And I’m giving you answers. You may not like them but welcome to 2021.I don’t know what will happen. I’m just asking questions based on the continuous call out about the measles vaccine and how many shots are needed today to keep it down.
And I’m giving you answers. You may not like them but welcome to 2021.I don’t know what will happen. I’m just asking questions based on the continuous call out about the measles vaccine and how many shots are needed today to keep it down.
Did you? Ok. Moving on I guess.And I’m giving you answers. You may not like them but welcome to 2021.
Except he's not, and they kind of are.
I'll accept that nobody is going around trying to infect others on purpose. Give or take a COVID party here and there. I never get invited.
But, there are definitely people going around not trying to "not infect" others. I'll also accept that these people aren't trying to kill others on purpose. They are mostly not monsters.
To the people on the other side, it's little comfort if they were infected by someone being negligent instead of on purpose.
The short order cook, under pressure to get meals out fast that skips washing their hands after using the bathroom to save time, isn't trying to make customers sick. They're trying to make them happy by getting their food done faster. They're also not trying to "not make customers sick". To the short term happy diner with the quick meal, they're not going to be happy long term if they're sick because of the skipped step. It wasn't malice, it was negligence. It's also not going to happen every time.
Nobody is recommending extreme measure. Nobody is looking for a booster every 6 months, for everyone to wear and N95, or for nobody to interact at all. That's the boogey man presented as the other side in arguments to do nothing. The ask is to do the things that will provide some level or reduction and not do the things that will increase spread. It's much easier to oppose someone if you change their ask from "help reduce" to "do this extreme thing it's the only thing that will work 100%".
This:Over the last week or so (maybe longer) I see some are comparing the COVID vaccines to the measles vaccine, expecting how we will need to vaccinate for COVID will somehow align or closely align with measles. Is there any indication at all that this will be the case? Or is this simply wishful thinking?
Measles shows how near universe vaccination is actually possible, that it works to greatly reduce circulation of a highly infectious diseases and how maintenance of vaccination rates is important. It also highlights the disingenuous politicization of vaccines.
This doesn’t tell me anything. At least not about my question. But no worries. I think my question has been answered anyways.This:
Except the MMR vaccine is two doses, administered to young children, and provides a lifetime of immunity. They want people to take a COVID booster every 8 months. Not going to happen.Measles shows how near universal vaccination is actually possible, that it works to greatly reduce circulation of a highly infectious disease and how maintenance of vaccination rates is important. It also highlights the disingenuous politicization of vaccines.
Some of them, sure. Many more people are just lazy and can't be bothered.But I do not. It’s a conspiracy to these idiots, still.
Idependent owner/operators are not allowed to operate in California per AB 5. This is an additional constraint on getting goods off the docks.Any owner/operator should be exempt because they won't have over 100 employees. If a trucking company which hires drivers as employees wanted to help drivers be exempt they could set up some kind of arrangement where the driver is a contractor and they lease the truck. They could easily make it that the contracted rate less the lease fee ends up being the same they were getting paid before.
They do?Except the MMR vaccine is two doses, administered to young children, and provides a lifetime of immunity. They want people to take a COVID booster every 8 months. Not going to happen.
I don't think that anyone has said "8 months" in particular, I just picked a number that was somewhere in between 2 months (J&J minimum wait), 6 months (Pfizer and Moderna minimum wait), and 12 months (how often most people get flu shots).They do?
Every 8 months again and and again and again?
Do you have a source for that?
I get that they want want some people to take an additional dose. But, does taking one additional dose really mean every 8 months FOREVER? Has any study or medical analysis actually said that? I get that lots of reporting, especially click bait and political reporting, has theorized that. But, that's not the same as an actual study or evidence showing it.
I think the debate is more about who "needs" boosters. If the vaccine I took 7 months ago will still be extremely effective at preventing me from getting a severe case of COVID and the booster is only necessary to keep up effectiveness against infection and/or mild illness, then I don't "need" a booster. If the effectiveness against severe illness drops significantly, then I would feel differently for my own personal situation.I don't think that anyone has said "8 months" in particular, I just picked a number that was somewhere in between 2 months (J&J minimum wait), 6 months (Pfizer and Moderna minimum wait), and 12 months (how often most people get flu shots).
I agree that it's hard to cut through and find an article that doesn't have political spin on it, but yes, medical consensus seems to be that we'll need to get them "regularly."
Who knows what type of vaccination schedule would have been needed during the initial emergence of measles when it was still in its adaptation phase either. Had the vaccine been developed against the characteristics of Delta we don’t know what the recommended schedule would have looked like either. It could have been a higher initial dose like Moderna, a 3-shot regimen, longer than 30 days in between, etc. We are trying to match up what is needed for the circulating virus and not the old one that doesn’t exist anymore.Except the MMR vaccine is two doses, administered to young children, and provides a lifetime of immunity. They want people to take a COVID booster every 8 months. Not going to happen.
I think the debate is more about who "needs" boosters. If the vaccine I took 7 months ago will still be extremely effective at preventing me from getting a severe case of COVID and the booster is only necessary to keep up effectiveness against infection and/or mild illness, then I don't "need" a booster. If the effectiveness against severe illness drops significantly, then I would feel differently for my own personal situation.
I'm not going to get boosters and deal with the side effects as part of an exercise in futility to try and eradicate COVID which is essentially impossible.
Maybe it lands at a fourth after more time or maybe not, we'll know when we get there.
I haven't seen anything that looks like this is the consensus at all. I've seen tons of speculation, by media and pundits. None by actual medical people.I agree that it's hard to cut through and find an article that doesn't have political spin on it, but yes, medical consensus seems to be that we'll need to get them "regularly."
This lines up with the current booster recommendations very well. People at more risk (for whatever reason) who will benefit more from an incremental reduction are currently advised to get the booster. People who don't have that elevated risk, are not.I think the debate is more about who "needs" boosters. If the vaccine I took 7 months ago will still be extremely effective at preventing me from getting a severe case of COVID and the booster is only necessary to keep up effectiveness against infection and/or mild illness, then I don't "need" a booster. If the effectiveness against severe illness drops significantly, then I would feel differently for my own personal situation.
If this ends up that the original doses provide enough of an immune response for most protection and that the booster shot is really priming your system for some number of months to fight off infection faster but not really changing the base immune response, then this is certainly possible.My monies on a yearly shot, like the flu shot, that idea will likely make some peoples head explode but for most people it won’t be a big deal, a minute spent at their target or grocery store pharmacy every fall.
I also think it’ll end up with numbers similar to the flu shot, probably 50% will get it every year and 50% won’t. (Assuming original vaccine protection against hospitalization remains high). Those who aren’t worried about getting the flu likely won’t be worried about getting mild COVID either.
And there it is with making up some extreme scenario and then declaring the goal impossible. The MMR vaccine isn’t the only two administered to children. The whole schedule of vaccines has high adoption.Except the MMR vaccine is two doses, administered to young children, and provides a lifetime of immunity. They want people to take a COVID booster every 8 months. Not going to happen.
Who is "they", other than the strawman you just put together? I haven't seen this advocated anywhere in the medical literature.Except the MMR vaccine is two doses, administered to young children, and provides a lifetime of immunity. They want people to take a COVID booster every 8 months. Not going to happen.
For reasons we still don't completely understand, the measles vaccine stimulates a very enduring immune response that most other vaccine can't provoke. It even endures longer than the vaccines co-administered against mumps and rubella. This is why testing for rubella titers is part of routine prenatal care even with good documentation of a prior MMR vaccination, since maternal rubella infection can be castrophic for the baby. And also the reason why I had a short case of mumps as an adult.I’m just wondering why we are framing everything around how the measles vaccine worked and still works, rather than something like the flu vaccine. How would we even know at this point? Just thinking long term. From what I read, how Covid transmits and infects is quite different than measles
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