Covid Vaccine - Temporarily locked

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  • peedee
    peedee Club Member Posts: 9,387 ✭✭✭
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    edited January 2021 #392

    Can you explain that further PD?

    No

    peedee

  • MikeyA
    MikeyA Forum Participant Posts: 1,072
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    edited January 2021 #393

    That is why I specifically mentioned NHS operating theatres. What happens in a private hospital and doesn't affect NHS waiting times I have no great problem with.

     

  • Cornersteady
    Cornersteady Club Member Posts: 14,427 ✭✭✭
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    edited January 2021 #394

    If you have more money than me then use it, I will not complain. Life is like that.

    But you'll be making my place in the list and waiting time go quicker so thank you.

  • brue
    brue Forum Participant Posts: 21,176 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    edited January 2021 #395

    Our pharmacy is on overload at the moment, can't get home deliveries out to those who can't collect, lots of people unwell at present. Not a good time to start asking for extra services. The NHS must take priority in ordering Covid vaccinations, AstraZ is being offered at cost and still can't deliver due to manufacturing problems. This is a logistical problem that needs total commitment from everyone not a distraction from individuals who want to pay extra to jump the queue.

  • Rufs
    Rufs Club Member Posts: 4,072 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    edited January 2021 #396

    I had 2 x trapeziectomy done at Spires Southampton by a very nice surgeon who had just completed a days work in Southampton General hospital , and jolly glad he was able to do them.

  • Cornersteady
    Cornersteady Club Member Posts: 14,427 ✭✭✭
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    edited January 2021 #397

    But that does not make sense.  By paying for all the costs I'm saving the NHS money and other people get seen quicker.

  • Cornersteady
    Cornersteady Club Member Posts: 14,427 ✭✭✭
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    edited January 2021 #398

    Ok I'll disregard you're post then PD

  • Tinwheeler
    Tinwheeler Forum Participant Posts: 23,140 ✭✭✭
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    edited January 2021 #399

    I'm not sure if you're addressing me, PD, but I’ve already made it clear that the NHS and other patients will benefit when no NHS resources are used. Private medicine already purchases its own drugs and equipment so there's no reason to think NHS vax would be used in the hypothetical situation under discussion.

    That's all it is at this stage - hypothetical, so no need your stress yourself.

  • Cornersteady
    Cornersteady Club Member Posts: 14,427 ✭✭✭
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    edited January 2021 #400

    But that applies to any one is any line of work when they were trained. 

    Are you saying then that NHS trained staff cannot work outside the NHS privately? 

  • Cornersteady
    Cornersteady Club Member Posts: 14,427 ✭✭✭
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    edited January 2021 #402

    I'd gladly pay that actually. Worth every penny in the long run. paid far more than that for garden decking recently, I think a vaccine from this horrible virus is worth more than that decking

    I really would.

     

  • Cornersteady
    Cornersteady Club Member Posts: 14,427 ✭✭✭
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    edited January 2021 #403

    Is there a shortage of doses? Again not what we've been told. 

    You're getting very stressed out, clam down as at present this is hypothetical but one day it will not be?

  • peedee
    peedee Club Member Posts: 9,387 ✭✭✭
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    edited January 2021 #404

    Sorry TW looks like something from my clipboard crept into my post to cause the confusion. I was simply trying to add further comment to MikeyA's post about not using NHS resources privately.

    peedee

  • SeasideBill
    SeasideBill Forum Participant Posts: 2,112
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    edited January 2021 #405

    Your contention was that training a surgeon costs the rest of us nothing. 

    Like just about everything you’ve said on this thread, that’s clearly nonsense. Whether we’re talking about the £billions spent by the Government on the university sector, the public cost of building, maintaining and running hospitals, research grants for clinical enhancement, introduction and training for new medical technology etc etc, without the NHS there would not be a private health sector of any reckoning. 
    BTW, I’m not opposed to private healthcare, but in the context of a pandemic which is killing hundreds of thousands of people, creating a market for life saving treatment is just plain wrong.

  • Tinwheeler
    Tinwheeler Forum Participant Posts: 23,140 ✭✭✭
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    edited January 2021 #406

    Incidentally, you may be interested to know that many private hospitals (eg The Nuffield Hospitals as well a our local Duchy Hospital) have been turned over to the NHS, in total or in part, during the covid crisis. The NHS pay the private companies at cost for using them.

    Therefore, the NHS is now able to take advantage of additional beds and nursing staff while those of us who are willing to pay for treatment have little or no avenue to do so. I'm not complaining, btw, as I'm glad others are gaining.

  • MikeyA
    MikeyA Forum Participant Posts: 1,072
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    edited January 2021 #407

    But how would it change your situation at present? If if meant you or I could go on holiday, either here or abroad, and carry on our daily lives as normal it would be money well spent but it wouldn't change anything if we were still under lockdown. The vast majority of our food supplies over the last year has been supermarket deliveries or Click and Collect, our daily walks are in the countryside so the chance of us catching Covid is slim. 

  • brue
    brue Forum Participant Posts: 21,176 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    edited January 2021 #408

    There is a shortage of vials in the manufacturing process Corners.

    That's the reality of the present situation.

  • Rufs
    Rufs Club Member Posts: 4,072 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    edited January 2021 #409

    Interesting quote from a leading doctor re purchasing the vaccine privately

    "However, the main bottleneck seems to be in the logistics of the rollout, not vaccine production per se. If private sales make additional resources available for the setting up of a private, additional distribution channel, then surely everyone benefits.  

    This is not “jumping the queue”. This is setting up a parallel fast-track queue"

  • Rufs
    Rufs Club Member Posts: 4,072 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    edited January 2021 #410

    and an alternative view from a GP

    "Vaccine supply chain shortages are already well-documented. Allowing private companies to buy up valuable stock would be a mistake of monumental proportions."

  • brue
    brue Forum Participant Posts: 21,176 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    edited January 2021 #411

    Well they can't at the moment so let's not go there.wink

    And why pay twice? The gov. are ordering stocks on your behalf at this very moment..I hope.

  • SeasideBill
    SeasideBill Forum Participant Posts: 2,112
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    edited January 2021 #412

    Well that might depend on whether the private venture was more lucrative than the arrangements agreed with governments and sponsors  around the world who’ve pumped in £billions to get us where we are now and produce vaccine at cost. 

  • Tammygirl
    Tammygirl Club Member Posts: 7,957 ✭✭✭
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    edited January 2021 #413

    I would just like to see all areas of the UK rolling out the vaccinations at the same pace.

    My MIL is 91 she has parkinsons and lives in a care home. So far not one person in that home has been given the jab. Our 2 neighbours are 95 & 96 still no sign of them getting the jab either. It is very upsetting to hear of much younger folk getting the jab when so many others that should have had it by now have not.

    Until all the elderly and by that I mean over 65s have been vaccinated then anyone thinking about jumping the queue because they can afford to pay is disgusting. There are many of us in a position to pay but not until those that really need it have been done first. 

  • Compo
    Compo Forum Participant Posts: 324
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    edited January 2021 #414

    Until all the elderly and by that I mean over 65s have been vaccinated then anyone thinking about jumping the queue because they can afford to pay is disgusting. There are many of us in a position to pay but not until those that really need it have been done first.

    Agree 100%

  • LLM
    LLM Forum Participant Posts: 1,555 ✭✭
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    edited January 2021 #415

    I'm sitting here looking at the Government / NHS / OAZ contract for the supply and distribution of the OAZ vaccine throughout the UK.  No individual or organisation other than the NHS should be supplied by OAZ.  In theory queue jumping should be impossible.  Don't ask, I will not explain.

    As I understand it the shortages / delays are vials being in short supply, and each production batch having to be tested for safety and efficacy which takes at least a week.  

  • brue
    brue Forum Participant Posts: 21,176 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    edited January 2021 #416

    I presume all those willing to pay will let the NHS know quickly so their NHS pre-ordered jab that they now don't want can be used to speed up the queue for the rest of us wink

  • Unknown
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    edited January 2021 #417
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  • MikeyA
    MikeyA Forum Participant Posts: 1,072
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    edited January 2021 #418

    Until all the elderly and by that I mean over 65s

    I definitely don't consider myself elderly  - until I look in the mirror  laughing but if that helps me to get the vaccine before April I'll take it. 

    My brother in law, in his early 50s and fit as a fiddle, has already had his vaccine, around a week before Christmas. It was apparently a mistake with one department not knowing what constitutes a care home. I'm sure many more mistakes will be made in the future before the whole country is vaccinated.

  • Cornersteady
    Cornersteady Club Member Posts: 14,427 ✭✭✭
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    edited January 2021 #419

    Ok  find one quote where I said:

    ... training a surgeon costs the rest of us nothing?

    Please really do SB. I said nothing of the sort, that is clearly nonsense.

    It was you who said they were self-trained? I merely said they paid fees to be trained. I never said that that fee covered all their training did I? And that is probably true of most jobs.

    Also isn't all private care potentially life saving? How many people have sadly have died waiting for NHS treatment?

    Anyway as this is all just pie in the sky I can't see why you are getting so upset over me wanting to pay for treatment I can't have? 

     

  • SeasideBill
    SeasideBill Forum Participant Posts: 2,112
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    edited January 2021 #420

    Agreed, my mother is 90 in a care home and suffers with dementia. She gets her jab tomorrow, In a care home where she previously lived, 12 residents died in April - a third of all residents. The thought that could happen again, simply because vaccines have been diverted to lower priority cases is disgusting.

  • Tinwheeler
    Tinwheeler Forum Participant Posts: 23,140 ✭✭✭
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    edited January 2021 #421

    I thought we'd already said the concept of paying is hypothetical 🤷🏻‍♂️