Vaccine cards... national registry of everyone vaccinated... get the fuck out of here are you serious, this is where this shit is headed:
https://www.cnn.com/2020/12/02/health/covid-19-vaccination-kit-record-card/index.html
I fucking knew it when they created the databases to track controlled substance prescriptions and violated our right to medical privacy this is where this shit was headed... yea I'm pissed.
@mewmew No a population where a persons medical history isnt private.. a population where a vaccine can skip long term safety studies, require emergency authorization, be held immune to any liability so you cant sue if you get killed AND be forced to take it and need to carry around a vaccination card to prove it.
If you cant see the problem in that combination then there is no hope for you.
@freemo While I can see a number of cons to such a scenario, I can also see a very important pro as well.
In short, your health systems *really* need to keep track of who has or has not been vaccinated. Ideally, you need to end up with everyone vaccinated; but you're not going to get there, because there are eight billion people on the planet, each needs two doses, and sixteen billion doses are NOT going to be easy or quick to get manufactured.
So you hit the healthcare workers first; the people most likely to die if they get COVID; the over-60s and those with comorbidities. But every last dose of the vaccine is needed, because there are NOT going to be enough doses, not for a long time... so the doses that there are, need to be distributed as optimally as possible. And in order to distribute those doses as optimally as possible... the people handling the logistics *do* need to know who has or has not already been vaccinated.
Some sort of database is the most straightforward way to keep track of that.
That's the pro; the big argument in favour of this national registry.
@ccc That doesnt explain why there would need to be a register that includes personally identifying information.. knowing "bob smith was vaccinated" isnt useful for what you describe but knowing "10% of health care workers are vaccinated" might be.
to track the sort of logistical information your talking about it could be done without the violation of personal privacy by instead simply tradcking the data one cares about (age, location, profession) of those vaccinated without needing to record their name or identifying information.
@freemo That's true - knowing that 10% of the health care workers in this particular hospital are vaccinated would be enough for that. (You would have to go down to a specific hospital - so that you know where to send the vaccinations - and at the very least someone in that hospital would need to know exactly who has and has not been vaccinated).
There are better ways to handle that particular pro, I have no doubt. And... on top of that, no matter how it's handled, that information is only really useful until COVID's been broken as much as smallpox has been broken. So, even then, the need for the data is *very* temporary.
@ccc well no you dont really need to know it at a hospital level. Generally the way youd do it is similar to how we are already doing it.
1) announce vaccines are available only to healthcare workers at the current stage.
2) Ask all healthcare workers to apply at their hospital for a vaccine
3) see the demand and requests and begin distributing
You dont need to know who got vaccinated to do logistics all you need to know is who is requesting to be vaccinated and of the criteria you specify for each stage which criteria they match.
There is really no logistical advantage to having a database that has identifiable information, you just need to know who has placed themselves in the queue.
@freemo Sure, there's better ways to handle that particular pro. The doctor actually giving the vaccination needs to know who he's giving it to, but only so that he can be sure that he gives the second dose after the correct interval - I don't see any immediate reason to send that information any further.
@ccc yea, I mean obviously there will be some local record of who gets what. Your personal doctor will have your name and personal files for example. thats fine, particularly if you have the right to purge that data at your leisure.
but as we agree a national registry is not needed
@freemo On a national level, you *do* need to know how many health workers per hospital have *not* been vaccinated, so you know where to send the sharply limited supply of vaccines.
You don't need to know *who* they are.
The national registry is a very lazy solution to the first of these. (There are other solutions; some of which don't spill over into the second of these).
...so yeah, I think we're broadly in agreement with regards to what is or is not truly necessary.
@ccc Well sort of... as I said you need to know who is in the queue. You obviously have no need to know what hospital workers arent vaccinated when those workers dont intend to get vaccinated. You would only need to know how many hospital workers there are that intend to get vaccinated and who have not.
Thus all you need to know is who is in the queue (people who want to get vaccinated and havent), not who is unvaccinated.
....wait wait wait wait up right there.
Hospital workers who don't *intend* to get vaccinated? Is that a thing that happens?
@ccc for normal vaccines, no. But when its a vaccine that skipped several years of safety tests, has a real risk of life threatening ADE long-term, has emergency authorization to be distributed without the normal safety vetting, and has an exemption so if you die when you take it (or get injured) you cant sue for compensation... when all that happens to be the case for a vaccine, then yes, a great many hospital workers do not wish to be vaccinated.
@freemo ...oh, dear.
Now I'm suddenly seeing a second use for a national registry of people who have been vaccinated. It would prevent a prospective patient from needing to check with each doctor who might treat him, individually, who might have been COVID vaccinated. Which - from a patient's point of view - might very well otherwise become a necessary precaution in a few months' time.
@ccc I dont think a patient should have a right to demand that a doctor put their life at risk in order to vet them. What a patient would have a right to is a doctor that isnt actively sick, a doctor that is regularly checked for presence of the disease, a doctor that washes their hands, wears a mask, and takes all the precautions... but tahts as far as it goes.
The scenario your depicting is a very dangerous slope where doctors and nurses would be required to put their lives at risk, take drugs that have not been properly vetted for safety if they wish to keep their jobs. I dont think we have any right to demand a nurse or doctor both be on the front line and risk their lives AND take experimental drugs before the rest of us that could kill them if they wish to keep their jobs.
@freemo You are right - a doctor should not put his own life at risk in order to vet a patient. But, as a patient, I also should not be expected to put my life at risk when going to the doctor.
And the way this virus spreads, *any* interaction with another human being carries a small but potential risk of picking up said virus. It doesn't *have* symptoms for the first several days - for some people, particularly if they are healthy people, it might never have symptoms at *all*. So, if I need to interact with someone, there is a small-but-finite chance of picking up the virus. (This is *especially* the case if I need to interact with someone who needs to look into my mouth, because I need to remove my own mask to permit that).
So, in order to reduce the risk to my own life, I should be able to select to visit a doctor who *has* received the vaccination. I shouldn't have the right to force a doctor to receive the vaccination; but I should have the right to select a different doctor if I find that the doctor I would have visited has not received said vaccination.
@ccc while I can understand that perspective,and I might even agree with you if we were talking about a vaccine with proven safety... it just doesn't make sense that a patient should have the right to pick doctors who put their lives at risk for your safety, or to allow doctors to have an advantage (draw in more patients) if they put their life at risk through taken an unproven vaccine.
Moreover if a doctor is taking the proper precations then even if they have the virus and they dont know you wont be at risk.. if they are disinfecting regularly, wearing a face mask and shield, and using fresh gloves, then there shouldnt be much of a risk to you.
If that doesnt satisfy you then you have the right to get the vaccine yourself, or do a televisit.
Doctors literally enter rooms and treat patients who are immunocompromised where even a little bacteria from a wall or a cold could easily kill them and yet they do so with a great track record of safety. So any such fears, presuming a doctor takes the right precations are moot in my eyes.
@freemo As I understand it, the currently available vaccines have gone through some basic trials. Not as much as the full understand-it-all type safety trials - there hasn't been enough time for those, yet - but enough to be fairly certain that having the vaccine is a good deal less lethal than *not* having the vaccine and risking the virus.
But let's consider an unvaccinated doctor who takes good precautions. What are my chances of dying if I visit that doctor, in person?
First of all, if I get the virus, I've got a straight-out 3% chance of dying from it (source: https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/ ) That's the average odds across all age groups, all countries, worldwide - the elderly or immunocompromised have lower odds, the young and healthy have better odds, and so on. But let's run with 3% chance of death if I have the virus and do a bit of a Fermi estimate.
Now, in consulting with a doctor, I'll need to spend some time in the doctor's room, with my symptoms being investigated. (Let's assume, for the sake of argument, that I'm facing a problem that requires the doctor to see my symptoms in-person). That's a small room, and I may have to remove my mask and say 'ah' while he pushes my tongue down... since this virus is so terribly eager to spread, the odds are that if the doctor has the virus then I will get the virus. But what are the odds that the doctor has the virus?
Face masks and shields and so forth will help. They're imperfect defenses, but they are defenses; they help to prevent the doctor from contracting the virus himself. But let's consider the doctor having regular self-tests (and temporarily closing down his own practice if he finds he has the virus) Now, how often does the doctor self-test?
The test may take a day or so of analysis in a very overworked lab to get a result; and the materials used in the test also have a cost. So self-testing once a week feels about right. There are 52 weeks in a year - this is a Fermi estimate so I'm rounding that to 50. Let's assume that a non-vaccinated doctor gets the virus once in any given year, on average.
Then my Fermi estimate suggests that I have a 2% chance (roughly) of getting the virus in any single visit to an unvaccinated doctor. If I get it, I get a 3% chance of death. So, merely by visiting an unvaccinated doctor, I get a six in a thousand chance of dying as a direct result of the visit.
Therefore, if I can't tell whether a doctor has taken the vaccination or not, I should not visit the doctor unless either (a) I have been vaccinated (this will take a while, I am not a health worker and the vaccines can only be produced so fast) or (b) I believe that I have at least a six in a thousand chance of dying if I *don't* visit the doctor.
@ccc they have went through some very basic safety trials, yea.. typically 5 - 10 years worth hof safety trials down to a few months.
Basically they got through enough trials to know if you take it you probably wont die or get ill in the first few months. But they have absolutely no data regarding the likely hood of 6 month or more concerns.
ADE is the biggest concern that is only detected in longterm trials. This is where a vaccine will usually provide immunity and show normal healthy responses in the short period after taking a vaccine but after 9 months, a year, or more into the future (when long-term immunity sets in rather than short-term) if an immunized person gets the disease they will have a more severe reaction tot he disease than an unimunized person.
If ADE becomes an issue with the COVID vaccine, and we have absolutely no data to provide safety against this, it means people who take it could potentially be in for a death sentance in a a year or more. Health workers who will likely be exposed to covid long after the virus is rampant would be particularly vulnerable to such a situation.
Your assessment of masks seems off... can you explain to me how immunocompromised individuals who would trivially die from even exposure to a cold manage to generally be safe for years on end when treated by doctors even thought they have to be in a clean room? If full protection (face shield, mask, gloves, fresh cloth body suit) were so ineffective wouldnt these people be dropping like flys every time a doctor visited them?
@freemo This virus has been out for a year, and one-point-seven million people have died. Waiting another four years would mean the deaths of approximately another seven million people - which, as I understand, is the reason why this vaccine got fast-tracked.
> Your assessment of masks seems off...
Yeah, it's a Fermi estimate. About half of my assessments are almost certainly off, one way or the other - I'm kind of hoping that they approximately cancel out, but I wouldn't be at all surprised to find out that the actual odds of dying as a result of visiting an unvaccinated doctor are off from my estimate by an order of magnitude or more. And yes, that includes my assessment of the effectiveness of masks.
@ccc While ADE is far from certain it is a real risk. Yes over a million have died, its very serious. But on the chance ADE, a very real chance, ADE is a side effect of this vaccine, then what happens whe the covid death rate all of a udden doubles?
Taking risks where there is a complete unknown but very reasonable possiblity that the end result is that the death toll fromt he virus goes up and not down long term, thats not an acceptable risk.
Its a shame people are dying, but acting and doing anything, no matter how unsafe, just because of the bias that doing something feels like it is better than nothing, is not good reasoning.
We have enough historic examples of how lack of proper safety measures causes a cure to become worse than the disease. We shouldnt let that be the case here.
I am not suggesting the vaccine not be released at all. I am suggesting that given the very real threat that it can put you at a greater risk of death than the virus, it should be u to the the individual if they want to take it and we should make every effort to ensure no one is strong armed into taking it against their better judgement for their own safety.
@freemo Hmmm. Not being a medical professional myself, I know absolutely nothing about ADE. How probable would you guess it is, and how much effect does it have? Is a doubling of the death rate typical?
@freemo what are you talking about? The vaccine sheet is shared between states from ever...
@pthenq1 No previously to get int he state immunization record you had to specifically request it from your doctor and by default you wouldnt be entered into it. Furthermore it was kept at a state, not national level with wach state keeping its own record.
I am less concerned with records i volunteer to be added to getting shared but in this case it doesnt appear to be an opt-in scenario anymore
@pthenq1 bullshit, no one should ever be obligated to reveal their medical history.
The way this is going to ply out is your going to be required to show proof of vaccination if you want to attend public gatherings, effectively forcing people to take a vaccine that is life threatening (didnt go through proper safety vetting)
@freemo LOL. Your medical history is protected by HIPAA.
You are free to not vaccinate. Nobody is forcing you.
But nobody has the right of hiding or lying after 350K deads of fellow Americans.
If a person needs to be vaccinated to do something they will be able to show they did it. That is all that it is on the vaccination card.
When things will return to normal then all good about dealing with this vaccine using the same parameters than the other vaccines.
@pthenq1 You really dont see the problem with passing emergency laws that prevents someone who received the vaccine from suing the government or the company that made it if they are died or injured and at the same time requiring people to vaccinate if they want to perform certain tasks...
You cant cook up something in a lab, bypass all safety, then require people to vaccinate if they want to be part of society and go to public gatherings or get a job.
The second they passed a vaccine that was given emergency privilage to bypass safety protocols was the moment they lost **any** right to force anyone to be vaccinated under any circumstance. Volunteer, sure.. but now you are seriously going to tell me my nurse friends, most of whom do not want to put their life and health at risk on a rushed and unsafe vaccine, need to loose their job and thats perfectly acceptable.
Cut me a break, its astonishing you cant see the problem here.
@freemo I see the problem, but it is not a big one.
The vaccines are in the context of a pandemic. There is a pandemic outside.
In the context of a pandemic (last one similar, 1918), some jobs will require extra care. Including a vaccine.
If a vaccine is required and a person does not have it, it makes sense they stop working on that.
It is all voluntary. We are all adults here.
The vaccine is safe up to a point; it can be said. 1 or 2 more years are required to certify it completely. But the process for emergency approval was thorough.
There are a fund and insurance (the vaccine insurance) covering the 2 o 3 people per million having horrible reactions to the vaccines. The government supports it, and it has existed since at least the 1990s.
I understand it is not ideal. But 3000 people dying is not ideal either. We have to choose.
And again, all the vaccination bushiness is voluntary. Of course, there are consequences if someone gets vaccinated or not.
Personally, I think not getting vaccinated is the same that chose to go outside while an enemy making bombs rain... it is crazy, irrational, and dangerous.
But hey, everybody is free of doing whatever. There will be consequences. That for sure.
@pthenq1 This is so horribly naive as to the problem.. you are citing people having reactions to the virus the 2 r 3 m per million **that is not the concern**..
The concern is not people reacting to a virus being administered int he days or even month after, that is easily handled with short term safety tests and not even the **point** of the tests that were skipped.
The tests skipped were the long term tests, they are not designed to test the risk of th vaccine causing harm immediately after administration.
If you bothered to read the scientific journals on the topic the thing doctors are up in arms about is the lack of **long** term tests, ones that on most vaccines typically fail to pass due to ADE.
With ADE a person administered a vaccine can and often does show short term immunity and is perfectly reaction free. However those immunized long term (9 months, a year or more) into the future will show deadly reactions to the virus they are immunized against causing those vaccinated to become significantly more ill (and often die) than those unvaccinated. ADE is primary reasonw e do long term testing at all.
The skipping of long term tests means there is absolutely **no** protection against ADE. There is a small, but not 0 chance that anyone vaccinated will become a walking time bomb and in a year exposure to the virus would be deadly to those vaccinated. This is the reason the vaccine panel in europe was urged to not release the vaccine and the reason so many doctors are pissed off and pushing to hold off on releasing it, al of which are falling on deaf ears.
Please dtop with this nonsense and bother to educate yourself on what the concern even is before you come in with this shit, because your response suggests you are copletely naive to the risks being discussed (if you werent you wouldnt be talking about short term adverse reactions, that isnt even a concern at all!).
We have seen the dangerous of rushed vaccines before, people die.. here we are again playing dice, virtually forcing people to get a vaccine with no right to sue (insurance is not sueing, it is capped and will not help when everyone gets ADE, its not a big enough fund to cover that).
In the chance that ADE becomes a real concern here, and while it may be small chance, the result is FAR FAR more dead than what COVID could do on its own, thats the risk, and the fact that you are perfectly ok with that risk being forced onto health professionals is saddening and very telling at the same time.
@freemo ADE is not likely like very UNlikely.
This is because #COVID19 vaccines do not use the inactivated virus, and ADE reactions were not observed in patients under phase 3 trials.
To be clear: if ADE is a possibility with the vaccines, we should see cases on the phase 3 trials. And there are none.
It is a false claim: https://www.newswise.com/factcheck/the-claim-that-covid-19-vaccines-will-cause-more-severe-disease-through-antibody-dependent-enhancement-is-not-yet-supported/
Some papers about the subject remarks that is very very unlikely.
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41564-020-00789-5#Sec4
https://academic.oup.com/jid/article/222/12/1946/5891764
So all good.
@pthenq1
I already stated it is unlikely, but if it occurs the results woukd be horrific and thus why we have long term trials.
No we would not see it in these phase 3 trials as they are two short to show ade, under normal vaccines with long term phase 3 trials we would see it.
@pthenq1
I do find it funny though that all the links agree with what i said, for the most part. As i said ADE is not a garuntee but the risk, even though being a minority chance, has devastating results. Even as the links pointed out there are many peer reviewed journals pointing out the riska of ADE and no one has been able to rule it out.
Even the papers you link claim mixed results and a chance of ADE.
@pthenq1
Quotes directly from your own post (peer reviewed journal) and supports exactly what i said perfectly:
ADE has been observed in SARS, MERS and other human respiratory virus infections including RSV and measles, which suggests a real risk of ADE for SARS-CoV-2 vaccines and antibody-based interventions. However, clinical data has not yet fully established a role for ADE in human COVID-19 pathology.
@freemo The paper says: "No definitive role for ADE in human coronavirus diseases has been established. "
That is the strongest NO possible.
@freemo Not heard anything about them in the UK, is this just in the Netherlands or is this happening in other countries too..
This is usa
@hansw At least they will know not to diagnose you with Covid when you walk in coughing and wheezing, but with the vaccination ausweis.
what, a healthier population?