I don't think it's a vaccine. I think it's something else.
There is 330 million people in the USA. In 2017, an average of 7,708 deaths occurred each day, that is 2,813,420 people per year. I am surprised someone has not died WHILE receiving the shot. Simple stats say it will eventually happen.
Liberalism/Socialism in a nutshell. Always with the questions, never with the answers.
There was a discussion on here awhile back with a doctor that’s been heavily involved with this crap. I forget his username. gs-doc???
In that discussion, he stated that IF an individual had this crap and survived that their T-cell antibodies were good for immunity for their rest of their lives. To take a vaccination after having the crap was basically just a waste of the vaccination. He had recommended to his own 80-year old mother that had the crap and survived, not to bother taking it.
I’d believe this guy looonnnnnngggg before I’d ever believe anything coming out of WHO or the current administration.
Apparently, the fear is waning and the death rate wasn’t high enough for em.
Any ideas of the exact boundaries between youth/middle age/ seniors/elderly/ancient...
The article included a 65 y.o. with the 80s - 90s...
Asking for a friend.
Questions? What’s the problem.
The elderly are the first to receive the “vaccine”.
The elderly are the ones who present a financial burden on society.
Gates is committed to “population reduction”.
Seems pretty clear to me.
Explains Consent form signature.
These vaccines are liable.
After my daughter and I had reactions to the second shot (fever, vomiting, not dangerous for us), I don’t believe my mother should get her second shot, given recent gastric issues and debilitation. But I am pretty sure her doctor will urge it any way. We’ve said no to doctors before, so no big deal there.
And from 2012...NIH....
“These SARS-CoV vaccines all induced antibody and protection against infection with SARS-CoV. However, challenge of mice given any of the vaccines led to occurrence of Th2-type immunopathology suggesting hypersensitivity to SARS-CoV components was induced. Caution in proceeding to application of a SARS-CoV vaccine in humans is indicated.”
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22536382/
VAERS and many “anecdotal” events leaked by nursing home workers all indicate that getting vaccinated after already having THE REAL THING is both ridiculous and dangerous.
bookmark
This is a giant experiment.
Deaths of Elderly Who Recovered From COVID-19, but Died After Vaccine, Raise Questions [KY, AR]
If you’ve had COVID-19, wait until 90 days after your diagnosis to get a COVID-19 vaccine.
I’VE HAD COVID IN THE LAST 90 DAYS. AM I SUPPOSED TO GET THE VACCINE (SHOT) NOW, OR DO I HAVE TO WAIT UNTIL AFTER 90 DAYS?
2 hours ago
Updated
Current information says that COVID-19 vaccines (shots) are safe if you have been sick with COVID-19 in the past 90 days. You may delay your shot 90 days, but you do not have to wait 90 days after infection to get your vaccine (shot). You may get a vaccine (shot) as soon as your isolation period is over and your symptoms are gone. You should not get the shot while sick or during the isolation/quarantine period to avoid exposing others.
Visit CDC’s Interim Clinical Considerations for Use of mRNA COVID-19 Vaccines Currently Authorized in the United States for more information https://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/covid-19/info-by-product/clinical-considerations.html
Our west coast PPO says 100 days.
Our local and open ICU beds are now above Gruesome's panic levels %.
Vaccinating older residents will curb COVID-19 deaths, Bay Area health officials say!
By Eli Walsh Bay City News Foundation
Health officers in eight Bay Area counties urged health systems Wednesday to prioritize COVID-19 vaccinations for older residents amid vaccine supply shortages in the region.
Health departments in Marin, Napa, Santa Cruz and Solano counties and their health care partners are prioritizing vaccinating all residents age 75 and older while Contra Costa, San Francisco, San Mateo and Santa Clara counties will do the same with residents age 65 and older.
The intent, according to health officers in the eight counties, is to limit coronavirus-related deaths by targeting the age demographic with the greatest risk of dying.
As of Jan. 28, an average of 83.6 percent of COVID-19 deaths in the eight counties have been residents age 65 and older.
"Three out of four COVID-19 deaths in Marin are among residents age 75 or older," Marin County Public Health Officer Dr. Matt Willis said. "A vaccine offered to a resident above age 75 is 300 times more likely to save a life than a vaccine offered to someone under the age of 50."
Health care workers and nursing home residents will also continue to be vaccinated in accordance with the state's vaccine prioritization guidelines.
The region's current pace of supply, however, could limit counties' ability to get vaccine doses for several weeks to older adults who want them.
The two-dose nature of the vaccines currently on the market, developed by Pfizer and Moderna, also makes it difficult to begin vaccinating new people, according to the counties, because portions of new shipments must be earmarked for second doses.
"We need to be direct and honest with the public that, although we want to vaccinate everyone, right now we just don't have enough vaccine to do so," Santa Clara County health officer and public health director Dr. Sara Cody said. "Given limited supply of vaccine, we must prioritize vaccinating those at greatest risk of death or serious illness."
Vaccine supply has been so limited that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention revised its vaccine guidance Jan. 21 to allow for second vaccine doses to be administered up to six weeks after a first dose, if necessary.
Second doses of the Pfizer vaccine are recommended to be administered three weeks after the first dose while four weeks is recommended for the Moderna vaccine.
"Modest delays in the administration of the second dose, if absolutely necessary, would not be expected to decrease the protection conferred by the second dose," the CDC said in a statement.
Gov. Gavin Newsom said Wednesday that the state will receive some 1,060,000 vaccine doses this week, but the federal government lacks the amount of vaccine needed by a state of California's size.
"We are anxious to vaccinate a much broader segment of the population, and are ready to do so as soon as vaccine supplies allow," Cody said.
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1UrHIuDpvJWhYMSSkXVrjSW0vE5j4WHDcMtnqjwWZmqQ/edit