Clearly Elijah doesn't know how vaccines work because this is apples and oranges.
95% effective at preventing you from getting it vs 99% chance you'll survive if you do get it. A proper comparison needs to show how likely a random unvaccinated person is to catch it. Obviously a vaccinated person should be at an even lower risk of death because they should have a lower risk of catching it.
Now if the vaccine had a 5% chance of killing you then yea, he'd have a point.
EDIT: Yes, yes alright. I know a vaccine doesn't "prevent" you from getting covid. It was a simplified explanation to get a point across.
This is not how vaccines work. They do not prevent you from getting it. The virus is a PART of the vaccine, which allows your immune system to battle on a controlled front and helps build antibodies. Elijah's statement is correct. The vaccine may help some people be prepared should they contract the virus, but they also come with downsides-such as getting the virus when you may never have otherwise.
An mRNA virus will not have that downside of "getting the virus you wouldn't have otherwise" because it's not a live or weakened virus vaccine. It only contains mRNA for a portion of the virus, but not enough to be the actual infectious virus.
That said, I'm hearing that this vaccine has a fairly high incidence of flu-like side-effects from taking it, so much so that doctors are being coached to ensure that people come back for shot 2 because shot 1 is so bad a lot of people won't want to come back for shot 2.
Good point. Do you happen to know why patients are showing symptoms? I always assumed it was a result of a temporarily weakened immune system as a result of the vaccine, but I am not positive.
Clearly Elijah doesn't know how vaccines work because this is apples and oranges.
95% effective at preventing you from getting it vs 99% chance you'll survive if you do get it. A proper comparison needs to show how likely a random unvaccinated person is to catch it. Obviously a vaccinated person should be at an even lower risk of death because they should have a lower risk of catching it.
Now if the vaccine had a 5% chance of killing you then yea, he'd have a point.
EDIT: Yes, yes alright. I know a vaccine doesn't "prevent" you from getting covid. It was a simplified explanation to get a point across.
This is not how vaccines work. They do not prevent you from getting it. The virus is a PART of the vaccine, which allows your immune system to battle on a controlled front and helps build antibodies. Elijah's statement is correct. The vaccine may help some people be prepared should they contract the virus, but they also come with downsides-such as getting the virus when you may never have otherwise.
An mRNA virus will not have that downside of "getting the virus you wouldn't have otherwise" because it's not a live or weakened virus vaccine. It only contains mRNA for a portion of the virus, but not enough to be the actual infectious virus.
That said, I'm hearing that this vaccine has a fairly high incidence of flu-like side-effects from taking it, so much so that doctors are being coached to ensure that people come back for shot 2 because shot 1 is so bad a lot of people won't want to come back for shot 2.
Good point. Do you happen to know why patients are showing symptoms? I always assumed it was a result of a temporarily weakened immune system as a result of the vaccine, but I am not positive.