oh lord...what depressing dross...ofcourse I'll be back...and so will the boys...do u really think they wanna be stuck in the rice paddy fields all year...all we need is a vaccine or an effective treatment plan...any day now....
oh lord...what depressing dross...ofcourse I'll be back...and so will the boys...do u really think they wanna be stuck in the rice paddy fields all year...all we need is a vaccine or an effective treatment plan...any day now....
GerBear1958 (November 12th, 2020)
More depressing dross latinwithpox.
Any day now???
Do you honestly think Thailand will be able to agree a vaccine amongst the many being produced? Do you really think they can come up with the right beaurocracy? Do you think they could come up with a credible plan? Haven’t you been watching developments, or rather lack of them?
What planet do you live on?
Don’t answer that!
gerefan2 (October 22nd, 2020)
u coddled guys have no idea...probably the lost dramatic thing that has ever happened in your lives is running out of toilet paper...quick dial 011....the virus will either be tamed by a vaccine or treatment plan or run its natural course and eventually burn out...i can wait another year...no great hardship...
The operative word here is eventually. The truth is of course that none of us can be sure. When you look at other vaccines (or lack of same) things are not looking too encouraging but yes that could change. But who knows. Must I remind you that we are now living with the incidence of HIV virus for over 40 years? And with the common cold virus for perhaps a few thousand years? So if we get lucky with this nasty one, we can all celebrate with a trip to Sin City!
GerBear1958 (November 12th, 2020)
These are not directly comparable.
1 HIV mutates quickly. And technical capability now is way ahead of 40 years ago.
2 The common cold is actually caused by many different viruses. Four of which are coronaviruses.
3 Motivation to develop a vaccine is much higher with Covid, hence it is well funded with many different vaccines under development.
We will probably see two vaccines submitting results to regulators for approval in 2020.
GerBear1958 (November 12th, 2020)
That’s exactly how I feel, latintopxxx. In the normal course of events I would hope to travel out to Thailand in January 2021 and stay for three months. But it has been apparent for several months now that being able to travel to Thailand in the first quarter of 2021 would, for someone from the UK, be highly unlikely. I have therefore set my sights on January 2022.
The good news, according to the following article published in The Guardian is that a vaccine is expected to be available here in the UK by “early next year”. It goes without saying that health service workers will be at the front of the queue, but how will the health authorities decide the basis on which everyone else will be vaccinated?
Perhaps a good indicator might be the way they decide how the flu vaccine is distributed. My slot for getting the flu vaccination this year is different from previous years. It is reasonably early and will take place on November 8th, 2020. The selection process is based on age, those with a health condition, carers and alphabetically based on surname. Whether that is a good indicator of the basis on which they will decide how the Covid-19 vaccine will be distributed is, at the present time, anyone’s guess. If however this method is chosen then there is a modest chance that travelling to Thailand in January 2022 is a realistic expectation. Like most of us, all I can do is wait and see and not fret too much about a likely date for my return.
For the full article see: https://www.theguardian.com/society/...e-for-covid-19Are we near to having a vaccine for Covid-19?
Even a once bullish PM is now not so optimistic but there are promising signs of a vaccine on the horizon
James Tapper
Sat 17 Oct 2020 21.47 BST Last modified on Sat 17 Oct 2020 22.05 BST
Chair of the Vaccine Taskforce, Kate Bingham, has said there is a ‘slim chance’ a vaccine might arrive by Christmas. In March, Boris Johnson said we would turn the tide in 12 weeks and “send the coronavirus packing” and by May ministers were boasting of having a vaccine by September. Last week the prime minister sounded far less confident, telling MPs that there was still no vaccine for SARS, 18 years after it emerged. A vaccine may not be far away though . . .
Remember: Coughs and sneezes spread diseases
francois (October 22nd, 2020)
Are you perhaps thinking along these lines?
D40D62DE-3B11-4384-9218-8D26A74867E6.jpeg
francois (October 22nd, 2020)