What’s the Point of the Latest Ukraine Escalation?
23 November 2024
by Eugyppius
The Emperor’s New Ad
22 November 2024
Can you have too many vaccinations? An ex-academic scientist tackles this question. He argues that, given the risks of post-vaccination autoimmune response, it's foolhardy to vaccinate those who've already had Covid.
Pressurising parents with the threat of closing schools to vaccinate their children when the safety profile is highly uncertain and the disease is no real threat to them is not a medically or ethically sound policy.
Yet another study has found that natural immunity provides better protection against infection than the vaccines, and that vaccine effectiveness against infection wanes rapidly, beginning a few weeks after vaccination.
A second large Israeli study has found that natural immunity provides better protection against infection than the Pfizer vaccine. Adjusting for several factors, infections were six times higher among the vaccinated.
Numerous studies have found that vaccine side effects are more common in those who've already had Covid. Such people (of whom there are many) not only face lower benefits from vaccination; they also face higher costs.
Moderna boss Stephane Bancel says he expects a "material drop" in vaccine efficacy against Omicron. But new research papers in the NEJM and Lancet show the enduring power of natural immunity.
A new study looks at vaccine effectiveness against severe outcomes among people who had Covid. While effectiveness against death was marked in those under 60, it was small and non-significant in those over 60.
In an interview last week, Neil Ferguson said that Britain's high infection rate had had the "upside of boosting population immunity". Whether he realised it or not, Ferguson was making the case for focused protection.
Last week, The New York Times ran a piece titled ‘Needless Suffering: Britain offers a warning of what happens when a country ignores Covid’. But infections are in steady decline. And even if they weren't, so what?
At this point in the pandemic, you might say 'Zero Covid' is a non-starter. Yet a recent article argues that "COVID-19 must be eliminated". As you might expect, this article ignores the crucial role of immunity.
© Skeptics Ltd.