Monday, January 25, 2021

Why Vaccinations Are Important

A medic in a coronavirus ward at Hadassah Medical Center in Jerusalem (courtesy of Hadassah Medical Center) 


Full effects of Pfizer’s shots only kick in around a month after inoculation, but data from Israel shows there is a stark drop in infections even before that point 

Vaccines are quickly averting serious cases of COVID-19 among the most vulnerable members of society, an Israeli healthcare provider has indicated. 

The full effects of Pfizer’s vaccine are only slated to kick in around a month after the first shot, but data from Israel, home to the world’s fastest vaccination drive, has already shown that there is a stark drop in infections even before this point. 


WNU Editor: These results look very promising. They certainly give hope that progress against this pandemic can be made.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Long term investment in nursing homes is not good unless it is for the high end clientele.

COVID and every other virus is just out there smoldering. A little bit of oxygen (travel) and it flares back to life.

Limits are real. There is a load limit to how many or what percentage of your population can be elderly and in a a prolonged weakened state. Unless we are gods or something and no longer subject to the laws of nature.

when the re is no travel because of lockdown there is still travel by the 'lites' to French restaurant, going to WEC or illegals.

I never took the course on production planning and control about how to make or profit, maintain quality or do much of anything when you start and stop production at random and are shutdown for indeterminate amounts of time. Such a course must be taught by paragons of morality, who play 5 dimensional chess and regard Father Pflegger as their moral compass.