ChemGal
One with keen eye
- Pronouns
- She/Her/Her
Dr. Henry stated so in the article I posted.I'm curious too.
Where's the evidence there are limited doses?
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Dr. Henry stated so in the article I posted.I'm curious too.
Where's the evidence there are limited doses?
In a COVID-19 briefing on Tuesday, Health Minister Adrian Dix and provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry said the supply of the J&J vaccines will be limited.
“It will be available first for any health-care worker who wants to use this as their way of getting back to work.”
Listening to what provinces are saying as well as unvaccinated people, I suspect there are more against getting an mRNA virus due to various thoughts about them rather than medical reasons.“It will be available first for any health-care worker who wants to use this as their way of getting back to work.”
This sounds very much like the other vaccines were not an option for these people. Having as much healthcare workers as possible at work sounds like a reasonable goal. I think with the thread of loosing your job if not vaccinated, the ones that are left unvaccinated will be the die hard anti vaxxers. There is a certain obligation to offer J+J to the ones that can’t have the others.
This isn't really about what you've been talking about, but this statement caught my eye.Listening to what provinces are saying as well as unvaccinated people, I suspect there are more against getting an mRNA virus due to various thoughts about them rather than medical reasons.
Depends on the people. Mrs. M and I are pretty diligent about researching our Rx drugs and other health matters. Also, we have Scientific American and Discover coming into the house, both of which cover the science of things like mRNA well. And I watch a lot of (reputable) science content on Youtube (what can I say, I'm a science junkie whose math skills just aren't up to actually being a scientist).My question is, was it a mistake to explain the mRna technology so extensively to the general public during this age of the internet? Do we always know or look up with such scrutiny what the doctor prescribes unless there's a problem? Eg. Does the average person know where tylenol comes from or how many drugs meant to cure one problem can actually create another one?
Good points, but as you say, you understand what you're reading without creating an additional narrative that's not there.Depends on the people. Mrs. M and I are pretty diligent about researching our Rx drugs and other health matters. Also, we have Scientific American and Discover coming into the house, both of which cover the science of things like mRNA well. And I watch a lot of (reputable) science content on Youtube (what can I say, I'm a science junkie whose math skills just aren't up to actually being a scientist).
But we likely don't fit your notion of average. We are both fairly concerned about our health. We are both well-educated, even if not specifically in medicine. I am fascinated by science so do a lot of reading and viewing of science content. We both have pretty good research skills and knowledge to evaluate what we read (she taught research methods to masters and Ph.D. students, in fact).
So if it hadn't been widely available, we would have found it in any case. I don't think health research should be some kind of black box and the information needs to be out there. We need to be educating the public, not expecting them to just trust the pros. In this case, not putting the information out there would have played to the conspiracy whackos notion of the whole thing being a scheme and might have sold more people on that idea. "What are they hiding?" type of stuff.
Which I find is a problem in general. Even in my day, I don't recall that it was covered well in high school maths and I probably learned more about it from my gaming than in school. Little M took a data management course in high school and he understood the stuff better than the teacher (thanks to his mum) so I don't have much confidence in today's system. And that was an upper year elective so really only kids planning on university took it. Really needs some good coverage in the general maths course in lower grades.The knowledge that seems most lacking is understanding probabilities.
We haven't looked into the flu shot in a long time. It has worked well for me since I started getting it annually and there have never been any health issues. So it kind of gets a "by" now. Same with my diabetes and hypertension drugs. We look into them periodically when new information comes to light, but otherwise they work and aren't causing problems so we don't really spend time on them anymore.@Mendalla
Just out of curiosity, when you got your flu shot, were you aware of the strains of flu virus that the vaccine is fighting this year? Do you know now if not. Are you googling it now?
So I wonder why some people have become so obsessed with the Covid vaccine? Is it the new technology, when in fact we have been inundated with new technology over the last 100 years? Mass vaccinations have been around for years.We haven't looked into the flu shot in a long time. It has worked well for me since I started getting it annually and there have never been any health issues. So it kind of gets a "by" now. Same with my diabetes and hypertension drugs. We look into them periodically when new information comes to light, but otherwise they work and aren't causing problems so we don't really spend time on them anymore.