What if your workplace is a nursing home? There are places where mandates make more sense than others.
Hospital admission is 'part and parcel' of having an unvaccinated cohort - But where do people most often catch COVID - In home environments and out of work environments - Unvaccinated people ( with the precautions I listed in my previous post ) pose little or no risk to the vaccinated in a work place - It makes no sense to stop people from working.
In general I'm really against making vaccinations mandatory. And I didn't think they would happen. But I have to admit that at the moment I don't see any real, possible alternatives for a country like ours. There just aren't enough people vaccinated. So the hospitals will be overrun in more or less time, but it will happen. Then there are only two possibilities: you have to deny people life-saving treatment, whether they need it because of Covid or heart attacks or accidents, because the hospitals are simply full. Or you have another lockdown - we are already starting that again, clubs and pubs have to close, christmas markets are cancelled, etc. The next step will be another real lockdown, that, in my eyes, is pure madness, when we do have vaccinations who, if every adult was vaccinated, would make sure the hospitals aren't overwhelmed.
Our legislation doesn't allow for denying people treatment in hospitals because they are unvaccinated and I think a much bigger change of it would be needed than for a vaccination obligation.
So, just looking at it from a pragmatic side: what are our other options? Either much, much bigger ICUs would help, but it would take years (apart from the money) to make that happen (in Germany probably decades...)
Or you say okay, then we just have a triage and the doctors decide who's going to get treatment and who won't, or if the ICUs are full and you have an accident, well bad luck for you.
What if your workplace is a nursing home? There are places where mandates make more sense than others.
Why do you think not enough people in Germany are vaccinated?
I keep referring back to the UK. The UK opened up on July 19 at just 60% fully vaccinated. Their hospitals coped fine and continue to cope fine. There were predictions that UK daily cases would reach over 100,000 / day. The reality is about 40,000 / day. Who was held accountable for this massive error?
There appears to be some problems with overly pessimistic assumptions used in modelling and this isn't being widely discussed or challenged?
Why do you think not enough people in Germany are vaccinated?
I keep referring back to the UK. The UK opened up on July 19 at just 60% fully vaccinated.
Have you?you have not any imunnity after six months and it not guarantee you health or freedom.
Honest questions, honest answers (I think I've probably answered some of them more or less directly in some previous posts):@limak_ in all seriousness, please don't misunderstand this as a provocation, honest questions because I simply wonder: what are you concerned about? I don't know your age, if you are very young, I may understand you, the advantage of the vaccination may not be so clear in comparison with the dangers, but if you are older: (1)don't you believe the studies that show the statistical advantages of vaccinations compared to the risk that covid holds? (2)Do you think they are manipulated? (3)Are you really afraid of long term consequences? If yes, which could that be? (4)Do you think the risk that covid brings if you get it unvaccinated is lower than the possible side/ long term effects of the vaccination? (5)Or do you think you can avoid an infection?
Well if you have 60+ you low your risk of death 12 times.Have you?
And does it guarantee?
This is one of many ethical questions that must be answered in plain language and immediately. In California the winners and losers were picked by the government,under crazy criteria..people were forbidden from working while others were forced to..no middle ground. People should have a right to work,period, and ridiculous standards should not be set to make it impossible.I have no issue with countries/states banning the unvaccinated from bars/restaurants etc BUT i draw the line at stopping people from working - Give them extra conditions like twice weekly PCR tests at their expense etc - To stop people working, especially in highly vaccinated places is madness.
Well if you have 60+ you low your risk of death 12 times.
What is the source of that?
Because I am not seeing that in this ONS dataset (see table 4)
Vaccines do seem to work at least short-term, but it would be good to have some data in support of the numbers.
Table 4 is for all deaths, Covid-related or not - so it's table 3 you're referring to, I guess?What is the source of that?
Because I am not seeing that in this ONS dataset (see table 4)
Vaccines do seem to work at least short-term, but it would be good to have some data in support of the numbers.
I disagree. It is definitely possible that a vaccinated person can bring in the virus, but it is less likely than the unvaccinated. Based on personal experience, ppe is not very good within the nursing facility i visit. There is also no mandate. Reading between the lines, I think they fear an exodus if they draw a hard line. My workplace has a mandate because they know they can replace anybody who leaves.It does not matter if you have procedures in place - So for a nursing home it would be a PP, regular PCR tests etc - You do realise that it's just as likely that a vaccinated person can bring the virus into the centre.
I disagree. It is definitely possible that a vaccinated person can bring in the virus, but it is less likely than the unvaccinated. Based on personal experience, ppe is not very good within the nursing facility i visit. There is also no mandate. Reading between the lines, I think they fear an exodus if they draw a hard line. My workplace has a mandate because they know they can replace anybody who leaves.
Testing may seem like compromise, but notice how much the unvaccinated claim 'discrimination' when they have to do anything that the vaccinated do not. Most medical careers require HBV vaccines. I fail to see why a c19 vaccination would be a dealbreaker.
Been thinking about this...Per capita, the UK have had ~double the amount of covid cases and deaths, compared to Germany. So their infection-induced immunity rate is considerably higher, and a way bigger percantage of the usual risk groups have already died.
They are at a different state of the pandemic. Germany is probably like one Winter behind, and consequently would need a higher vaccination rate to make up for that. Australia of course is another, completely different story.
I disagree that countries are at different stages of the pandemic that implies the worst is yet to come for countries like Germany or Australia, I disagree with that. It really got started in early 2020 and that's plenty of time - you can check World-o-meter.
But I agree that the immunity rate is affected by exposure to the virus. You make a good point about the relative experiences of the UK and Germany. Also for Australia we are a geographically isolated country and closing the international border was easy and done early. This likely saved thousands of lives (the border is still closed). But as you point out that approach also means a lower infection-induced immunity rate. Hence a higher vaccination rate is required to open up safely compared to say the UK or US.
Also, on the bigger percentage of risk groups which have already died, the numbers of remaining citizens in those usual risk groups are still very large. What made the difference is we learned by experience. Older people know they are most at risk. Procedures and policies around aged care are greatly tightened. In early 2020 it was not yet known that the elderly were at such risk. But I do think the virus itself has mutated into a more transmissible but less virulent version. All the stats seem to confirm this.
Ultimately, I wish people would volunteer to do the right thing without a mandate. But, I am not surprised that the US is stalling around 60%. I thought Europe would do better.You are discussing one small part of the work sector and as you pointed out mandatory vaccine varies from state to state and country to country - And as you also pointed out the virus can be brought into any type of workplace which can be mitigated by safety staandards - Ultimately, people should not be denied the chance to work by Government's
Looking at these numbers and it is really hard to imagine that more than 60% of US adults get the vaccine. All the metrics are starting to improve and I think the majority of the leaners in gray ultimately opt out as a result. I think Gottlieb is right that fewer people will get the vaccine than most people hoped.
View: https://twitter.com/APNORC/status/1359502384775405568