It's basically the new flu shot, and probably will be for a very long time yet. I'm not so concerned about that but I do wonder when the next disease (bird flu?) will come along and we'll get another annual shot... and another...
It’s worth noting that companies are testing flu + COVID vaccines as an all in one shot. I think most people don’t want to come to their pharmacy for multiple jabs.
You can schedule two jabs at your pharmacy, so it isn't that inconvenient. It is much harder with a young child, who...you can get to take one jab but you really aren't going to get two jabs in one sitting. A combined jab would avoid an extra appointment and toy/cheeseburger bribe.
Also, the COVID jab is much harder to take than the flu jab for some reason. I barely notice the flu shot, but for a COVID shot, I actually feel my muscles contracting, and my arm is a bit sore for a week (although nothing beyond a minor annoyance). I wonder what this means for a combined shot.
You can get two or three vaccinations at once provided they don't have any issues with each other. I just got Shingrix and TDAP earlier this week, one in each arm. Pro tip, get the one more likely to cause injection site pain (Shingrix in my case) in your non-dominant arm.
It is already possible to combine multiple vaccines into a single shot. This approach is used for other diseases, such as the MMR (measles, mumps, and rubella) vaccine.
In the hypothetical case you're describing, I would expect that consolidation of vaccine administration would happen before we reach a point where you need to get half a dozen separate jabs at your annual well visit.
I understand, but I think I read it as the diseases-we-have-good-interventions-for-list. We can work on more efficient distribution, but it seems like a relatively minor issue.
You could also put it in the "diseases-we-dont-need-interventions-for-in-most-cases-list". The vaccines aren't really effective for younger people. I still remember how it was pushed as 95% effective against *transmission* in the beginning.
We don't see this panic regarding the flu and they have similar mortality in the same demographics. Give it to the elderly and the sensitive and ignore it for the rest like we've always done.
There's really no need to exaggerate the risks, I only caught covid twice (first and delta variants) 2 years apart while many of my vaccinated friends seem to catch every single one only months apart. Why is that? Interestingly I've never been this healthy in my life, anecdata and probably more related to social distancing than being unvaccinated but interesting nonetheless.
I don't care if people choose to get vaccinated but it's seriously time to move on.
I've spent some of my life working in undeveloped, tropical areas. Because of this, I'm vaccinated against a bunch of diseases the average Western citizen doesn't worry about- Yellow Fever, Japanese Encephalitis, Tuburculosis and have seen first-hand the afflictions of the local populations who weren't vaccinated.
Working in a clinic with sick and dying people, while being safe because I myself am vaccinated against the disease is kind of a surreal experience.
While obviously the ideal would be a single dose providing lifelong protection, an annual booster still would make me incredibly grateful that I get to live in this modern, almost futuristic world of preventative medicine superpowers.
That says it all.
There were some suckers getting the flu shot and then developing a severe flu.
Reading the vaccine documentation turns out that it was developed using a variant at the other end of the world.
I wonder scientifically what goes into "recommendation" nowadays, amid all the bickering and turmoil, and i no longer feel I know, and i believe personally in vaccines, but not in profiteering, which never seemed a discussed concern till the last few years.
how can an observer detect if profiteering is influencing recommendation?
In Germany, no one will going to get a covid vaccination again. This topic was dealth with so controversially, so polarisingly, that it divides the nation. One group even made a political program with being anti-covid measures, pretending there are dark forces limiting personal freedom etc.
How‘s the situation in the US?
I got 3 shots. And had severe complications after the third shot. So I don’t think I am going to have one again.
My contention was not between "nobody" and "a few" but how a divided country (so the claim) would unite "everyone"/"a lot" on the same side of the divider.
> This topic was dealth with so controversially, so polarisingly, that it divides the nation. One group even made a political program with being anti-covid measures, pretending there are dark forces limiting personal freedom etc.
I’m not against the vaccine. I just don’t think I need it. Sure, some people talk about chronic inflammation. But I think I trust my generally normative immune system to handle this.
Nebula says that my genome is at the 99th percentile for serious illness and hospitalization with COVID-19 so this will be fun to see. But I’m going to stick to it.
People become statisticians and scientists overnight when it comes to COVID-19 Vaccines.
The science is very simple, get the shot and you reduce the likelihood of hospitalization or death. It's more effective for those with co-morbidities or those older in the age brackets.
I am not sure why this was politicized to death the way it has been. The mandates early on were to curb the hospitalizations / deaths that was occurring. Really the mandate should have been for people with co-morbidities or in the upper age bracket but you know what, people are stupid and everyone thinks they're healthy, so instead of being nuanced they applied it to everyone.
I think the issue is that most people don't have co-morbidities and most people aren't old. So when you're told to get the vaccine, and it turns out you're actually worse off due to potential heart complications, it feels like a betrayal. By the way, it is.
Part of this, I believe, was hedging bets in the fog of war that was a global pandemic. Part of it was just raw incompetence.
I am genuinely curious as someone who got every shot and booster. Do I actually benefit from this one? My understanding is the last one I did not statistically benefit from.
> The mandates early on were to curb the hospitalizations / deaths that was occurring.
The first vaccine was very efficient against infection by the original variants. So it was not useful only for people with co-morbidities. Then we got Omicron and a loss of efficacy against infection (but still useful to reduce severeness).
My issue is that it was already known that you can't vaccinate against a corona virus. Why we were convinced this time would be different was insane to me. They used to call them "mutations". But they came up with a new word "variants". Plus there were past attempts to come up with vaccines for SARS and MERS which all failed. This was no different. I wished they had leveled with everyone about this rather than scare the shit out of people.
It was politicized because the hall monitors and moral busybodies (we all remember who they were and what they were like before the pandemic too) tried to force people to pick between getting it or starving.
Most of Europe (i.e. the parts of Europe that I know) acknowledged that "mistakes were made", and moved on. Nobody really expected an apology from officials for the shit-show, because everybody understood that they were doing the best they could given their situation, and it would be political suicide to admit they acted in error.
What's weird about the U.S.A. though, is that it's still a thing _now_?
This is basically the new flu shot and we'll get the usual litany of anecdotal reports that someone still got the flu/covid, but statistically these shots reduce the number of infections and the severity of infections with few side effects, so I'll keep getting them.
"during 2019-2020, the last flu season prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, flu vaccination prevented an estimated 7 million influenza illnesses, 3 million influenza-associated medical visits, 100,000 influenza-associated hospitalizations, and 7,000 influenza-associated deaths."
Time will tell how effective covid vaccines are when it's mutating as rapidly as it is. The covid vaccine will definitely reduce zero infections if people do not get it.
Yeah, sorry I wasn't clear, I was talking about the covid shots. There are studies suggesting negative efficacy against infection after the initial period°. So while I think for hospitalizations and death there is a stronger argument, for infections it's not terribly clear.
° from chat gpt (with all the standard caveats):
Source: "Vaccine effectiveness against SARS-CoV-2 infection with the Omicron or Delta variants following a two-dose or booster BNT162b2 or mRNA-1273 vaccination series: a Danish cohort study" (Published in The Lancet).
Source: "Efficacy of a Fourth Dose of Covid-19 mRNA Vaccine against Omicron" (Published in NEJM).
"Conclusions
Two vaccine doses provided high protection against SARS-CoV-2 infection and COVID-19 hospitalization with the Alpha and Delta variants with protection, notably against infection, waning over time. Two vaccine doses provided only limited and short-lived protection against SARS-CoV-2 infection with Omicron. However, the protection against COVID-19 hospitalization following Omicron SARS-CoV-2 infection was higher. The third vaccine dose substantially increased the level and duration of protection against infection with the Omicron variant and provided a high level of sustained protection against COVID-19 hospitalization among the +60-year-olds."
Look at the table on page 9 for 2 doses past 180 days. Negative efficacy is within the error bars. By no means a slam dunk, but it's there. EDIT: Also consider that the endpoint is "symptomatic infection", so it misses asymptomatic infections.
The 3rd dose followup periods aren't long enough in this study to see what happens there.
Turn this into a SARS/MERS - it would be highly profitable. I'm not an anti-vaxxer - I have all vaccines, and I made the mistake of getting the first Pfizer, which I regretted a lot after I damaged my health due to side effects that were downplayed and ignored by both Pfizer and CDC!
Geert Vanden Bossche [0] has been predicting a vaccine-induced massive die-off this summer!
We need antivirals, not vaccines! Just look at this [1] and shit in your pants!!!
Let's assume for the sake of argument that these new shots will be perfectly safe and effective (won't catch it, won't spread it, won't have any side effects, etc).
Given current sentiment and uptake rates, how many people are actually going to get these (or make their 6 month old get them)? And how low does that number have to be before you are just training people to be comfortable ignoring your recommendations?
The disappointing thing that no one talks about is that all of the vaccines target the spike, which is the part of the virus that evolves most quickly (the spike is also an immunotoxin). Alternatively, vaccines could have targeted the nucleocapsid protein. This would have had the dual benefit of not being as immunogenic/immunotoxin and also likely being a one and done shot with long term effective immunity. Why do you think the folks at Big pharma decided to choose a vaccine against the spike protein? Can anyone say "recurring revenue?"
Vaccines designed at a genomic level target the spike because that's the protein at the surface of the virus, and thus believed to be the most effective target for your immune system. That belief seems to have been correct (at least as to infection), since mRNA vaccines against the spike had the highest efficacy. The spike is unfortunately also under heavy selective pressure for that same reason, leading to the rapid evolution that you note; but that's the inherent and unavoidable tradeoff.
Inactivated virus vaccines (like Sinovac) don't target the spike, since they don't target anything. They do induce anti-nucleocapsid immunity, but there's no evidence that corresponds to any clinical benefit.
I don't think the word "immunogenic" means what you think it does. Vaccines are supposed to be immunogenic (i.e., to generate an immune response); if they weren't then they wouldn't do anything. I've seen papers proposing that the spike protein is toxic in certain cases, but no evidence that the exposure from the vaccine minus the exposure from averted infections is net harmful.
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[ 2.7 ms ] story [ 131 ms ] threadhttps://www.pfizer.com/news/press-release/press-release-deta...
Also, the COVID jab is much harder to take than the flu jab for some reason. I barely notice the flu shot, but for a COVID shot, I actually feel my muscles contracting, and my arm is a bit sore for a week (although nothing beyond a minor annoyance). I wonder what this means for a combined shot.
In the hypothetical case you're describing, I would expect that consolidation of vaccine administration would happen before we reach a point where you need to get half a dozen separate jabs at your annual well visit.
We don't see this panic regarding the flu and they have similar mortality in the same demographics. Give it to the elderly and the sensitive and ignore it for the rest like we've always done.
There's really no need to exaggerate the risks, I only caught covid twice (first and delta variants) 2 years apart while many of my vaccinated friends seem to catch every single one only months apart. Why is that? Interestingly I've never been this healthy in my life, anecdata and probably more related to social distancing than being unvaccinated but interesting nonetheless.
I don't care if people choose to get vaccinated but it's seriously time to move on.
I've spent some of my life working in undeveloped, tropical areas. Because of this, I'm vaccinated against a bunch of diseases the average Western citizen doesn't worry about- Yellow Fever, Japanese Encephalitis, Tuburculosis and have seen first-hand the afflictions of the local populations who weren't vaccinated.
Working in a clinic with sick and dying people, while being safe because I myself am vaccinated against the disease is kind of a surreal experience.
While obviously the ideal would be a single dose providing lifelong protection, an annual booster still would make me incredibly grateful that I get to live in this modern, almost futuristic world of preventative medicine superpowers.
That says it all. There were some suckers getting the flu shot and then developing a severe flu. Reading the vaccine documentation turns out that it was developed using a variant at the other end of the world.
how can an observer detect if profiteering is influencing recommendation?
How‘s the situation in the US?
I got 3 shots. And had severe complications after the third shot. So I don’t think I am going to have one again.
I feel 'everyone' and 'nobody' very often can be replaced by 'a lot' and 'few'.
Let me quote the illustrious submeta here:
> This topic was dealth with so controversially, so polarisingly, that it divides the nation. One group even made a political program with being anti-covid measures, pretending there are dark forces limiting personal freedom etc.
That just about covers it.
As long as the shots have the spike protein they can GFT
I’m not against the vaccine. I just don’t think I need it. Sure, some people talk about chronic inflammation. But I think I trust my generally normative immune system to handle this.
Nebula says that my genome is at the 99th percentile for serious illness and hospitalization with COVID-19 so this will be fun to see. But I’m going to stick to it.
The science is very simple, get the shot and you reduce the likelihood of hospitalization or death. It's more effective for those with co-morbidities or those older in the age brackets.
I am not sure why this was politicized to death the way it has been. The mandates early on were to curb the hospitalizations / deaths that was occurring. Really the mandate should have been for people with co-morbidities or in the upper age bracket but you know what, people are stupid and everyone thinks they're healthy, so instead of being nuanced they applied it to everyone.
Part of this, I believe, was hedging bets in the fog of war that was a global pandemic. Part of it was just raw incompetence.
I am genuinely curious as someone who got every shot and booster. Do I actually benefit from this one? My understanding is the last one I did not statistically benefit from.
The first vaccine was very efficient against infection by the original variants. So it was not useful only for people with co-morbidities. Then we got Omicron and a loss of efficacy against infection (but still useful to reduce severeness).
What's weird about the U.S.A. though, is that it's still a thing _now_?
https://www.cdc.gov/flu/about/qa/vaccineeffect.htm
Time will tell how effective covid vaccines are when it's mutating as rapidly as it is. The covid vaccine will definitely reduce zero infections if people do not get it.
° from chat gpt (with all the standard caveats):
Source: "Vaccine effectiveness against SARS-CoV-2 infection with the Omicron or Delta variants following a two-dose or booster BNT162b2 or mRNA-1273 vaccination series: a Danish cohort study" (Published in The Lancet).
Source: "Efficacy of a Fourth Dose of Covid-19 mRNA Vaccine against Omicron" (Published in NEJM).
Source: UKHSA COVID-19 vaccine surveillance reports.
"Conclusions Two vaccine doses provided high protection against SARS-CoV-2 infection and COVID-19 hospitalization with the Alpha and Delta variants with protection, notably against infection, waning over time. Two vaccine doses provided only limited and short-lived protection against SARS-CoV-2 infection with Omicron. However, the protection against COVID-19 hospitalization following Omicron SARS-CoV-2 infection was higher. The third vaccine dose substantially increased the level and duration of protection against infection with the Omicron variant and provided a high level of sustained protection against COVID-19 hospitalization among the +60-year-olds."
No indication of negative efficacy.
The 3rd dose followup periods aren't long enough in this study to see what happens there.
Geert Vanden Bossche [0] has been predicting a vaccine-induced massive die-off this summer!
We need antivirals, not vaccines! Just look at this [1] and shit in your pants!!!
[0]: https://x.com/GVDBossche
[1]: https://nextstrain.org/ncov/gisaid/global/6m
I got a Pfizer–BioNTech booster, and it was of course fine.
I don't want and would not get the Sinovac booster.
Given current sentiment and uptake rates, how many people are actually going to get these (or make their 6 month old get them)? And how low does that number have to be before you are just training people to be comfortable ignoring your recommendations?
near to a cinema next to you!!
;-)
Inactivated virus vaccines (like Sinovac) don't target the spike, since they don't target anything. They do induce anti-nucleocapsid immunity, but there's no evidence that corresponds to any clinical benefit.
I don't think the word "immunogenic" means what you think it does. Vaccines are supposed to be immunogenic (i.e., to generate an immune response); if they weren't then they wouldn't do anything. I've seen papers proposing that the spike protein is toxic in certain cases, but no evidence that the exposure from the vaccine minus the exposure from averted infections is net harmful.