Vaccines don’t always prevent infection
Researchers had hoped to design safe COVID-19 vaccines that would prevent at least half of the people vaccinated from getting COVID-19 symptoms.
Fortunately, the vaccines have vastly outperformed expectations. For example, in 6.5 million residents of Israel, aged 16 years and older, the Pfizer–BioNTech mRNA COVID-19 vaccine was found to be 95.3% effective after both shots. Within two months, among the 4.7 million fully vaccinated, the detectable infections fell by 30-fold. Similarly in California and Texas, only 0.05% of fully vaccinated health care workers tested positive for COVID-19.
Vaccine developers often hope that, in addition to preventing illness, their vaccines will achieve “sterilizing immunity,” where the vaccination blocks the germ from even being able to get into the body at all. This sterilizing immunity means someone who’s vaccinated will neither catch the virus nor transmit it further. For a vaccine to be effective, though, it doesn’t need to prevent the germ from infecting an immunized person.
https://twitter.com/TheConjuring4k
https://twitter.com/ConjuringWeb
https://twitter.com/2021F9movie
https://twitter.com/Infinite20202
https://twitter.com/Sans_unbruit_2
https://twitter.com/sansunbruitfilm
https://twitter.com/RegarderCruella
https://twitter.com/film_conjuring3
https://twitter.com/Respect_fr
https://twitter.com/Potters_Ground
https://twitter.com/DownloadCruella