outgrow” a vaccine. It isn’t a gradual process at all, it’s a random product of a chaotic system and can happen at any moment. Virus cells get hit with radiation or chemical reactions all the time, randomly, one of those will mutate the virus into something that is immune to the vaccine eventually.It takes years for a virus to fully outgrow a vaccine ordinarily.
They’re not even saying this variant is resistant to the vaccine just that it “might” be slightly less effective, which I’m sure can be countered in the second dose anyhow for some and initially for others.
If we’re expected to run scared at the sight of any variant, then we might as well stay locked down forever.
All they can do is cover as broad a range of predicted mutations as possible and hope that it changes in a more predictable manner. Wouldn’t worry about it tbh, nothing you can do if it happens and the current coverage is apparently good enough for all current mutations which is all we can do atmAnd that’s what worries me. We could see a surge in cases unless those hard working scientists work on a strong enough vaccine.
Absolutely the opposite is true. It takes nanoseconds for the virus to mutate in a random event and to “outgrow” a vaccine. It isn’t a gradual process at all, it’s a random product of a chaotic system and can happen at any moment. Virus cells get hit with radiation or chemical reactions all the time, randomly, one of those will mutate the virus into something that is immune to the vaccine eventually.
Of course it’s statistically more likely to occur over a longer period of time (due to more of these events happening) but the event for it to happen is (almost) instantaneous and random. Can’t be predicted and can’t be prevented. So what my point was, is that the shit could hit the fan any day and all 20m vaccines done could prove useless tomorrow, or any other day. Or it could not happen for the next 1000 years.
All they can do is cover as broad a range of predicted mutations as possible and hope that it changes in a more predictable manner. Wouldn’t worry about it tbh, nothing you can do if it happens and the current coverage is apparently good enough for all current mutations which is all we can do atm
Likelihood is it won’t. But it could and will always pose a very real risk going forward. And isn’t something that can be discounted at all, very naively by some on here previouslyThe likelihood is that it won’t outgrow a vaccine in the short term, though. Something being possible and actually happening are totally different.