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The thing is that the AZ antibody response increases over time, so those getting an AZ jab now would likely develop a much stronger antibody response with a second dose of Pfizer in October or later when we know Pfizer supplies also increase dramatically.I asked the nurses about 8 weeks between the vax and mixing. They seem bound by company rules around use around each vax. Possibly lawsuits as well I suppose.
She did state that the recommendation from the book was what they used, she seemed well versed in it.
A shame as I'd have gone with mixing the vax and spread it further out then 3 weeks.
Its the smart choice. They wouldn't do it where I was. Not sure if the gp might do it differently.The thing is that the AZ antibody response increases over time, so those getting an AZ jab now would likely develop a much stronger antibody response with a second dose of Pfizer in October or later when we know Pfizer supplies also increase dramatically.
It will be interesting to see if that option is available, by then.The thing is that the AZ antibody response increases over time, so those getting an AZ jab now would likely develop a much stronger antibody response with a second dose of Pfizer in October or later when we know Pfizer supplies also increase dramatically.
Conspiracy theories coming true.Government restrictions on the un-vaccinated legal say experts.
'Special rules' are likely on the way for vaccinated Aussies. Here's why they'd be legal
A COVID-19 "vaccine passport" is coming, and rules about access to businesses, masks wearing and even public transport could all be very different for people depending on whether they are vaccinated or not. Here's what you need to know.www.abc.net.au
It's going to be pretty hard to police in some circumstances. People getting on public transport for example.
The review, conducted by the Melbourne Institute of Applied Economic and Social Research and released last week, showed just over 30 per cent of Queenslanders were either unwilling or unsure about getting the vaccine.
Im in W.A and have relatives in the UK, none of them nor any of my family or friends have had the virus, the ones in the UK have had the vaccine without issue, of the people and relitives in W.A most are only now starting to talk about getting vaccinated.Not entirely surprised by that. A relative close to my age and her husband is older and close to 80. Live up pass Cairns. Cane farmer. They both had AZ but before they did have the vaccinations some acquaintances almost tried to restrain her husband from having it. Usual crap about "stuff" in vaccinations and shedding. Told them to get stuffed. And he is one of the most conservative blokes I know. He he. She wasn't shy about telling me what she thought of them. Cretins and a total waste of oxygen.
A point that is usually misunderstood by the anti-vaxxers.Does being vaccinated increase the risk of getting covid ?
Why you shouldn't be concerned when more vaccinated people are getting infected than unvaccinated
Confusion has spread online as countries report increasing numbers of new COVID-19 cases among people who have been vaccinated. But vaccinated and unvaccinated infections need to be compared with their respective populations for a proper analysis.www.abc.net.au
I went home, went to bed and woke up the next day to do it all over again. I’ll keep doing so until we’re out of this
Digital giant issues strike after channel posted videos denying the existence of disease and encouraging people to use discredited medication
Sorry @pozindustrial, your linked "Dr" is totally discredited in the medical science community; you know, the people that actually save lives by advising on and implementing best practice in health care.Here is a blog by a doctor who did her thesis on disease control and the role of vaccinations. She cites false information distributed by WHO and gives an explanation of herd immunity. She too was censored, but not discredited.
Are all the paramedics vaccinated, the last media article I read on the subject, talked about a lot of paramedics still not fronting up, or only recently applying for the vaccine.I think this perspective around COVID from a paramedic says it all. And we are nowhere near the potential number of sick people.
As paramedics in south-west Sydney we are pushed beyond exhaustion – and into a dystopian world
Anonymous
Staff morale has never been lower and the only thing keeping us afloat is joking about how we’re drowning
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‘The loneliness I feel by keeping totally isolated from loved ones and the risk I put myself at helping us all get back to a normal life is burning me out.’ Photograph: Sean Foster/Getty Images
Thu 5 Aug 2021 12.18 AEST
Last modified on Thu 5 Aug 2021 12.19 AEST
It’s been nearly 18 months since I wrote about Covid-19 first hitting our shores and spreading to our suburbs. The transmissibility and virulence of the Delta strain has pushed the ambulance service beyond the brink of exhaustion.
It wasn’t until paramedics and other health staff began contracting Covid at work that we realised how much trouble we were in and by then more than 200 paramedics were deemed close contacts and ordered into two weeks’ isolation. I was one of them. Despite the message from the highest levels of government, this was a race, and we had tripped over the first hurdle.
After two weeks locked in and alone, I was eager to get back to work to chip in and see my friends. My enthusiasm was quickly extinguished when I stepped into the dystopian world that used to be my workplace: hospitals in crisis and nearing capacity. The tension in the air is thick, staff morale has never been lower and, despite words of encouragement from management, the only thing keeping us afloat is joking about how we’re drowning. Most of us are feeling anxious. Typically for paramedics, we find strength and solidarity through collective suffering.
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Sydney Covid Delta variant outbreak ‘an epidemic of young people’
Read more
As the crisis in Sydney worsened, certain ambulance sectors were left dangerously short-staffed while health management scrambled to catch up. New orders were handed down – full PPE must now be worn for every patient. Full PPE means droplet precautions, mask, gloves, goggles and plastic gown. If anyone finds popping a mask on to order a coffee exasperating, try wrapping yourself in cling-wrap and going to work for 12 hours.
What started as a trickle became a flood of call-outs for Covid-positive patients needing help. It has never been like this. I’ve entered houses where all occupants are Covid positive. Some are sick, some are just scared and apologise for wasting our time. They’re not sure how bad they need to get before they should go to hospital. Some don’t speak English, or have poor health literacy, and fear there’ll be repercussions should they test positive. Fear of testing not only prolongs lockdowns, it can also prove deadly.
I’ve turned up to a house to find every member symptomatic, and none had been tested. We found a patient unconscious and not breathing and commenced CPR. Chest compressions aren’t like the movies, they’re brutal. CPR is also physically demanding, particularly in restrictive PPE. Trying to keep calm while out of breath under a mask, sweating under a layer of plastic while trying to insert an artificial airway, get a cannula in a vein, evaluate a cardiac rhythm on a monitor to determine whether to deliver a shock isn’t a walk in the park.
Conveying sympathy to a family, through fogged up goggles, that their loved one couldn’t be saved is even harder. The whole household ended up being Covid-positive and needed hospitalisation. This is now a typical shift for us.
The other night on my way home, while popping into the bottle shop to pick up an essential item, I noticed an irate customer at the checkout not wearing a mask. He was yelling about his rights and calling the teenage worker “Gladys’ puppet”. As I watched him ranting about the vaccine to the perplexed looking teenager behind perspex, I began to ponder.
I wondered if this man was having an asthma attack, would he question the nebuliser I’d administer to open up his airways. If he had an anaphylactic reaction to his bottle of rum, would he call life-saving adrenaline a “fake drug”. If he slipped and broke a leg, would he trust me to put a needle in his vein and give morphine or would he ask for proof that it worked? No, I’m pretty sure if this man was in strife, he would be desperate for my help. He would put faith in the science, the protocols and the training of the practitioner providing the treatment. He would listen to the health advice.
Every person who disobeys health orders pushes the finish line further back. Like everyone out there providing an essential service, I’m sacrificing more than my freedom. The loneliness I feel by keeping totally isolated from loved ones and the risk I put myself at helping us all get back to a normal life is burning me out.
In that moment, I felt like getting into an argument but instead I left. I went home, went to bed and woke up the next day to do it all over again. I’ll keep doing so until we’re out of this. If everyone else does their part by getting vaccinated you’ll ensure paramedics aren’t left in pieces beyond the pandemic. After all, we’re only human too.
The author is a paramedic at an ambulance station in Sydney’s south-west
As paramedics in south-west Sydney we are pushed beyond exhaustion – and into a dystopian world | Anonymous
Staff morale has never been lower and the only thing keeping us afloat is joking about how we’re drowningwww.theguardian.com
Then to cap it off the media has the audacity to blame the Government for mixed messages. ?
August 2nd.
AstraZeneca’s Australia boss ‘surprised and disappointed’ with debate over Covid vaccine
Pharmaceutical company’s Australian chief points to mixed messaging as cause of AstraZeneca hesitancywww.theguardian.com
The media is never wrong, their avid followers are never wrong, because they have no accountability.
There is only one who has accountability apparently, yet those without any accountability for what they write, can hold some to account.
The World has gone mad IMO, they may as well save everyone a huge amount of money and let the media take over everything, just get rid of Governments completely, let the reporters run it.
One thing for sure @basilio , you can see why the Guardian is free and relies on subscription, all media should be the same, they should rely on people paying them for their information. Rather than having to rely on advertisers vested interests, or the tax payer funding to pay for their endless dribble.
Just my opinion, but it may well end up with a more accurate and objective media, which is in everyone's best interest.
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