- Joined
- Dec 17, 2019
I do but the way corona virus is currently in its current form your only safe for so long. they're going to need to develop a vaccine with boosters to keep immunity going. A vaccine isn't the same as the wild strain of a virus, currently corona virus antibodies would stay in your system max 100 days, after that the immunity is gone your vulnerable to reinfection again.
because nobody likes the idea of throwing grandma or someone terminally with cancer under the bus. I highly doubt herd immunity will be a thing until a vaccine can be made.
If herd immunity is impossible because of this, then a vaccine is impossible for that same reason.
If the strains of COVID-19 mutate so fucking fast that your body's immune response no longer produces the correct antibodies and your lymphocytes no longer recognize the strain, then a vaccine wont do any better. The goal of a vaccine is to basically teach your body's immune response to make the right antibodies and your lymphocytes to recognize the infected cells.
If your body's response to the real deal doesn't last, then how the fuck will exposure to a less-lethal and/or inactivated lab strain make you fare any better?
This was the point of my initial reply, if a proper immune response doesn't fucking work and Grandma is going to die from COVID regardless, then why are we making Jacie go crazy with depression and cause Mike to lose his job, while Peter & Heather burn through their savings and little Jimmy is left out of school?
That being said, I am of the belief that both natural herd immunity and a vaccine are possible, because there is more involved in an immune response than "are active antibodies detectable in your body right now"
Also imma need a legit source on that 100 days claim, because I've seen nothing in the literature and its only come up in news sources.
Initial reports of reinfection came from lingering virus particles, not active infections
(archive)
As of May, no true case of reinfection in humans had been confirmed
To the best of my knowledge, no accepted case has been confirmed since, but May was the most recent peer-reviewed date
(archive)
Even if there are true cases of reinfection out there, statistically speaking they will drop to zero as more people catch the virus and recover
(archive)
(archive)
As of May, no true case of reinfection in humans had been confirmed
To the best of my knowledge, no accepted case has been confirmed since, but May was the most recent peer-reviewed date
(archive)
Even if there are true cases of reinfection out there, statistically speaking they will drop to zero as more people catch the virus and recover
(archive)