page 23: "(iii) recent observations from UK Health Security Agency
(UKHSA) surveillance data that N antibody levels appear to be lower in individuals who acquire infection following 2 doses of vaccination.
Aside from those who have pointed out that N antibody levels are lower after 2 of the gene/cell therapy ("vaccination" doses, the other obvious takeaway is that you can still acquire infection after 2 doses.
This also explains why if you are traveling out of the country or into the U.S. or Canada, you are still required to take a Covid test within 72 hours of departure.
Next. page 24: "Researchers across the globe are working to better understand what antibody levels mean in terms of protection against COVID-19. Current thinking is that there is no threshold antibody level that offers complete protection against infection, but instead that higher antibody levels are likely to be associated with lower probability of infection"
In short, it says there is no complete protection. The subject here is S antibody. Not N (Nuleocapsid) anibody.
Page 6: "Both of these studies relate to a period when the Alpha variant dominated. An analysis from the ONS Community Infection Survey found that contacts of vaccinated index cases had around 65 to 80% reduced odds of testing positive with the Alpha variant and 35 to 65% reduced odds of testing positive with the Delta variant compare to contacts of unvaccinated index cases"
Nothing to write home about. Horrible study overall.
I wonder if she could sue the individual who gave her the jab in a civil tort?
Someone has to try it.
“Just doing my job.” is not an excuse.
Clinicians aren’t military.
Nuremberg Code could be referenced but does not apply.