TillLindemann
Well-known member
@mike said in [Coronavirus Outbreak](/post/1436381) said:@tilllindemann said in [Coronavirus Outbreak](/post/1436378) said:@papacito said in [Coronavirus Outbreak](/post/1436371) said:@earl said in [Coronavirus Outbreak](/post/1436359) said:@papacito said in [Coronavirus Outbreak](/post/1436350) said:Has any country ever vaccinated their way out of trouble?
I get the feeling that the NSW government are not far off giving up on lockdowns and hoping that vaccinations can bring numbers down quickly.
No doubt we'll get there eventually, but I can't see how it'll have much of an impact by the end of the month.
Basically every developed country is giving up on lockdowns and relying on vaccines. The situation is significantly worse with the delta variant.
If restrictions are being implemented it's to protect the unvaccinated.
Health care workers are getting increasingly frustrated because getting vaccinated would solve the problem.
I am pretty certain that NSW has already accepted that we aren't getting cases down to zero again.
I should add the vaccine and open up approach is working well in areas where the vaccination rate is up and not so good when the vaccination rates are down.
While I'm optimistic for the best, vaccinating our way out of delta would be quite an achievement.
A lot of these countries had a combo of natural immunity, massive vaccine rollouts and no delta when they started.
Vaccines are necessary, but not enough on their own. Even the most highly vaccinated countries are still struggling with delta.
It starting to be a Pandemic amongst the unvaccinated.
But the worry is, where it is allowed to let loose in countries that have high (but not high enough) vaccination rates, there is an increased risk of vaccine-resistant strains evolving. At least that seemed to be the fear some were expressing in relation to the UK opening right up again.