Maybe control groups be dealt with at intervals of three days, three weeks, three months
In about 90 years one might have reliable data

ossie wrote:pwa wrote:Blair (remember him?) is saying a single dose gives 90% immunity and that we should be giving that single dose to as many vulnerable and care / health sector people as possible before thinking about second doses. That does make some sense.
It appears they are going to do exactly what Blair suggested. Yet the amount of grief he got on here and other social media![]()
The government said the vaccine rollout will change slightly to focus on giving as many at-risk people as possible the initial vaccine dose.
People receiving the Oxford vaccine or the one from Pfizer/BioNTech, which is also being rolled out, will now receive their first dose of the vaccine followed by a second dose up to 12 weeks later.
https://news.sky.com/story/covid-19-oxf ... k-12155958
Cyril Haearn wrote:Just shows how little anyone knows
Maybe control groups be dealt with at intervals of three days, three weeks, three months
In about 90 years one might have reliable data
Jdsk wrote:ossie wrote:pwa wrote:Blair (remember him?) is saying a single dose gives 90% immunity and that we should be giving that single dose to as many vulnerable and care / health sector people as possible before thinking about second doses. That does make some sense.
It appears they are going to do exactly what Blair suggested. Yet the amount of grief he got on here and other social media :wink:
The government said the vaccine rollout will change slightly to focus on giving as many at-risk people as possible the initial vaccine dose.
People receiving the Oxford vaccine or the one from Pfizer/BioNTech, which is also being rolled out, will now receive their first dose of the vaccine followed by a second dose up to 12 weeks later.
https://news.sky.com/story/covid-19-oxf ... k-12155958
The approval is great news.
....
Psamathe wrote:My worry is that the trial data still show 62% and with the more infectious strain even with 100% vaccination take-up that is far from enough for herd immunity. Government are selling this as "'way out' of pandemic" (Hancock, today). And once vaccinated with the 62% vaccine you are unlikely to be re-vaccinated with e.g. 90+% vaccine later.
Jdsk wrote:ossie wrote:pwa wrote:Blair (remember him?) is saying a single dose gives 90% immunity and that we should be giving that single dose to as many vulnerable and care / health sector people as possible before thinking about second doses. That does make some sense.
It appears they are going to do exactly what Blair suggested. Yet the amount of grief he got on here and other social media![]()
The government said the vaccine rollout will change slightly to focus on giving as many at-risk people as possible the initial vaccine dose.
People receiving the Oxford vaccine or the one from Pfizer/BioNTech, which is also being rolled out, will now receive their first dose of the vaccine followed by a second dose up to 12 weeks later.
https://news.sky.com/story/covid-19-oxf ... k-12155958
The approval is great news.
I'm looking forward to seeing the regime. It will be an interesting bit of regulation if it is different from what was used in the submitted studies. My guess is they will go for a longer gap but with extra surveillance so that the new regime is run as a new study.
Jdsk wrote:What does "control groups be dealt with at intervals of three days" mean?
Jdsk wrote:I'm looking forward to seeing the regime. It will be an interesting bit of regulation if it is different from what was used in the submitted studies. My guess is they will go for a longer gap but with extra surveillance so that the new regime is run as a new study.
Jonathan
mikeymo wrote:Jdsk wrote:I'm looking forward to seeing the regime. It will be an interesting bit of regulation if it is different from what was used in the submitted studies. My guess is they will go for a longer gap but with extra surveillance so that the new regime is run as a new study.
Jonathan
Does this "roll out" of the vaccine count as Phase IV of the same study?
https://www.nccn.org/patients/resources/clinical_trials/phases.aspx
pwa wrote:The Westminster Government is saying half of all over 80s in England have had their first jab, which is great. But in our S Wales village none have had it yet, and there are tales of people in a nearby town receiving their letter after the date of their appointment. The post is so slow at the moment that it can't keep up.