Saturday, August 14, 2021

Singapore's Ho Ching wants the COVID VACCINATED to be masked, and not endanger the public: Singapore follows the UK, US while Australia remains silent

 by Ganesh Sahathevan 


Ho Ching,  the Singapore Prime Minister Ho Ching's wife,  has quite a large following on social media. 

She is a regular on Facebook, and this morning she posted: 


Vaccination is the single most powerful protection we can now have for individuals. 

But no vaccine is perfect. 

And certainly, none of the available vaccines anywhere in the world can provide 100% protection against infection, even if they are very good at preventing symptomatic infection, or if they are excellent at preventing severe or fatal illness as they mostly are. 

But having good protection for ourselves is not enough. 

From a society and community angle, we need to protect others too, not just protect ourselves. 

We know that while vaccinated people can be protected against the worse outcomes of Covid, they can still be infected and these infected folks can still infected others. 

Many vaccinated folks can be silent carriers adding to community spread if there is a large outbreak that infects them in the first place.
So to reduce the spread, squeeze down the outbreak, we must continue to stay mask and practise various safe distancing measures.
This helps the vaccinated and the unvaccinated as well.



In advising her fellow Singaporeans Ho follows Public Health England, and the US CDC who have recently issued directives for the COVID vaccinated to be masked.
Australia on the other hand has chosen to remain silent. The Prime Minister Scott Morrison is a marketing man,and it does appear as if he is concerned that issuing a directive to vaccinated persons to be masked would interfere with his "doses in arms messaging". His fellow state leaders are no better.


TO BE READ WITH


"Some initial findings ... indicate that levels of virus in those who become infected with Delta having already been vaccinated may be similar to levels found in unvaccinated people," PHE said in a statement


LONDON, Aug 6 (Reuters) - There are early signs that people who have been vaccinated against COVID-19 may be able to transmit the Delta variant of the virus as easily as those who have not, scientists at Public Health England (PHE) said on Friday.

The findings chime with those from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which last week raised concerns that vaccinated people infected with Delta could, unlike with other variants, readily transmit it. read more

The highly infectious Delta variant has become the dominant coronavirus type globally, sustaining a pandemic that has already killed more than 4.4 million people, including over 130,000 in Britain.

Vaccines have been shown to provide good protection against severe disease and death from Delta, especially with two doses, but there is less data on whether vaccinated people can still transmit it to others.

"Some initial findings ... indicate that levels of virus in those who become infected with Delta having already been vaccinated may be similar to levels found in unvaccinated people," PHE said in a statement.

"This may have implications for people's infectiousness, whether they have been vaccinated or not. However, this is early exploratory analysis and further targeted studies are needed to confirm whether this is the case."

PHE said that of confirmed Delta cases that had ended up hospitalised since July 19, 55.1% were unvaccinated, while 34.9% had received two doses of a COVID-19 vaccine.

Nearly 75% of the British population has had two vaccine doses, and PHE said that "as more of the population gets vaccinated, we will see a higher relative percentage of vaccinated people in hospital".

Separately, PHE said another variant, known as B.1.621, first detected in Colombia, had shown signs of evading the immune response triggered by either COVID-19 vaccines or previous infection.

PHE has labelled the variant "under investigation" but has not declared it a "variant of concern" - a designation that can trigger strong policy responses.

"There is preliminary laboratory evidence to suggest that vaccination and previous infection may be less effective at preventing infection with (B.1.621)," it said, adding there had been 37 confirmed cases of the variant in England.

"However, this data is very limited and more research is required. There is no evidence to suggest that (it) is more transmissible than the dominant Delta variant."

Reporting by Alistair Smout Editing by Costas Pitas and Mark Potter

SEE ALSO

CDC Scaled Back Hunt for Breakthrough Cases Just as the Delta Variant Grew




Wednesday, August 4, 2021

This man was COVID vaccinated in February 2021, but he could still be a public health risk for he refuses to even acknowledge that his level of COVID antibodies might have diminished to dangerous levels -He remains active in the community, and could well be infecting both vaccinated and unvaccinated persons with the COVID virus

by Ganesh Sahathevan




The BBC and others reported that Australia's Prime Minister Scott Morrison received COVID vaccination  in late  February.

It  has been six months since and we do not know if Morrison's body continues to carry COVID antibodies. There are reports from around the world that vaccine efficacy has been dwindling rapidly over a relatively short period of time. 
Morrison therefore remains a public health risk. Despite that fact he has been active in the community.

Given the danger to the public, it is in the public interest that Morrison disclose the level of COVID antibodies remaining in his system. The same applies to anyone else who has been vaccinated, given the latest information from the US CDC which states that the vaccinated can infect both vaccinated and unvaccinated persons.  


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