I am glad that so many people are happy with the decision to delay the second dose. I am not.
I might have had more confidence if the pandemic wasn't being handled by a government with a track record of messing things up. (I want to use a much stronger word but I am restraining myself.) Their decisions have resulted in the UK having the highest death rate per capita in the world.
Let's take it on the chin! No need to ban mass gatherings, off you go to the football and the races. Lock down? We won't do that... Well, better late than never. Close the schools? We certainly won't do that. Oh, turns out that kids do transmit the virus after all - who'd have thought? Close the borders? Test at airports? Maybe after we've let the virus run for a few months. What do you mean, Test, Test, Test? You're only the WHO, why should we do what you say? No, we don't need your app, we've got a world beating one of our own. Oh dear, seems that it doesn't work. Yes, of course it's okay to send hospital patients back into care homes without testing them first. No, we're happy to give jobs and contracts to people with absolutely no experience in these areas. What could possibly go wrong?
So forgive me if I don't have 100% confidence in our leaders and I pay some attention to the vaccine manufacturers, the BMJ, the preliminary information from the Israeli vaccine programme, and the fact that the rest of the world seems to disagree with the decision. They watched us with similar horror at the beginning of the virus, when the government was going for herd immunity instead of lock down, despite the advice of countries like Italy and France. One European newspaper nicknamed the UK "the control sample." The delay, before the government changed its strategy, cost thousands of lives.
Still, better luck next time, eh?