Coronavirus - Here for life (In high population density areas)

Looks like the All Ireland hurling and football finals had a big impact on the numbers.

2 Likes

U21 Football Final no doubt

20

I was on about the Club championships

“every vaccine counts” but lets leave 40,000 of them sitting in a fridge as giving the second dose anything other than exactly 3 weeks apart seems to be more dangerous than getting COVID itself.

3 Likes

Where is that coming from? Given supplies are limited at the moment it would seem sensible to wait a week or two and make sure they are administered correctly rather than squandering them, it that is at issue, right?

I am assuming that’s their logic. I can’t think of any other reason why they aren’t horsing every single vaccine into people as soon as they get it.

Healthcare workers who are close contacts but have no symptoms have been requested to return to work now such is the shortage of staff

CUH has no capacity. Have set up a covid ward in Mallow and started moving patients there yday to free up capacity for more serious cases

1 Like

The slow start is frustrating and my expectation is that we will be slower than other EU countries in the long run, but that remains to be seen.

At moment it makes sense to make sure all the vaccines on hand are used successfully while supply is very limited. I think some of the criticism of the government on the slowness with vaccination has been a bit over the top so far.

Used successfully… How do you mean? A storage issue or a sticking it in someone’s arm issue?

1 Like

Can you try that post again, but this time with some logic applied?

1 Like

Sure the only reason they’ve anyone vaccinated at all is because of criticism. They weren’t planning on vaccinating at the weekends initially until people were mean to them on Twitter

Lads wanted a vaccine invented within a few months, then they wanted it stored at minus 70. Then they want it distributed, now they want a booster
Would an invermectin tablet not have been a lot handier? Worked for 1.4 billion Indians

1 Like

My understanding is that if someone gets the jab and doesn’t get the second one at the right time then they aren’t vaccinated for the long term, right? Would you prefer they started lashing out injections willy nilly or planned to make sure that the second one is administered at the right time, even if that took a couple of weeks? I’d prefer the second.

Reports that admin staff were vaccinated before frontline in Tralee and Limerick.

One for Paul Reid to explain

3 Likes

With the amount of supplies we have at the moment vaccinating people at weekends is purely for optics, it’s not going to massively speed up the overall process.

When we have big numbers of supplies on hand then it makes more sense to work through weekends and round the clock even. I might be wrong but right now it will hardly make a difference will it?

If there’s gonna be a supply of millions and if the first jab reduces your risk by 60-70% I think there is a case to be made for lashing it in quickly, especially to vulnerable elderly people in nursing homes.

2 Likes

That’s hardly a surprise. They have holidays to take and planes to fly on.

A scandal if true

Why can’t they do it correctly at speed? It’s sticking a needle in someone’s arm and updating a database /file ffs. You public servants are gas.