The only benefit of anti-vaxxers is the default position as a self-selected control group with minimal loss to the aggregate IQ of society from remaining untreated. — Cheshire
Right, but if you are playing on the poetic aspect of semantics it is a treatment group. It is a preventive treatment; a specific test. — Cheshire
Safety is entirely measured in terms of certainty. — Isaac
You suggested that it was evidence of the safety of the vaccine in the context of the FDAs work on safety... — Isaac
Can I make assertions extrapolated only from the duration of the time taken? Are they equally as valid.Let's be candid here. Vaccines usually take much longer than the 1 year Covid-19 vaccines have been developed within. My hunch is fast-tracking the process like this a realy bad idea - shortcuts, I'm told save time but there's a tradeoff here between speed and safety/efficacy which everyone, oddly, seems to be ignoring. — TheMadFool
you require proof the covid vaccine is not an extraordinary case. — Cheshire
It is a demand for deductive evidence for the unknown outcome of a probabilistic trial awaiting inductive corroboration. It is a function of the amount of time that has passed; that makes the request impossible to meet. — Cheshire
If you take a Bayesian approach the number of currently healthy vaccinated people increasing at a steady rate should be reasonably compelling. Th number of unhealthy unvaccinated people clogging hospitals in places should also be reasonably compelling. — Cheshire
Prove to me what happens to me in the future. Can't be done. — Cheshire
Literally the hospital 5 miles from my house. From a nurse named Karin Heller in the ICU watching young people die from a delta variant begging people to address the situation. In the UK at least 40% of anything that occurs is likely to some one vaccinated. It is a function the populations vaccination rate which I addressed as being novel 5 or 6 times.Where's your evidence for "The number of unhealthy unvaccinated people clogging hospitals in places ". In the UK 40% of hospitalisations related to covid are among the vaccinated. — Isaac
I'm pretty sure I was verbally abused for not providing evidence which you now acknowledge can't exist. Letting people make up their own minds does not entail justifying their bad ideas; should covid prove to hold the ordinary dynamic of having been less effective due to anti-vaxxer spread of speculative danger.Yep. Which is why I wouldn't demand that it's met. I'm not demanding anything here. It's other people doing the demanding, I'm happy to just let people make up their own minds. — Isaac
Why? With an increase in vaccine uptake we'd expect an increase in healthy vaccinated people in all cases (except the vaccine actually being lethal). Increasing numbers of healthy vaccinated people tells us nothing. — Isaac
We are not dealing with quantum mechanics. The measurement does not alter what is being measured. The safety of a product and the determination of its safety are not the same. A product does not become safer because it is approved. It is approved because it has been shown to be safe. It is not its safety that changed, it is rather our degree of certainty of its safety that may change. — Fooloso4
Safety –a measure of the probability of an adverse outcome and its severity associated with using a medicine or technology in a given situation — McGraw-Hill Concise Dictionary of Modern Medicine
The context is whether he or others who are concerned for the safety of the vaccine should wait for FDA approval. — Fooloso4
Literally the hospital 5 miles from my house. From a nurse named Karin Heller in the ICU watching young people die from a delta variant begging people to address the situation. — Cheshire
In the UK at 40% of anything that occurs is likely to some one vaccinated. It is a function the populations vaccination rate — Cheshire
Letting people make up their own minds does not entail justifying their bad ideas — Cheshire
Empirical observations provided in real time by known medical professionals in direct contact is not the same kind.Exactly the kind of anecdotal evidence we've been trying to stop anti-vaxxers from using to spread disinformation. — Isaac
It is evidence your position is untenable and must result to holographic facts. At least 40% of all affected were probably also British by residence. No one needs a dishonest tactic to present the truth. I consider this a concession your position can not be maintained.Yes, it is. What difference does that make to a claim that it is the unvaccinated who are clogging hospitals? And yes, things might be different in the US, or they might not. We don't know do we, because you're too lazy to actually look up any evidence for us to discuss. — Isaac
See above.We haven't established that they're bad ideas yet. — Isaac
I was quoting Fishfry here. — hypericin
This is from a country with a high vaccination rate. — hypericin
What really matters though is the transmission rate. — hypericin
Evidence that vaccinations reduce transmission at a rate significant to cases of not vaccination. Besides the remarkable initial reduction in transmission following the introduction of a vaccine. Hold on I'm gathering evidence the sky is blue for a different study.Do you have such evidence? — Isaac
Yep. Which is why I wouldn't demand that it's met. I'm not demanding anything here. It's other people doing the demanding, I'm happy to just let people make up their own minds. — Isaac
I think you've been hacked.Yes, it is. What difference does that make to a claim that it is the unvaccinated who are clogging hospitals? And yes, things might be different in the US, or they might not. We don't know do we, because you're too lazy to actually look up any evidence for us to discuss. — Isaac
Safety –a measure of the probability of an adverse outcome and its severity ... — McGraw-Hill Concise Dictionary of Modern Medicine
And the argument is that waiting will increase the safety by decreasing the uncertainty (risk). — Isaac
As I said, safety and efficacy are not binomial, everything is only ever some given level of safety. — Isaac
Because it has been shown to be safe and effective.
— Fooloso4
That doesn't make sense. It's not a binomial. — Isaac
I've presented evidence from experts who believe that vaccination does not significantly increase the chances of a good outcome. — Isaac
The question is what qualifies the FDA to determine what level of safety people ought to accept? — Isaac
It is the evaluation that changes. The danger was there all along, it was simply unknown. — Fooloso4
Such an increase in our understanding may occur years from now rather than between now and its approval. Where do you draw the line? — Fooloso4
You did, but you said so in defense of your claim that it doesn't make sense to say that the vaccine is safe and effective: — Fooloso4
Can you explain how the vaccine is effective but does not significantly increase chances of a good outcome? How do you reconcile these conflicting claims? — Fooloso4
That is a question but not the one that was raised. — Fooloso4
ndeed. So evidence of a significant difference in transmission rate between strategies (vaccination vs other non-pharmaceutical methods vs both) is what we'd need to establish a moral imperative for a person to choose one over another. Do you have such evidence? — Isaac
To be clear, if 'safe' is a property of the vaccine, not our knowledge of it, then the FDA are lying. — Isaac
...otherwise everything can be declared 'might not be safe'. I really don't think that will help. — Isaac
Nothing is without risk. — Isaac
We're talking about what level of risk people ought to accept. — Isaac
Your use of the fact that the vaccine had been declared 'safe and effective' to argue that it ought to be taken was nonsensical because the person concerned had already said that they'd prefer to wait until it was proven more safe, a greater degree of certainty about the dangers. — Isaac
Because efficacy is not binomial either. — Isaac
... it is not a good risk/benefit balance for younger adults and children where they have no pre-existing vulnerability. — Isaac
Someone was told that they ought to take the vaccine because it had passed a certain threshold of safety and efficacy. — Isaac
Agreeable.The issues involved in more informed disagreements over safety, whether they have a more or less equal balance of advocates on either side or relatively few on the dissenting side, are beyond the capabilities of non-experts, that is those who are not epidemiologists, virologists or immunologists, to critically assess, and that seems to be a big problem. — Janus
Can I make assertions extrapolated only from the duration of the time taken? Are they equally as valid. — Cheshire
If you've done design and manufacturing work; then you are aware a lot of the progression can be derived from the initial setup or concept. Suppose whoever made the prototype knew what they were doing. The lack of changes and reevaluation to an original design also makes for quick output. — Cheshire
So people keep saying. No one has yet explained how that gem of statistical understanding everyone is so proud of is relevant to a claim about the rarity of the vaccinated infectious. — Isaac
what really matters is (difference in infection rate) x (difference in transmission rate). So even modest protection in both factors can multiply to make a significant difference. — hypericin
Well if the whole country was vaccinated, 100% of those infected would be vaccinated. Further, children, who are ineligible, and young adults, who get vaccinated in lower numbers, make up a significant part of the unvaccinated population. Their natural immunity partially removes them from the pool of potential viral hosts. — hypericin
When it is said to be safe this means to the best of our knowledge. — Fooloso4
Does that mean that when you say:
Nothing is without risk. — Isaac
that is not helpful? — Fooloso4
When discussing communicable disease we have to consider what level of risk the community ought to accept. More and more in both the private and public sector the answer is that the risk of the vaccine is lower than the risk of an unvaccinated community. — Fooloso4
I did not say it ought to be taken. I said I was surprised to here he was waiting. — Fooloso4
If it did not significantly increase chances of a good outcome it would not be regarded as effective. — Fooloso4
At first it was thought that there was not much risk for younger people but that is no longer the true. — Fooloso4
the likelihood of severe outcomes or death associated with covid-19 infection is very low for children — Stephen Baral
In any case, as with any vaccine that is considered safe that does not mean that it would be helpful for everyone. — Fooloso4
If what you say about the studies done to determine the safety of the vaccines in the under 25s is true then that is cause for concern and I would be worried too if I had children in that age group. Well, I am concerned anyway, I wouldn't want to see young people as a group harmed by the vaccines, but of course I would be more worried if I had kids myself. — Janus
In an emergency situation, which I think this arguably is, there does seem to be an imperative to suppress the voices of dissenters just for the pragmatic reason that they create unwarranted fears in many impressionable people, which serves to undermine the program. — Janus
The CDC director calls this "following the science," but it is not. It is following the TV pundits. — Vinay Prasad - Associate Professor in the Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics at the University of California
See this for example. According to my anti-Covid vaccines friend there is a league of thousands of doctors in the US, who believe the vaccines are killing and injuring many more people than the official figures show. But this all seems to be hyperbolic speculation (or should I have said speculative hyperbole?) as far as I, the non-expert, can tell. — Janus
The issues involved in more informed disagreements over safety, whether they have a more or less equal balance of advocates on either side or relatively few on the dissenting side, are beyond the capabilities of non-experts, that is those who are not epidemiologists, virologists or immunologists, to critically assess, and that seems to be a big problem. — Janus
I expect a higher level of wariness from those responsible for public health. If even a single expert (well-recognised, in the correct field) says there's a problem, then the course of action is uncertain. Hesitancy at least, certainly not legally mandating the chosen course and banning discussion of the alternative as has been mooted in this case. — Isaac
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