- Joined
- Oct 13, 2013
- Posts
- 15,354
Not on the PBS (pre prohibition) and 8 3 mg tablets (where found) were $au28Ivermetin cheap by comparison
For a course of treatment thats cheaper compared to molnupiravir$au28
The current bivalent have not been shown to be better over previous. The FDA EUA approval for bivalent was based on some mice trials and NO human data.Maybe a bivalent
He talks about diminishing efficacy of repeated jabs in people who are at low risk
I have had 3 Covid jabs. Last one more than 12 months ago. I don’t have any health issues but I would be eligible for a booster.Can I ask a ( genuine) question?
Framing:
I’m not afraid of getting Covid again, I’m back to living life as before with 4 doses in the arm. I view it now as one of the several respiratory diseases we have to put up with.
But what I don’t understand is the antipathy or negativity towards having another booster shot, say 6-12 months after your last shot or last infection. Ignoring issue of cost to public.
I assume that a current booster would be more targeted to current strains. Maybe a bivalent or even a quad?
In fact, why shouldn’t it be just like the annual flu ‘booster’? Targeted as possible to current strains; free to the vulnerable, people like me pay for it?
doesnt stop you getting itCan I ask a ( genuine) question?
Framing:
I’m not afraid of getting Covid again, I’m back to living life as before with 4 doses in the arm. I view it now as one of the several respiratory diseases we have to put up with.
But what I don’t understand is the antipathy or negativity towards having another booster shot, say 6-12 months after your last shot or last infection. Ignoring issue of cost to public.
I assume that a current booster would be more targeted to current strains. Maybe a bivalent or even a quad?
In fact, why shouldn’t it be just like the annual flu ‘booster’? Targeted as possible to current strains; free to the vulnerable, people like me pay for it?
Can I ask a ( genuine) question?
Framing:
I’m not afraid of getting Covid again, I’m back to living life as before with 4 doses in the arm. I view it now as one of the several respiratory diseases we have to put up with.
But what I don’t understand is the antipathy or negativity towards having another booster shot, say 6-12 months after your last shot or last infection. Ignoring issue of cost to public.
I assume that a current booster would be more targeted to current strains. Maybe a bivalent or even a quad?
In fact, why shouldn’t it be just like the annual flu ‘booster’? Targeted as possible to current strains; free to the vulnerable, people like me pay for it?
Thanks - no kidding?doesnt stop you getting it
doesnt stop you spreading it
The point of getting the Flu vaccine is that it does decrease your chances of contracting Flu and subsequently spreading it to very vulnerable people.Yes, but - anyone - why doesn’t the ‘No point getting Covid boosters’ hold the same for the flu? I’m after TL; DR, not a link to another study
I can’t believe that if they came so far so quick with mRNA vaccines for Covid, why there shouldn’t be incremental improvements now after a few years. If the benefit is marginal, and I don’t mind paying, why shouldn’t I be allowed to get it?
Do we have an ocean of statistics and a desert of simple medicine?
More precisely, I was asking the question . But valiant effortWhile both influenza and Covid are viral, you are conflating two different things and assuming that the response to one is the appropriate response to the other.
You say that as if its taken as read, but when the big push was on in 2021 the exact opposite was spouted by nearly every government going.Thanks - no kidding?
More precisely, I was asking the question . But valiant effort
But rather than the endless bloody studies and rodent head-counts, seems to me the answer to my query is:
Unlike the annual flu vaccine
* Corona virus vaccines to tackle new variants can’t be developed and tested fast enough
* And if they could, the ‘average’ positive response isn’t good enough
* And even if it was, the CV vaccine only diminishes symptoms whereas the flu vaccine aids non transmission .
How-zat?
But personally, I’d still be happy to pay for the most current Covid vaccine even if it was 2 or 3 dominant variants out of date and only ‘on average’ 20% or so effective.
AFF Supporters can remove this and all advertisements
Horses for courses (and how many horses end up breaking down in a race & being shot....).Well, to that I would say: what's the point?
The new Covid variants are tending highly infectious, but mild in effect.
But there is increasing concern about possible heart-damage issues from mRNA vaccines, not to mention ever-diminishing efficacy.
Risk-benefit ratio is a personal thing.
For me, Covid (most likely original Omicron given where I was locked up) was a tickle in the throat - and I'm in an ostensibly high-risk cohort on an age basis.
I'm running with Covid and natural immunity.
Well, to that I would say: what's the point?
The new Covid variants are tending highly infectious, but mild in effect.
You say that as if its taken as read, but when the big push was on in 2021 the exact opposite was spouted by nearly every government going.
But there is increasing concern about possible heart-damage issues from mRNA vaccines,
Risk-benefit ratio is a personal thing.
I’m not sure if they point is directed to me - apologies if not, - but I was very careful to try and frame my question in a calm and considerate way ( see ‘framing’ in post 34,424) stating that I have no lingering fear of Covid but just had a genuine query. You’ll see that I’m not scared of Covid in the slightest. But I am wondering why I shouldn’t be allowed to have a booster that may improve my chances of having a less interrupted holiday, if it’s safe, and if I pay for it. Why should anyone else care about that?And this is the issue with hysteria, it removes logic. As many of us have been saying for a long time; “what is it that we’re actually scared of?”. Some clearly just cannot let go.
Interested in your views on points raised by Prof Robert Clancy in the YT discussion I posted - esp the implications for immune tolerance due to repeated dosing with mRNA "vaccines" and the issues regarding dose and duration of response with mRNA vs traditional vaccines, and the point about the systemic distribution of antigen and its role in chronic inflamation?I’m not in a rush to get a 4th vaccine.