brad465
Established Member
I hate to break it to you but everyone's "favourite" so-called Professor is back attention seeking, by suggesting there's no reason why everyone shouldn't get boosters:This is why I am not in favour of a "boosters for all policy". Boosters are useful for people more vulnerable, but for most it is simply a waste of resources which could and should be focused to parts of the world struggling to get even first doses into people. What governments should be focusing on instead of forever boosters, vaccine passports etc is actually (re)educating people on how best to look after our immune systems. Diet, exercise and even mental health can all have effects on it, ironic really when you think that many governments have spent nearly two years putting people down, locking them up & making them feel guilty for something that is not their fault. Its time now to focus the vaccines where they are really needed, and not just pump them into healthy people in industrialised nations to make them feel better about themselves.
Rolling out booster jabs to younger age groups could help cut Covid infection rates to low levels across the UK, a leading scientist has said.
Prof Neil Ferguson said data suggests a third jab gives significant protection, even against mild illness.
He said he saw "no reason" why younger age groups should not be offered boosters after priority groups.
He also said the UK was unlikely to get a "catastrophic winter wave" this Christmas.
The UK recorded 40,375 new Covid-19 cases and 145 deaths on Friday.
In September, the government's scientific advisers recommended everyone over 50 should be offered a third dose of a Covid vaccine, along with front-line medical staff and younger adults with some underlying health conditions. The rollout began later that month.
Prof Ferguson, head of the modelling group at Imperial College London, told BBC Radio 4's Today Programme he saw "no reason why we shouldn't be rolling them out to younger age groups, once we've got through the priority groups, the over-50s and the clinically very vulnerable".
Modelling data on the immunity booster jabs provided to the UK population will be published next week, he said.
Prof Ferguson said he expected the data to be "very like" that seen in places such as Israel, where it showed people were "very substantially protected" after receiving their booster dose - not just from severe disease, "but even from just getting infected again, mild disease".
He added: "And that's what we've been missing in the last few months with the Delta variant, with people who have only had one or two doses."
He said, according to modelling carried out by his group and at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, rolling out booster jabs to younger age groups "could make quite a big difference to driving down transmission to low levels".
However, Prof Ferguson, whose modelling led to the first nationwide restrictions in 2020, added this would be a decision for the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI) committee to make.
At least he thinks a "catastrophic winter wave" is unlikely, but is it reasonably feasible to offer booster jabs to everyone every year (I know that's not what's being suggested, but this is where we could be heading if we offer boosters for everyone)? We've never done so before, and if we did think it was feasible for the likes of flu, we'd have done so years ago. I would suggest a similar approach to annual flu vaccines for covid in future: give annual boosters for those identified as most vulnerable on the NHS, and offer it to others for a fee. Rolling out ~60-65 million doses every autumn is not feasible in the slightest, on top of all the other diseases we have vaccines for, like flu and MMR, not just in terms of staff logistics, but also the physical materials required to make, transport and store vaccine doses.