If you were able to get the Astra zeneca vaccine would you.Seems I'm eligible next week but the bad press it has makes me wonder.
I'm not convinced it's "rushed", even with it being so quick to market. I'm a believer in the advancements of science and technology. Just look at the computation power that was available to us as a society in 2010 compared to what we have today. Technology has been advancing at an exponential rate, and when the top scientific brains in the world are all working towards one goal using this advanced technology I truly believe they can produce results in a significantly shorter timeframe than they would have with previous vaccines.The vaccine has been rushed out. Others can be the lab rats that want it.
You realize you're quoting from an "organization" that hasn't even spent the $9.95 to register their own domain name right? That hardly screams credible to me.This statement from Doctors for Covid Ethics is concerning.
I'm not convinced it's "rushed", even with it being so quick to market. I'm a believer in the advancements of science and technology. Just look at the computation power that was available to us as a society in 2010 compared to what we have today. Technology has been advancing at an exponential rate, and when the top scientific brains in the world are all working towards one goal using this advanced technology I truly believe they can produce results in a significantly shorter timeframe than they would have with previous vaccines.
Typically you'll have Lab A working on Vaccine A, Lab B on Vaccine B, Lab C may also be working on A but while still working on vaccine C, etc.. etc.. That hasn't been the case here. There's also been crowdsourcing of computing power where people have been using their idle GPU's to lend support to these projects. The scale of work on this vaccine has been so large, I think the timeline is appropriate.
I also believe there will be a time, maybe not in our lifetime but within the next 100 years, where a vaccine will be able to be produced almost overnight.
You realize you're quoting from an "organization" that hasn't even spent the $9.95 to register their own domain name right? That hardly screams credible to me.
As a response to the OP's question.... no I don't think I would. While the AZ vaccine doesn't inject you with COVID-19, it does inject you with a modified strand of the cold similar to your regular flu shot. I much prefer the method used by the Pfizer vaccine. Although at around 20% of the cost with a much easier distribution route, I feel the AZ vaccine will be the front runner chosen by most governments.
I'm interested in the stockroom, not the showroom.You realize you're quoting from an "organization" that hasn't even spent the $9.95 to register their own domain name right? That hardly screams credible to me.
Bullshit!!!I'm not convinced it's "rushed", even with it being so quick to market. I'm a believer in the advancements of science and technology. Just look at the computation power that was available to us as a society in 2010 compared to what we have today. Technology has been advancing at an exponential rate, and when the top scientific brains in the world are all working towards one goal using this advanced technology I truly believe they can produce results in a significantly shorter timeframe than they would have with previous vaccines.
Typically you'll have Lab A working on Vaccine A, Lab B on Vaccine B, Lab C may also be working on A but while still working on vaccine C, etc.. etc.. That hasn't been the case here. There's also been crowdsourcing of computing power where people have been using their idle GPU's to lend support to these projects. The scale of work on this vaccine has been so large, I think the timeline is appropriate.
I also believe there will be a time, maybe not in our lifetime but within the next 100 years, where a vaccine will be able to be produced almost overnight.
You realize you're quoting from an "organization" that hasn't even spent the $9.95 to register their own domain name right? That hardly screams credible to me.
As a response to the OP's question.... no I don't think I would. While the AZ vaccine doesn't inject you with COVID-19, it does inject you with a modified strand of the cold similar to your regular flu shot. I much prefer the method used by the Pfizer vaccine. Although at around 20% of the cost with a much easier distribution route, I feel the AZ vaccine will be the front runner chosen by most governments.
You know what they say about opinions.There are lots of articles out there similar to this.
This is not a vaccine
The Israeli people haven't been given information required for a sufficient risk-benefit analysis in this extraordinary endeavor. Opinionwww.israelnationalnews.com
Another reminder: Vaccines are required to undergo less rigorous and comprehensive safety protocols as medications.
Any and all products that comes to market prior to meeting all the minimum safety tests and standards (especially already reduced ) is rushed.
If you take one of these cov products you are enrolling yourself in Experimental Human Trials because they were skipped, bipassed, avoided short cutted over and around. Neglected. Why? Because even though they have been in the works for decades, and it is not new, they have never successfully passed Phase 4 human trials!!
Good point but we may never get one vaccine that covers all variants as COVID keeps tricking us. It's kind of interesting.Isnt the astra zeka only like 63% effective? Thats terrible imo.. I will wait for one to actually get approved by health canada I think. With all the variations of this virus it seems kinda pointless since they are already changing gears and talking about a new vaccine that protects against all variations.
I sure do. I also recognize the irony in recommending people choose reliable sources for their information then posting 2 propaganda shill pieces to reference.You know what they say about opinions.
Here is another excellent reason to stay tf away from these unproven shots. No proof they work in the future. No proof they last. No proof they are safe.Isnt the astra zeka only like 63% effective? Thats terrible imo.. I will wait for one to actually get approved by health canada I think. With all the variations of this virus it seems kinda pointless since they are already changing gears and talking about a new vaccine that protects against all variations.
I didn't read that whole link bit I do remember reading a study and it was something very crazy like 99.9% of deaths from covid had low levels of vitamin D. I will try and find it but it was mind blowing to me something so simple can possibly save us.Here is another excellent reason to stay tf away from these unproven shots. No proof they work in the future. No proof they last. No proof they are safe.
And yet here's nature for the win again. Our own immune systems do it all.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33594378/
Oh ya, and add VitD and our immune systems are even more effective than their shots at reducing symptoms.