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Coronavirus

Are we pinning our hope too much on the vaccine?

(153 Posts)
MawBe Sun 04-Jul-21 16:06:51

We all (I hope) agree the vaccine is making an enormous difference to the impact Covid has on our lives, and I certainly hope that while zero-Covid might be a pipe dream, we should be able to manage the virus in a similar way we now cope with severe flu, bronchitis and pneumonia in all but the very old or frail.
But, and is a big but, we are glibly talking about “opening up” international travel, dispensing with social distancing, and ditching the wearing of face coverings. In other words, putting all our eggs in the vaccine basket.
The easing of the above measures would make life seem much more like the normality we last knew 15 months ago and it would be lovely to believe we can put Covid behind us.
But we can’t.
I worry, are we becoming over-confident and over- reliant on the vaccines we have and their continued availability. I am assuming mutations of the future are already being planned for in immunology labs all over the world as if the virus were to mutate into something much more severe, I fear we could all be up a gum tree.
#justthinking

MayBee70 Tue 06-Jul-21 11:34:03

I would imagine that, on the 19th we shall become the party palace of the world…..

Lucca Tue 06-Jul-21 11:31:34

Some hope Aepgirl !

Aepgirl Tue 06-Jul-21 11:28:20

Surely people won’t take 19th July as meaning we can dispense with all safety measures. I hope we don’t see people hugging everybody they meet, breathing on each other, and forgetting all the sacrifices we have made over the last 18 months.

Let’s just take it easy, not rush into anything, that could put us back into lockdown.

Lewie Tue 06-Jul-21 11:26:29

I learned just this morning of a friend who has had both covid jabs, catching the new variant and being bedridden for two weeks! I shall continue to wear my mask in supermarkets and any other indoor spaces for a while yet.

GrauntyHelen Tue 06-Jul-21 11:23:59

I think removing the compelling of masks and social distancing while the cases are doubling every 9 days is reckless I thank God I live in Scotland!

BusterTank Tue 06-Jul-21 11:15:53

People have become to complacent thinking they are fine because they have had the jab . Which is untrue people who have the double vaccine , have died . It has also been proven that people mixing has know shown that cases are on the rise again . How many more cases and how many more deaths do we need , before people realize that we are not ready to return to normal .

effalump Tue 06-Jul-21 11:15:14

You're pinning your hopes on a vaccine that doesn't make you immune, doesn't stop you catching 'covid', doesn't stop you spreading it around, in some cases can make you seriously ill. You happy to carry on socially distancing and wearing masks (perhaps not from 19th July for a short time) that will more than likely cause you to end up with bacterial pneumonia from re-breathing in your own germs and bacteria (we all have thousands already in our bodies) rather than take your chance with a virus that is 99.98% survivable? Wow!

Sparklefizz Tue 06-Jul-21 11:14:55

kjmpde

the vaccine is part of the safeguards. sosial distancing, masks and wshing hands etc are also needed To rely just on the vacine is like trying to complete a jigsaw without all of the pieces.

Totally agree. We need to use all the tools in our tool kit against Covid.

Sparklefizz Tue 06-Jul-21 11:13:48

My husband and I both caught an unlabelled virus back in 1989. He got better and I never did, and I have lived with the after effects, similar to Long Covid, for 32 years. It is called Myalgic Encephalomyelitis and it has ruined my life.

The threat of Long Covid needs to be taken very seriously.

Annaram1 Tue 06-Jul-21 11:08:21

Just to say we are very lucky to have a vaccine that is free. I was talking to a man in India and he told me that over there a jab costs $4 and if you are lucky you might be able to buy a tank of oxygen to take to the hospital with you as they never have enough there. Many Indians cannot afford to pay for the jab which is why the numbers are so high there.

Notright Tue 06-Jul-21 11:08:13

It is a much higher chance of dying from Covid than the other things we can catch or have vaccine for.

kjmpde Tue 06-Jul-21 10:49:48

the vaccine is part of the safeguards. sosial distancing, masks and wshing hands etc are also needed To rely just on the vacine is like trying to complete a jigsaw without all of the pieces.

MayBee70 Tue 06-Jul-21 10:43:24

Alegrias1

MayBee70

This virus could have been Ebola and the next pandemic might be of a virus equally lethal. Why do you dismiss the possibility so lightly?

I don't dismiss it at all. But its not Ebola. Did we live our lives before Covid scared of the fact that we might have a lethal virus? No, we didn't, not every day anyway.

To suggest that the virus we are dealing with right now might mutate into something we can't handle is not a valid thing to do. It exaggerates the risk and causes even more anxiety than there already is in the world.

I see your post WWM2, I think we agree.

No. But governments should have prepared for it which they didn’t. Maybe we should have lived our lives assuming there would be a pandemic at some point. There was a BBC4 documentary about pandemics which, even though I watch BBC4 all of the time, I never watched because I wanted to ignore the fact that something so awful might happen so I’m as guilty as the next person. We mustn’t sleep walk into something like this again.

polnan Tue 06-Jul-21 10:36:40

imo to answer the question, simply
yes.

Alegrias1 Mon 05-Jul-21 13:43:32

MayBee70

This virus could have been Ebola and the next pandemic might be of a virus equally lethal. Why do you dismiss the possibility so lightly?

I don't dismiss it at all. But its not Ebola. Did we live our lives before Covid scared of the fact that we might have a lethal virus? No, we didn't, not every day anyway.

To suggest that the virus we are dealing with right now might mutate into something we can't handle is not a valid thing to do. It exaggerates the risk and causes even more anxiety than there already is in the world.

I see your post WWM2, I think we agree.

Namsnanny Mon 05-Jul-21 13:39:44

Ihave experience of the after effects of Gfever myself. So I do understand the difficulties some people might face with long covid.
But we know so little, and cant target these people with support until they present with symptoms.
Not opening up on the presumption that long covid will be a problem for some, isnt an answer IMV

Getting finance together to research and medically support those affected is a necessity.

And where does the money come from? Working people paying taxes.

Sorry, I'm not so erudite as some, so I hope I'm getting my point across!

Whitewavemark2 Mon 05-Jul-21 13:37:51

Alegrias1

Every so often there's something in a post that I just can't pass by...

We know that mutation may well become something so dangerous that mankind may struggle to contain it.

Why on earth would you say that? There's no reason at all to say that. Another virus may come along that we can't contain. We might get hit by an asteroid tomorrow, or a plane might fall out of the sky and land on my house.

But the risks of Covid mutating into an unmanageable virus are negligible; I posted something to that effect yesterday from one of the Oxford vaccine team. If people think that Armageddon is on the doorstep, we're never going to get out of this!

I do wonder what this whole thing has done to our ability to judge risk.

You are right. The risk is minimal.

MayBee70 Mon 05-Jul-21 13:37:06

This virus could have been Ebola and the next pandemic might be of a virus equally lethal. Why do you dismiss the possibility so lightly?

Alegrias1 Mon 05-Jul-21 13:27:25

Every so often there's something in a post that I just can't pass by...

We know that mutation may well become something so dangerous that mankind may struggle to contain it.

Why on earth would you say that? There's no reason at all to say that. Another virus may come along that we can't contain. We might get hit by an asteroid tomorrow, or a plane might fall out of the sky and land on my house.

But the risks of Covid mutating into an unmanageable virus are negligible; I posted something to that effect yesterday from one of the Oxford vaccine team. If people think that Armageddon is on the doorstep, we're never going to get out of this!

I do wonder what this whole thing has done to our ability to judge risk.

MayBee70 Mon 05-Jul-21 13:18:22

What upsets me that the AZ vaccine is being thrown out in some countries and there are other countries eg South Africa where people are queuing up to have any vaccine they can get. This initial scaremongering about the AZ vaccine, for whatever reason, has resulted in many deaths that could have been avoided.

Whitewavemark2 Mon 05-Jul-21 12:30:21

maizie I absolutely agree.

We know that it is a global pandemic.

We know that the wealthy countries have grabbed more than they need for vaccine.

We know that the virus, left unchecked will mutate.

We know that mutation may well become something so dangerous that mankind may struggle to contain it.

We know that the continent of for example Africa has not received remotely the amount of vaccine needed.

This will almost certainly mean that the next variant will come from there and spread throughout the world.

We simply will never be back to anything like normality until we have vaccinated the world to a sufficient level.

We should act as though the virus is still free to spread until we have world herd immunity.

MaizieD Mon 05-Jul-21 12:02:09

The trouble at the moment is that they know covid affects all your major organs including your brain - so flu it ain’t.

As I understand it you can sustain covid damage to internal organs even after having what appears to be a mild infection.

This is one of my major worries about letting it run through children and young people. We don't know just how much damage can be cause, nor how much of it could be long term and persist into adulthood. I don't care for the government to take this risk for my grandchild and for all young people.

While covid is causing infections globally and the greater part of the world's population is unvaccinated I really don't think we should be dropping our guard. We might have to accept the fact, not that we have to 'learn to live with it', as though it were some seasonal illness like a cold, but that we have to be fully on our guard against it for a considerable length of time. And be prepared for the country to invest in making schools and colleges as safe as possible safe for our young people; for the sake of their futures.

I am quite horrified at the irresponsibility of our
government and far more worried than I have been at any stage of the pandemic.

Whitewavemark2 Mon 05-Jul-21 11:32:29

growstuff

Whitewave and JaneJudge I was reading something somewhere (sorry, forgotten where) that Covid is leading to some "revisiting" of mysterious past viruses. So much money has been poured into Covid-19 that scientists know much more now about how they work. Viruses are actually very fragile and can't be spread without hosts. Many die out very quickly before any research is done. It could be that you had one of these viruses which disappears very quickly, but unfortunately leaves you with permanent after-effects.

Yes that’s right I think. I know that I shall have to deal with it for the rest of my life, and I have largely got to grips with it but it isn’t pleasant when it affects me, and I know the only way to get rid of it is to rest for about10 days.

The trouble at the moment is that they know covid affects all your major organs including your brain - so flu it ain’t.

Until they know as much as feasible I think it is irresponsible to allow the virus to spread without hinderance.

growstuff Mon 05-Jul-21 11:03:04

Whitewave and JaneJudge I was reading something somewhere (sorry, forgotten where) that Covid is leading to some "revisiting" of mysterious past viruses. So much money has been poured into Covid-19 that scientists know much more now about how they work. Viruses are actually very fragile and can't be spread without hosts. Many die out very quickly before any research is done. It could be that you had one of these viruses which disappears very quickly, but unfortunately leaves you with permanent after-effects.

JaneJudge Mon 05-Jul-21 10:51:27

It is really weird isn't it? I had loads of bloods taken that were sent 'up to London' too. Your poor husband, that sounds awful x