Anonymous wrote:They could provide virtual option for elementary school at least. I think lots of parents would like that. MS and HS students, yes, have the vaccine available and they should be in person and keep wearing masks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Here's the flaw in your response:
Vaccines are highly effective .................But they lose.effectiveness past the 6 month mark. I don't know about you but my 6 month mark is in September. It's going to be shit show if they don't allow a booster to all adults in September or October. I suspect they will do just that unless children are able to be vaccinated by that time (which seems more unlikely)
If less adults take the Fall Booster, which is also probable, you can't count t on the vaccine to keep schools open
[citation needed]
Is there something wrong with your Google??
https://www.cnbc.com/2021/07/28/pfizers-ceo-says-covid-vaccine-effectiveness-drops-to-84percent-after-six-months.html
So, according to Pfizer's CEO, the effectiveness drops from the upper 90%s to 84%. In other words, after 6 months, it's still a highly effective vaccine.
No.
Pfizer CEO says the vaccines effectiveness steadily drclines EVERY MONTH
Their data only goes to 6 months. 20% drop in protection from hospitalization up to that 6th month mark but declines steadily perhaps until zero . No one knows yet.
And kids are heading back right as adults vaccine effectiveness is waning.
Which doesn't seem to stop you from misstating speculation as certainty.
Anonymous wrote:They could provide virtual option for elementary school at least. I think lots of parents would like that. MS and HS students, yes, have the vaccine available and they should be in person and keep wearing masks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Doesn't really make any sense given that so many other vaccines stay effective for years
This virus is RNA virus, mutating very fast. Think about flu vaccine, which lasts only 6 months
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Here's the flaw in your response:
Vaccines are highly effective .................But they lose.effectiveness past the 6 month mark. I don't know about you but my 6 month mark is in September. It's going to be shit show if they don't allow a booster to all adults in September or October. I suspect they will do just that unless children are able to be vaccinated by that time (which seems more unlikely)
If less adults take the Fall Booster, which is also probable, you can't count t on the vaccine to keep schools open
[citation needed]
Is there something wrong with your Google??
https://www.cnbc.com/2021/07/28/pfizers-ceo-says-covid-vaccine-effectiveness-drops-to-84percent-after-six-months.html
So, according to Pfizer's CEO, the effectiveness drops from the upper 90%s to 84%. In other words, after 6 months, it's still a highly effective vaccine.
Outdated information. The trial was done pre-delta. There are multiple studies saying Pfizer has only 30-50% efficacy toward delta. The ones inoculated early have much lower immunity.
https://twitter.com/erictopol/status/1425798861591777284?s=21
Yes, but Moderna didn't drop that low and many scientists think it is because the dosage is higher than Pfizer's.
Probably also because moderna was given at a later time than Pfizer. It also takes 4 weeks for two doses. So I’m expecting moderna efficacy may drop to 40% in a month or 2. Efficacy toward covid infection correlates well with circulating antibody levels and by 6 months the levels have one log reduction.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Probably also because moderna was given at a later time than Pfizer. It also takes 4 weeks for two doses. So I’m expecting moderna efficacy may drop to 40% in a month or 2. Efficacy toward covid infection correlates well with circulating antibody levels and by 6 months the levels have one log reduction.
Go. Away.
There's already enough misinformation on the internet.
Anonymous wrote:
Probably also because moderna was given at a later time than Pfizer. It also takes 4 weeks for two doses. So I’m expecting moderna efficacy may drop to 40% in a month or 2. Efficacy toward covid infection correlates well with circulating antibody levels and by 6 months the levels have one log reduction.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Doesn't really make any sense given that so many other vaccines stay effective for years
This virus is RNA virus, mutating very fast. Think about flu vaccine, which lasts only 6 months
Are you the "virologist" who kept telling us that there wasn't going to be a vaccine for SARS-CoV-2 because there are no vaccines for RNA viruses? (Which, actually, there are.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Here's the flaw in your response:
Vaccines are highly effective .................But they lose.effectiveness past the 6 month mark. I don't know about you but my 6 month mark is in September. It's going to be shit show if they don't allow a booster to all adults in September or October. I suspect they will do just that unless children are able to be vaccinated by that time (which seems more unlikely)
If less adults take the Fall Booster, which is also probable, you can't count t on the vaccine to keep schools open
[citation needed]
Is there something wrong with your Google??
https://www.cnbc.com/2021/07/28/pfizers-ceo-says-covid-vaccine-effectiveness-drops-to-84percent-after-six-months.html
So, according to Pfizer's CEO, the effectiveness drops from the upper 90%s to 84%. In other words, after 6 months, it's still a highly effective vaccine.
Outdated information. The trial was done pre-delta. There are multiple studies saying Pfizer has only 30-50% efficacy toward delta. The ones inoculated early have much lower immunity.
https://twitter.com/erictopol/status/1425798861591777284?s=21
Yes, but Moderna didn't drop that low and many scientists think it is because the dosage is higher than Pfizer's.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Doesn't really make any sense given that so many other vaccines stay effective for years
This virus is RNA virus, mutating very fast. Think about flu vaccine, which lasts only 6 months
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Here's the flaw in your response:
Vaccines are highly effective .................But they lose.effectiveness past the 6 month mark. I don't know about you but my 6 month mark is in September. It's going to be shit show if they don't allow a booster to all adults in September or October. I suspect they will do just that unless children are able to be vaccinated by that time (which seems more unlikely)
If less adults take the Fall Booster, which is also probable, you can't count t on the vaccine to keep schools open
[citation needed]
Is there something wrong with your Google??
https://www.cnbc.com/2021/07/28/pfizers-ceo-says-covid-vaccine-effectiveness-drops-to-84percent-after-six-months.html
So, according to Pfizer's CEO, the effectiveness drops from the upper 90%s to 84%. In other words, after 6 months, it's still a highly effective vaccine.
Outdated information. The trial was done pre-delta. There are multiple studies saying Pfizer has only 30-50% efficacy toward delta. The ones inoculated early have much lower immunity.
https://twitter.com/erictopol/status/1425798861591777284?s=21
Anonymous wrote:Doesn't really make any sense given that so many other vaccines stay effective for years
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Here's the flaw in your response:
Vaccines are highly effective .................But they lose.effectiveness past the 6 month mark. I don't know about you but my 6 month mark is in September. It's going to be shit show if they don't allow a booster to all adults in September or October. I suspect they will do just that unless children are able to be vaccinated by that time (which seems more unlikely)
If less adults take the Fall Booster, which is also probable, you can't count t on the vaccine to keep schools open
[citation needed]
Is there something wrong with your Google??
https://www.cnbc.com/2021/07/28/pfizers-ceo-says-covid-vaccine-effectiveness-drops-to-84percent-after-six-months.html
So, according to Pfizer's CEO, the effectiveness drops from the upper 90%s to 84%. In other words, after 6 months, it's still a highly effective vaccine.