BMA raising concerns about the government's vaccine strategy, urging that the gap between Pfizer doses be reduced from twelve to six weeks.
A genuine question......What’s people’s opinion on here about smashing out the first dose of vaccines first and extending the next dose to 12 weeks ?
So many different opinions on social media, Twitter etc and I really don’t know what to think.
My opinion, for what it’s worth, is that it’s a good thing (but now wavering).....better to get 1000 people 50% safe rather than 500 people 90% safe (figures just made roughly).....that’s what logic says to me. Am I being too simplistic ?
I have tried to stay off this topic because it winds me up. Social media and Twitter probably not the places for an authoritative debate either (including here).
every single practising doctor, including my kidney consultant who I saw a few minutes ago, I have spoken to (and it’s a dozen or so) thinks there is absolutely no sensible reason to delay the second jab of the Pfizer vaccine. As far as I know no other country is following this approach. There is no evidence to support it. The AZ vaccine is a bit different, and the trial data so chaotic and poorly presented, so a delay to 12 weeks might actually be better, but it’s very hard to tell.
The argument is partial mass protection v stronger protection for fewer people. Given that the fewer people are by definition the most vulnerable, the ones with a much higher chance of ending up in hospital for a long time, I support stronger protection for the vulnerable.
But I’m pretty sure that either way, we will be facing another wave of this **** in the autumn, when we will probably need an upgraded vaccine(s) for whatever strains are circulating then. The key will be reducing hospitalisations to a manageable level.
On a slightly more positive note, having read the ‘evidence’ behind this ‘new strain is more deadly’ stuff, it really is weak, 6 out of 10 studies hint at this, but the results of these are incredibly variable and based on very small numbers. It might be more deadly, but I suspect the levels of deaths can be easily explained by the increased number of cases due to the increased infectiousness, which I still don’t understand - I mean I understand the statistics but not the mechanics of why it is more infectious.