Micky 32 wrote: » I don’t want to know or care who or what your identity is to be honest. It’s late you should be in bed.
Gradius wrote: » Well there you go. If I have no way of proving what I say, then there's no point calling me a spoofer either, right? Believe it or not. Jesus, you'd think I was claiming to be Buddha incarnated again. I worked with vaccines?!...stop the lights!! :P
kerry cow wrote: » question is are the smart guys on here willing to take the vaccine next year when it becomes available ?? come on , step up , step up . me , no way , its too untested , but if ye all do , it stemps the virus for the rest of us , who know too wisely the risks of the side effect that may follow on later , its almost as dangerous as the virus itself . rock and a hard place , so how many volunteers have we ?
Gradius wrote: » I don't work with vaccines anymore. But why would me posting today, versus two years ago or ever mean anything anyway?
Micky 32 wrote: » It’s quite easy to see who you are not anyway. You worked with vaccines? Maybe you swept the floor in a vaccine laboratory and made the tea. I mean hmmm and hmmiz post far more informative quality up to date information and seem very knowledgeable posts vs your misery of doom stupid posts you have been posting all night. You certainly don’t come across as someone who worked on vaccines.
ACitizenErased wrote: » Can someone with PCR knowledge explain this? Am I right in reading that there's a 1-3% false positive rate of total tests?https://twitter.com/CillianDeGascun/status/1305252820313141249?s=20
Gradius wrote: » Oh you've got me on the ropes now! If I were to mention them it's a matter of 5 minutes to find my name and so on. So no, I'm not retarded. That you couldn't imagine that scenario though... :P
Micky 32 wrote: » Lol, it’s very easy to tell someone to shut their mouth when behind a keyboard isn’t it?
Fujifilm Holdings Corp. said it would seek regulatory approval to market a flu drug as a treatment for Covid-19 after a trial in Japan showed that it helped patients with mild cases of the disease recover faster.
smurfjed wrote: » I’m personally expecting to be offer a vaccine before the end of the year, either the Chinese or Russian one. It would certainly make my life easier.
Gael23 wrote: » Me too, I have an autoimmune condition so hopefully I’ll be eligible for one of the early batches available
iguana wrote: » Do we know that the vaccine is being tested on people with autoimmune conditions? I assume so as they are very common and many people will be unaware they have one. So I can't see how in a trial of 30,000 people there won't be, at a minimum, several hundred people with autoimmune conditions. I have/had endometriosis and stress related psoriasis, which are both autoimmune conditions and I do wonder if they are part of why I had so very many post-viral issues following a suspected Covid infection in mid-March. So I am interested to know how people with these types of conditions fare after the vaccine.
Hmmzis wrote: » Sign me up for the jab (most likely two). Gradius, once you can post here again, no need to be arrogant about it. It would be enough to just mention the mechanisms that can cause the bad side effects so long after seroconversion. I know how to search PubMed and Google Scholar.
hmmm wrote: » https://www.ft.com/content/b782f666-6847-4487-986c-56d3f5e46c0b "The UK is to host the world’s first Covid-19 human challenge trials — in which healthy volunteers are deliberately infected with coronavirus to assess the effectiveness of experimental vaccines. The government-funded studies are expected to begin in January at a secure quarantine facility in east London, according to several people involved in the project, which will be announced next week" These people are frankly heroes, and should be treated as such.
hmmm wrote: » https://twitter.com/mugecevik/status/1308080056384843777 "Attack rates are highly correlated with symptom severity"
FutureTeashock wrote: » You can have the one I won't be taking.