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26/02/2021


2021/02/26#p1

4 comments: click to read or leave your own

Happy Friday.

I'm taking my wife for her first dose of Covid vaccine this morning. She's clinically vulnerable and shielding so this is a first step towards a safer world. The second dose will be in May. I don't know when I'll be offered it not being in a priority group but all English adults are supposed to be offered at least the first dose by 31st July.

I was listening to a segment on the radio the other day detailing how rich nations were stockpiling vaccines and the manufacturer's were deliberately selling something like 95% of their output to those rich nations – I suppose it's a guaranteed payday especially when one company is making up to 80% profit.

It's disgusting.

There is a call for mass manufacturing on a global scale but this would require open sourcing the vaccine recipes. Not only are the companies themselves unwilling to do this but a number of governments of said rich nations are also blocking it. Big pharma holds such sway in political circles.

The World Health Organisation has an initiative called Covax which aims to grant more -"global equitable access to Covid vaccines"_ but, due to the above, will fall far short of anything even remotely resembling equitable. An example given during the above radio piece was that even with Covax's help only 2 in 10 adults in Ghana will be offered a vaccine by the end of this year.

The longer it takes to vaccinate the higher the chance of mutations which will be immune to the current crop of vaccinations and even the rich nations could find themselves back at square one.

A global pandemic is an ideal opportunity to reassess and put right some of the things wrong with our world – "what kind of normal [do] we want? – but it's sadly business as usual or worse. The divisions and inequalities are only going to grow, whole sections of the world could potentially become "no go" zones. It sounds melodramatic but you can see it happening. We've had our "travel corridors" during lockdown but with Covid passports being a possible way forward things could only get worse.

Well, that became the opposite of "happy Friday" pretty quickly.

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strandlines says: Reply to strandlines

@colinwalker I hope getting the vaccine for your wife goes smoothly and she doesn't experience any side effects. To respond to the second part of your post probably warrants an email 😊

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hjertnes says: Reply to hjertnes

@colinwalker I don't see that happening, a time limited cheaper license cost for third parties to produce it might. All of this stuff are very complex and expensive to do

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philbowell says: Reply to philbowell

@colinwalker Great to hear your wife is getting her first dose today. Both my parents have now had their first dose, my Mum has had to shield all the way through, it's great to have some light at the end of the tunnel. To offer a ray of light, the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine is being offered around to other countries at cost. I was talking to someone yesterday who is from Sri Lanka and she says it's being used there and is now being produced in India. Hopefully more of that starts to happen soon.

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colinwalker says: Reply to colinwalker

@philbowell Yes, the India production is apparently whats being used for the Covax scheme but more needs to be done.

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2021/02/26#p2

1 comment: click to read or leave your own

The vaccination went very smoothly and she didn't feel a thing. Her arm aches and she feels a bit dizzy but that's to be expected.

For what is largely a volunteer lead operation it was incredibly well organized and efficient. Very impressed.

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simonwoods says: Reply to simonwoods

@colinwalker Same here. It was very much a moment in time I found myself beyond relieved to live in this country; for all of its flaws, the mere existence of such substantial public infrastructure is a massive boost to the standard of living.

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