My wife just got over covid. Her case was mild, but it is not a disease you want to get.
I'm sorry to hear that but glad that she seems to be on the mend and my best wishes for a full recovery. We've had family members who have had it and it seems almost random in it's infectiousness, one niece in a household of 4 gets it, the rest carry on with no apparent problem despite all living closely together.
At the moment I'm too young
(69) to get a shot over here, I reckon I'll be in the next lot of 60-70's around March. But when the call comes we'll both be queuing up. I took my mum (94) for hers at the beginning of January and she's not had any side effects so far. I don't bother with the annual Flu jab but this is different, it's targeted at a specific virus whereas our annual flu jab is really a "best guess". So yes, we'll be lining up.
I understand reticence because of the rapid development, but it's not that remote from the normal procedure. It's the media that hype up this "superfast development and aren't they clever" type of thing.
What the media don't say is that normally you'd think up a vaccine, do a few lab trials with paid volunteers and if it didn't kill anyone you'd work out costs/profits with your sales folks. If the market looked profitable you'd invest in staged trials and go for approval. Only after approval would you start to think about investing in plant to manufacture and get the stuff out to patients. That drags the process out and actually increases the end cost but given that not all bright ideas make it to market, it's a safer procedure for the business.
The difference this time, in the UK at least, is that the government got behind Oxford/Astra and hence all procedures went in parallel rather than sequentially. They were sorting out manufacture at the same time they were starting out on trials. There was a big risk that it wouldn't work and Astra weren't being expected to shoulder that risk alone.
I wouldn't be surprised if you folks didn't go the same way with your industries, so I wouldn't worry too much about the apparent "rushed" development, because in truth it isn't that phenomenal. It's just our government stepped up for once.