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Wits Professor Shabir Madhi told a media briefing on Sunday that results from the trials show that the AstraZeneca vaccine was less effective against mild and moderate forms of the B.1.351 coronavirus variant first identified in the country. He said it was “disappointing” and a reality check.
originally posted by: network dude
Drink plenty of fluids and get plenty of rest.
If you were told you could play for free at a gambling table, but there was a 70-80% chance you would lose and then you’d have to pay......kinda this?
originally posted by: deltaalphanovember
a reply to: slatesteam
haha - well some people swear by their annual flu shots. They have always made me feel worse.
Am I saying flu shots don't work? No, I am just saying I have a choice to take it or not. Just like there should be a choice for the covid vaccine. I wear a mask in public and I sanitise... these are trivial precautions I can live with.
I do not want to be a guinea pig for a pharmaceutical company - especially where the guinea pig actually pays to be a guinea pig.
originally posted by: Coagula
a reply to: deltaalphanovember
But Prof Sarah Gilbert, Oxford lead vaccine developer, said vaccines should still protect against severe disease".
So all we gotta do forever is just come up with new vaccines for new variants, inject them, and then we’ll all be able to go on roller-coasters again?
originally posted by: Coagula
a reply to: deltaalphanovember
No, it's not ineffective. You might still get covid after getting the astra zeneca vaccine, but it will still protect you against severe outcomes.
Oxford-AstraZeneca's vaccine offers "minimal protection" against mild disease from the South Africa variant, scientists say early trials suggest.
"A new study, not yet peer reviewed, involved about 2,000 people who were on average 31 years old.
But Prof Sarah Gilbert, Oxford lead vaccine developer, said vaccines should still protect against severe disease".
Since when is medical science founded on “hope”?
originally posted by: TheAMEDDDoc
a reply to: Coagula
This is where we start to worry about the effectiveness of vaccines, specifically the effectiveness of neutralizing antibodies. These types of viruses love to do this, making small changes that give them an edge and the antibody loses effectiveness. It may even become non neutralizing and help the virus evade the immune response and start targeting cells of the innate immune system. Luckily we make so many for each exposure.
Another problem is if less antibodies bind, this could decrease the chance of complement successfully activating and stimulating antigen presenting cells to take up virus/infected cells and present viral antigen to adaptive immune cells. Complement needs more than one antibody in a certain space to work properly. This could also influence B cells and prevent antigen presentation there, further limiting a good response to clear the pathogen.
It’s starting to remind me of those studies where CoV makes subtle changes and then starts using the antibodies against the host to evade the immune response and influence signaling and causing severe disease, even with some good antibodies. I guess the hope is the immunity from the vaccine uses some antibodies to stop or slow the infection until new antibodies can be made for those structural changes.
Thank you for sharing your point of view and acknowledging this “vaccine” and the program delivering it is less than ideal
originally posted by: TheAMEDDDoc
a reply to: slatesteam
Since always lol, basically you make an educated guess and then hope the experiment works out and proves your hypothesis and secures more funding for your lab.
Not too appropriate for a vaccine though, you’re absolutely right. After what I went through, I’m advising people to be careful and make an educated decision with their medical provider.
There are few things that fit in this category for me, gas chamber training in the military, falling off a roof, falling down a pile of sharp rocks on a mountain bike, swine flu vaccine, food poisoning, and the COVID vaccine. It was on the same level as having my impacted wisdom teeth removed. I’m not doing that every year.