https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33113270/ Originally Posted by texassapper
YR always asks for links. When they are provided he never responds to the link. You need to read and respond. Originally Posted by gnadflyOK, I read it. This ADE shit is pretty interesting. I'm planning to move to Costa Rica when the progressives take control. Maybe before they take control, so they won't be able to take everything I own before I leave. So I was researching the dengue vaccine. Dengue is a nasty ass disease and most people in Costa Rica eventually get it. Since I'm a Vaccine Lover I figured maybe I could just take vaccine for dengue and never have to worry about it. Well, it doesn't work that way. Somehow anti-body dependent effect (ADE) makes the vaccine worse than the disease for a lot of people. There's only a minority of the population for which the risk reward ratio looks favorable.
So does this apply to COVID, as suggested by Texassapper's link? Hell no:
https://www.nebraskamed.com/COVID/an...nt-in-vaccines
If you take the vaccine it greatly reduces the probability you'll end up in the hospital. Ironically, I believe Texassapper posted another link to a large group of mostly-vaccinated people in Massachusetts, who got COVID but only a few went to the hospital, and none died. This is evidence that ADE for the COVID vaccine is not something to worry about.
Seriously, thanks for the link Texassapper. I didn't understand what the hell was going on with the dengue vaccine before but now know a bit more.