Natural Immunity is now a thing? This item was squashed and censored, now we can talk about it?
Fortunately, a single dose of a COVID-19 vaccine could help prevent serious illness and hospitalization from another infection in people who have already had COVID-19. Based on these findings, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has simplified the recommended COVID-19 vaccination schedule to one convenient injection of an mRNA- based vaccine for people 6 years and older who are unvaccinated.
There is absolutely no risk of COVID causing any serious health effects to anyone who is even remotely healthy.
If you are thinking about getting vaccinated,
See professional help
an updated formulation of Pfizer-BioNTech's COVID-19 vaccine is now being studied that could make a single dose of the vaccine even more effective by providing protection against new variants of the virus.
Your participation in this clinical trial could reduce your risk of getting COVID-19 again.
This is an absolute lie
It will also contribute to the development of the next generation of COVID-19 vaccines needed to help protect millions of people around the world from the newest variants. So, thank you for taking the time to learn more.
and more CA$H.
Really?
Tell that to the previously young and healthy people who are now disabled because they caught Covid.
What Long COVID Looks Like in Children and Young Adults
Natural Immunity is now a thing?
"Natural immunity" is a bad term. All immunity is natural. I prefer to call it "disease-induced immunity," which is more accurate.
The medical and research communities completely recognize disease-induced immunity and always have. One issue is that disease-induced immunity is not as effective, since the immune system might be using any of the 29 viral proteins to develop an immune response, but only an immune response to the spike protein is likely to prevent future infection. Another issue is that immunity against coronaviruses only lasts a few months, regardless of whether that immunity developed in response to a virus infection or a vaccine.
If you are thinking about getting vaccinated,
See professional help
Lucky for me, I am a professional with many years of experience doing infectious disease countermeasures research and working in areas related to public health. Since I am a professional, I actually know how to read and understand the medical/scientific literature and study data. Since there is nothing in the literature that indicates that developing an immune response following a vaccination is particularly dangerous, I have gotten vaccinated and encouraged my family to do the same. I have had five doses so far (four of the original vaccine, one of the bivalent). And I know they were effective, since I spent several days in quarantine with a positive Covid case and did not catch it myself.
Finally, what kind of thinking is it where you know you need to be protected against Covid, but the only way you believe you can be protected is by catching it? If you have to catch Covid to be protected from it, then what good is disease-induced immunity?