‘Don’t know how long booster will last!’ Experts clueless
#1
Lightbulb 

"But three months after that booster dose you're back down again to only 25 percent of the people having the antibodies.


"We're definitely boosting but there is some doubt over how long the booster will last."


https://www.express.co.uk/news/politics/...ovid-19-vn
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#2

tikum tikum.
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#3

Experts can b clueless then they r called experts? 
A booster shot by medical definition is to maintain or renew the effect of a previous one  Laughing ... I not expert

There is no right or wrong decisions. 
One only has to bear the consequences that one makes  Big Grin
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#4

Pfizer: If you know our famous product, you will know the graph well. Just like a big heart beat graph.
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#5

(15-12-2021, 05:32 PM)Galilo_l Wrote:  Experts can b clueless then they r called experts? 
A booster shot by medical definition is to maintain or renew the effect of a previous one  Laughing ... I not expert

I am no expert either, but I think a booster shot is to protect oneself from the Corona viruses....I am but a plankton in a vast ocean...... Laughing Rotfl
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#6

no need no need to be clueless.
abt 90 days the most
It goes like this.
'scareVirant' does not exist.
after jab it exists.
Immune response to said will last 3 months.
dat the best scenario as u cannot patent something that does not exist in nature.
Danger if graphene oxide is injected and it got energises by its 5G frequency bands where it absorbes energy
and introduces oxidants in large amt into said body.
Mother of earth 'GROUND" and oral Vit.C cannot help.
Only injection of VitC on standby can like in a nuclear blast.

U didn't fancy Mother of Earth can send large amt of electrons direct into u when u barefooted.
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#7

They successfully got people used to annual vaccination liao... Lol
[+] 1 user Likes Sticw's post
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#8

Antibodies will wane down, it is natural process.
Opinion | Why Hospitalizations Are Now a Better Indicator ...
https://www.nytimes.com › 2021 › 12 › 11 › opinion › why-hospitalizations-are-now-a-better-indicator-of-covids-impact.html
4 days agoAlthough antibodies wane over time and their effectiveness may be affected by variants, T cells and B cells generated from vaccines should continue to offer protection against severe illness. Right...

Also have more antibodies does not mean it can bind the virus
after all Omicron evade antibodies better than Delta variant,
https://www.advisory.com/daily-briefing/...10/omicron
Omicron evades many vaccine antibodies. (But that doesn't mean vaccines won't work.)
Early data suggests the omicron variant may be better able to evade vaccine antibodies than other variants. But seve…
Advisory Board

https://www.news-medical.net/news/202108...study.aspx
Delta variant unable to evade antibodies elicited by COVID-19 ...
17 Aug 2021 ... ... the delta variant of the virus that causes COVID-19 is not particularly good at evading the antibodies generated by vaccination, ...

It is advisable to take longer interval between the doses.
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#9

Clueless experts? They are not experts.
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#10

(15-12-2021, 01:49 PM)theold Wrote:  "But three months after that booster dose you're back down again to only 25 percent of the people having the antibodies.


"We're definitely boosting but there is some doubt over how long the booster will last."


https://www.express.co.uk/news/politics/...ovid-19-vn

Then the real question is "How long with Covid ends?"

KTV妹妹说,香港人无义,台湾人无情,新加坂人无智 Big Grin
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#11

(15-12-2021, 09:52 PM)dynamite Wrote:  Clueless experts? They are not experts.

Omicron vs. T cells: Why scientists are banking on the immune system's 'memory'
Denise Chow  6 days ago
It's a worrisome convergence: falling antibody levels and a new variant.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/health/medical...ar-AARCdya

T Cells Might Be Our Bodies' Best Shot Against Omicron
The Atlantic|20 hours ago
The new variant may undermine some vaccine-derived defenses. But the immune system's best assassins are likely to hold the line.

T-cell vaccines could top up immunity to COVID, as variants loom large
Nature|2 days ago
Peptide jabs targeting T cells could be especially useful for people with compromised immune systems, as backups for spike-based vaccines, or against Omicron and other emerging variants.

There are inhibitors which so far works against all variants. 
It can also prevent transmission better than jab vaccine.
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#12

(15-12-2021, 09:56 PM)watchfirst9 Wrote:  Omicron vs. T cells: Why scientists are banking on the immune system's 'memory'
Denise Chow  6 days ago
It's a worrisome convergence: falling antibody levels and a new variant.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/health/medical...ar-AARCdya

T Cells Might Be Our Bodies' Best Shot Against Omicron
The Atlantic|20 hours ago
The new variant may undermine some vaccine-derived defenses. But the immune system's best assassins are likely to hold the line.

T-cell vaccines could top up immunity to COVID, as variants loom large
Nature|2 days ago
Peptide jabs targeting T cells could be especially useful for people with compromised immune systems, as backups for spike-based vaccines, or against Omicron and other emerging variants.

There are inhibitors which so far works against all variants. 
It can also prevent transmission better than jab vaccine.

Good input, many thanks..... Clapping
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#13

(15-12-2021, 10:05 PM)debono Wrote:  Good input, many thanks..... Clapping


AZ think its vaccine is better in against hospitalization because T cell works better

https://globalbiodefense.com/2021/12/04/...rna-shots/

The UK used the AstraZeneca vaccine a lot more widely than other European countries, many of which restricted its use to older age groups or abandoned using it altogether after reports of very rare blood clots.

The theory behind this is the AstraZeneca vaccine may provide more durable “T cell protection”. T cells are a crucial part of our immune system, and differ from antibodies.

There’s not enough evidence yet to support the CEO’s claim. But we do know a lot more about adenovirus vector vaccines, such as AstraZeneca’s, as they’ve been around for decades, while mRNA vaccines are relatively newer.

Theoretically, it is possible adenovirus vector vaccines do give more durable protection against COVID via T cells.
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