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This, reported in the local paper, surprised the bejesus out of me. From today's Courier Mail here in Brisbane:
'Holy Spirit Nursing Home residents were given ‘excessive amount’ of COVID vaccine by doctor without required training. The doctor at the centre of the vaccine bungle only took the COVID immunisation training the day after he incorrectly administered the doses to two elderly patients, it can be revealed. He has been referred to the medical regulator, while the contractor which employed him has been warned if there is another incident it will lose the contract. Health Minister Greg Hunt initially told Parliament today that the doctor had completed the training, but later returned to correct the record and say he had not. The Courier-Mail understands that the Australian-trained doctor, who graduated in 2007, completed the training the day after the incident occurred. The government is considering there to be multiple points of failure in this incident, with the company not having checked if the doctor had completed the training before he started his first day.'
It was the Pfizer vaccine. That is aside from the fact should a doctor even need training? As doctors they should independently check correct dose anyway. I have said it before, and will say it again, this pandemic has exposed just how 'shoddy' at least certain parts of out government bureaucracy is. Sigh.
Me - I trust my GP. Unless further evidence comes along I will be getting the Oxford vaccine, first dose - full dose - then second full dose 12 weeks later. The analysis of current data from a Lancet preprint shows first dose - 76% efficacy (22 to 90 days), second dose 84% efficacy if given 12 weeks later or greater. But in anyone that was vaccinated if they got it is was only mild. The data was from an experimental design not set up for checking what was found, so may change as further testing is done. But, if tests show it is OK, will get the Novavax vaccine when it becomes available here in Aus about the second half of this year - it has about 90% efficacy and good protection against new variants (60% efficacy against SA variant).
Thanks
Bill
'Holy Spirit Nursing Home residents were given ‘excessive amount’ of COVID vaccine by doctor without required training. The doctor at the centre of the vaccine bungle only took the COVID immunisation training the day after he incorrectly administered the doses to two elderly patients, it can be revealed. He has been referred to the medical regulator, while the contractor which employed him has been warned if there is another incident it will lose the contract. Health Minister Greg Hunt initially told Parliament today that the doctor had completed the training, but later returned to correct the record and say he had not. The Courier-Mail understands that the Australian-trained doctor, who graduated in 2007, completed the training the day after the incident occurred. The government is considering there to be multiple points of failure in this incident, with the company not having checked if the doctor had completed the training before he started his first day.'
It was the Pfizer vaccine. That is aside from the fact should a doctor even need training? As doctors they should independently check correct dose anyway. I have said it before, and will say it again, this pandemic has exposed just how 'shoddy' at least certain parts of out government bureaucracy is. Sigh.
Me - I trust my GP. Unless further evidence comes along I will be getting the Oxford vaccine, first dose - full dose - then second full dose 12 weeks later. The analysis of current data from a Lancet preprint shows first dose - 76% efficacy (22 to 90 days), second dose 84% efficacy if given 12 weeks later or greater. But in anyone that was vaccinated if they got it is was only mild. The data was from an experimental design not set up for checking what was found, so may change as further testing is done. But, if tests show it is OK, will get the Novavax vaccine when it becomes available here in Aus about the second half of this year - it has about 90% efficacy and good protection against new variants (60% efficacy against SA variant).
Thanks
Bill