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by xxxxxyy1
1917 days ago
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I can't upvote this enough. Additionally, it doesn't make sense to have a one-size-fits-all approach to vaccination as though people who already got infected require vaccination. I get Jonestown vibes from the public health establishment, since the policy position is absolute conformity. No exceptions! Doesn't infection from the virus confer immunity to other proteins not found in the vaccine(which AFAIK only induces immunity against the spike protein)? |
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Same. It's novel too: I've been vaccinated against Yellow Fever, and doctors here simply won't give you it without confirming that you will be travelling because the vaccine has a very real risk of harming you. It's safer than the risk of Yellow Fever if you're travelling to areas with it. But it absolutely is a risk/benefit trade-off.
> Doesn't infection from the virus confer immunity to other proteins not found in the vaccine
Certainly. Real infections also generate immunity in more parts of the body, eg mucus membranes, as well as stronger t-cell responses.
Though note that it's rare for diseases to evolve resistance to vaccines, because they work by stimulating an immune response rather than directly targeting something. The more highly engineered vaccines are at a higher risk of this happening than the lower tech ones based on the disease agent, weakened or inactivated. But this isn't like antibiotics where resistance almost always evolves eventually.