@wrosie wrote:
How believable is this new member?
His first post was misinformation about Marketforce.
@prince wrote:
Good reminder to take sensible precautions.
@prince wrote:
I'm a substitute teacher so I'm around a big number of students too. I haven't been wearing a mask but I'm willing to.
@Tonytj wrote:
Do you think that Pfizer created Covid so they could sell their vaccine?
@Shop-et-al wrote:
If anyone knows: are any vaccines in development that will be long-lasting (years) and address multiple variants of Covid?
@Rousseau wrote:
@Shop-et-al wrote:
If anyone knows: are any vaccines in development that will be long-lasting (years) and address multiple variants of Covid?
Yes, that is what we have now, but not for long. The bivalent booster targets Omicron subvariants BA.4 and BA.5 and the original SARS-CoV-2 virus.
Unfortunately, the soon to be released booster is reported to only target Omnicron XBB.1.5. Not sure why they aren't bundling XBB.1.16 and XBB.2.3 with it along with the the earlier main variants.
I would hope that the existing bivalent vaccine will remain available alongside the new vaccines. Too many people are foolishly not current with their vaccinations and shouldn't end up only vaccinated against XBB1.5 while others will likely want to receive an additional dose of the bivalent either along side the XBB vaccine or just prior to it.
@Shop-et-al wrote:
Thank you. Would more people get the vax if they were assured that vaccination need not be forever? What if the brainy souls in the world could reach a one and done Covid vaccine, or at least a limited number of iterations? For example, polio vaccination involves four doses at intervals for children and three for adults who have not been vaccinated for polio. Just a thought.
@Rousseau wrote:
@Shop-et-al wrote:
If anyone knows: are any vaccines in development that will be long-lasting (years) and address multiple variants of Covid?
Yes, that is what we have now, but not for long. The bivalent booster targets Omicron subvariants BA.4 and BA.5 and the original SARS-CoV-2 virus.
Unfortunately, the soon to be released booster is reported to only target Omnicron XBB.1.5. Not sure why they aren't bundling XBB.1.16 and XBB.2.3 with it along with the the earlier main variants.
I would hope that the existing bivalent vaccine will remain available alongside the new vaccines. Too many people are foolishly not current with their vaccinations and shouldn't end up only vaccinated against XBB1.5 while others will likely want to receive an additional dose of the bivalent either along side the XBB vaccine or just prior to it.
@ColoKate63 wrote:
SARS-2 mutates rapidly, too rapidly for production (as it stands now with current technology) to keep up. Polio doesn’t mutate like that. HIV (the virus that causes AIDS) mutates very similarly- and after 40 years we still don’t have a HIV vaccine. Something to consider.
I’ve been vaccinated x5. Tested weekly with home tests, PCR tests when I felt sick. Have not contracted Covid as far as I know, because I masked properly with a fitted N95 and had a powerful HEPA filter going in my classroom. Waiting for the new vaccine in Sep-October and will jump on it.
My advice: if you qualify, get the Novavax vaccine. I’m unqualified (too young) for it now, but damn I wish I could. It’s better than the mRNA vaccines.
@Rousseau wrote:
The rate of mutation is in part, but not entirely, a result of a wide reservoir of virus which has a sadly large number of unvaccinated hosts allowing it to grow without hindrance. Those who are vaccinated fight off the infection quicker giving the virus less time to mutate. Like other viruses, it has a rather short life time when not in a host.
I wouldn't say that the new Novovax vaccine is better, but rather is differently better. It might be best to be protected with both mRNA vaccines onboard as well the Novovax vaccine. Of course, our knowledge is growing. One positive thing which the SARS-Covid-2 pandemic has yielded is rapid advances in vaccine development against other viruses.
@tstewart3 wrote:
@prince wrote:
Good reminder to take sensible precautions.
The same precautions to take for all germs and viruses. Wash your hands, don't touch your face, keep hydrated, eat healthy, get plenty of sleep and rest.
@prince wrote:
And don't hug everyone/shake hands. Stay home when you're sick.
I avoid crowds and still work to keep my distance.