Coronavirus discussion thread
1 lurker |
136 watchers
Jan 2021
9:57am, 23 Jan 2021
906 posts
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Non-runner
Telegraph report, behind a paywall so: Government advert that says joggers and dog-walkers are “highly likely” to have Covid is to be discontinued after the regulator said there was no evidence to support the claim. The Telegraph can reveal that the Cabinet Office has also agreed not to repeat the claim made in the 30-second radio ad – which also warns that “people will die” if individuals “bend the rules” – after being contacted by the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA). The taxpayer-funded advert was condemned by MPs and public health experts for spreading “false information” and risking “scaring” people into physical inactivity during the third national lockdown. The ASA said it had received complaints and would “assess those carefully to establish whether there are any grounds for further action”. A spokesman said: “We have contacted the Cabinet Office with the concerns that have been raised about its claim, in a radio ad, that it is “highly likely” that individuals such as joggers and dog-walkers have COVID-19. “Our rules require that advertisers hold robust documentary evidence to prove claims that are capable of substantiation. We have received an assurance from the Cabinet Office that the ad will be discontinued by early next week and the claim about individuals being highly likely to have COVID-19 will not be repeated. “On that basis, as the Cabinet Office has worked with us to swiftly address and resolve this matter without the need for formal investigation, we consider the matter closed.” The ASA said it was also assessing complaints about a similar ad about supermarket trolleys, as well as a poster about takeaway coffee headlined “Don’t Let a Coffee Cost Lives”, but had yet to contact the Government about those. According to the most recent official data, one in 50 people in England was estimated to have Covid between December 27th and January 2nd, rising to one in 30 in London, which would mean individuals are unlikely – rather than highly likely – to have the virus. Under ASA rules, adverts must be “legal, decent, honest and truthful”. |
Jan 2021
9:57am, 23 Jan 2021
5,454 posts
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jennyh
Which adverts are these Non-runner? Just being nosy as I don’t think I’ve seen them.
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Jan 2021
9:57am, 23 Jan 2021
5,455 posts
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jennyh
Sorry, cross post with your second post! 🤦🏻♀️
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Jan 2021
10:17am, 23 Jan 2021
24,611 posts
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Johnny Blaze
Senior doctors want gap between doses reduced to 6 weeks. Also suggests reasons why the govt might be prepared to mix and match different vaccines - due to supply problems. Could be like that time I ordered mackerel in tomato sauce from Sainsbug and they subbed mackerel in spring water instead! bbc.co.uk |
Jan 2021
10:18am, 23 Jan 2021
24,612 posts
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Johnny Blaze
If they had subbed in pilchards I would have refused delivery. Just saying.
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Jan 2021
10:24am, 23 Jan 2021
3,820 posts
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ndellar
My mum and dad both had the Pfizer jab this morning, their card gives them an appt in 3 weeks hoping it stays like that and doesn’t get moved or cancelled
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Jan 2021
10:51am, 23 Jan 2021
2,372 posts
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Cheg
The ad |
Jan 2021
10:57am, 23 Jan 2021
4,210 posts
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Little Miss Happy
Thanks for sharing that N-r. I hope they do get them at 3 weeks Ndellar. |
Jan 2021
11:00am, 23 Jan 2021
113 posts
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anthonyj89
Wow those ads are reprehensible. I can't believe they got that published.
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Jan 2021
11:01am, 23 Jan 2021
6,692 posts
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The_Saint
If I was a jogger rather than a runner I would be annoyed by their ridiculous claim. It makes you wonder whether they are actually trying to sabotage the correct message.
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Useful Links
FE accepts no responsibility for external links. Or anything, really.- BBC Radio 4 series "How to vaccinate the world", by Tim Harford
- BMJ (British Medical Journal) coronavirus hub: research and clinical guidance
- The Lancet's COVID-19 resource centre
- Covid-19 vaccine FAQ from the New England Journal of Medicine
- FAQs from the Royal Statistical Society - context around all the data on Covid-19
- UK vaccine tracker: up to date visualisations on the progress of the UK programme. Data from PHE.
- Daily summary from the UK Government
- Vaccine Knowledge Project - Covid-19 vaccines
- ONS data on Covid-19 with age and geographic breakdowns
- A guide to Covid-19 tests from the Royal College of Pathologists
- Vaccinaid: a chance to help Unicef vaccinate other nations
- Long Covid treatments: why the world is still waiting (Aug 2022)
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