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Pfizer vaccine antibodies gone by 7 months


nemo38

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https://www.reuters.com/business/healthcare-pharmaceuticals/delta-increases-covid-19-risks-pregnant-women-pfizerbiontech-vaccine-antibodies-2021-10-01/

 

"Six months after receiving the second dose of the two-shot vaccine from Pfizer Inc (PFE.N) and BioNTech SE , many recipients no longer have vaccine-induced antibodies that can immediately neutralize worrisome variants of the coronavirus, a new study suggests."

 

 

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Well.......so much for that promoted and lofty experiment. 

 

The science establishment might do themselves a favour and explore, study and research the ideals of therapeutics as applied to all things covid. 

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What the clickbait headline failed to mention, and predictably buried further down, was.....

 

Quote

Neutralizing antibodies are not the immune system's only defense against the virus.

Specifically, which they again failed to mention because it won't get as many clicks, is that you still have t-cells and memory cells generated by the vaccine.  This gives your immune system a memory of previous infection including what is simulated by a vaccine.  This can be remembered for years.

Edited by shdmn
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image.png.d0a47d3f4ec21214d43cd675a41f20d5.png

What you don't seem to understand is that infection doesn't equate to illness. There are still powerful immune systems that remain to battle covid.

Here's a report from Israel that might help you understand this better:

"According to Health Ministry data, the ratio of unvaccinated people among the severely ill has continued to rise as more people are inoculated against the virus. As of September 13, out of the 664 severely ill patients, 437 were completely unvaccinated and 168 had received two doses. Only 59 had received the booster shot. The ratios are similar when analyzing new infections."

https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/israel-unvaccinated-booster-65-serious-covid-19-cases-death-delta-1.10208784

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Both my wife and me were vaccinated last April with the Pfizer vaccine before we left the US. Just in time to get here for the fun.

Grrrrrrrrr.

If the Op is correct. our vaccine is nearing the end of it's affectedness. 

How does one get a buster shot in Thailand? or do we need to leave the country? 

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10 hours ago, zzaa09 said:

Well.......so much for that promoted and lofty experiment. 

 

The science establishment might do themselves a favour and explore, study and research the ideals of therapeutics as applied to all things covid. 

You did read the article?

 

“The following is a summary of some recent studies on COVID-19. They include research that warrants further study to corroborate the findings and that have yet to be certified by peer review.”

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10 hours ago, Gulfsailor said:

From over 100 years of research and experience it is known that in general the longest lasting vaccines are those which are made from a live attenuated virus and which include an adjuvant.

AZ is out performing Pfitzer in the long term.

 

 

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11 hours ago, zzaa09 said:

Well.......so much for that promoted and lofty experiment. 

 

The science establishment might do themselves a favour and explore, study and research the ideals of therapeutics as applied to all things covid. 

You forgot to read or quote this excerpt from the article.

 

"These findings suggest that administering a booster dose at around 6 to 7 months following the initial immunization will likely enhance protection against SARS-CoV-2 and its variants."

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30 minutes ago, Denim said:

AZ is out performing Pfitzer in the long term.

 

 

I find it interesting that in most of the debate  about "the vaccines" it is mRNA vaccines or Pfizer that somehow has become a fixation.

Indeed AZ seems to have escaped the initial inflated controversies and has continued to provide well accepted results. That is other than the somewhat ridiculous bickering  over locations of production of a standardized product. 

 

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Despite all the initial claims, and trial studies, the bottom line is there is still a lot of long term research and studies and statistics over time that needs to be done.  These RNA things really do just trick the body and work much differently than most previous vaccines.  Yes they seem to have some plausible benefits.  But they are radically different than previous vaccines that used weakened, or dead viral particles.  The RNA vaccines are much cheaper and quicker to make versus things such as Flu vaccines which require more advance planning, growth and culture facilities, etc.  And even some of those vaccines are not very effective because the flu vaccine makers have to guess in advance what strains to try and fight, and while those are being manufactured and distributed, of course the viruses often mutate. 

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42 minutes ago, ozimoron said:

You forgot to read or quote this excerpt from the article.

 

"These findings suggest that administering a booster dose at around 6 to 7 months following the initial immunization will likely enhance protection against SARS-CoV-2 and its variants."

Yes, and then what?  7 months later antibodies may again be gone?

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10 hours ago, Gulfsailor said:

From over 100 years of research and experience it is known that in general the longest lasting vaccines are those which are made from a live attenuated virus and which include an adjuvant.

The new MRNA types haven’t been used long enough, but early indications are not very favorable. 
Right now there are no live virus vaccines for Covid-19, although there are a few candidates in a trial. The problem is increased risk of side effects. 
the closest are the Sinovac and Sinopharm vaccines which use the real fill virus but is it fully deactivated plus an adjuvant is used. In contrast to lots of speculation and gripping headlines in western media the efficacy of these vaccines appear to hold up better over time than the viral vector or MRNA types. 

There are some attenuated/inactive virus vaccines being worked on.  The list is hard to find but they are out there.  Novavax uses a protein similar to the COVID protein.  That is similar to the older approaches.  From what I read, and I didn't realize this, the Sinopharm, Sinovac vaccines uses the old tried and true approach.  I read of some others but can't put my finger on them at the moment.

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14 hours ago, placeholder said:

As of September 13, out of the 664 severely ill patients, 437 were completely unvaccinated and 168 had received two doses. Only 59 had received the booster shot. The ratios are similar when analyzing new infections."

Well that's more than a little worrying. 59 people still became seriously ill even after a booster shot

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6 hours ago, gk10012001 said:

Yes, and then what?  7 months later antibodies may again be gone?

As others have said, lack of antibodies doesn't automatically imply that the effect of the vaccine has "run out" and is no longer helpful. The T-cells are still there having learned and remembered how to fight infection

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Seems to be an ever changing landscape since there is so much to learn about the safety and performance of the mRNA vaccines. Too much misinformation, changing daily. NOBODY knows unless you "know". Pfizer seems to be under performing,  dwindling to 6 month protection now. But no worries, new vaccines could be on the horizon according to pfizer. Could become like 90 day reporting soon, get your jab every 90 days. Ted Nugent nails it in his recent interview, complete with the sheep impersonation.

https://thehill.com/policy/healthcare/575279-study-shows-pfizer-covid-19-vaccine-effectiveness-declines-after-six-months

https://news.yahoo.com/biontechs-ceo-says-world-might-113847622.html

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