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CV and mad panic behaviour
(05-22-2021, 11:45 AM)PaulP date Wrote:It's pretty seedy, litigious behaviour from a doctor / scientist. The sort of behaviour that should make one feel immediately uncomfortable and suspicious
The podcast is well worth listening to, it seems there may be a prior history of this behaviour that should have been a warning, but Raoult's claims were championed by Trump and Bolsonaro.

The podcast is well worth a listen, the links below are even more valuable if you are so inclined.
"Ruck, ruck, ruck, ruck ....... Ruck, ruck, ruck, ruck"
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(05-22-2021, 11:48 AM)LP link Wrote:The podcast is well worth listening to, it seems there may be a prior history of this behaviour that should have been a warning, but Raoult's claims were championed by Trump and Bolsonaro.

The podcast is well worth a listen, the links below are even more valuable if you are so inclined.

Thanks.
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Just for clarity, 175,057 "yellow card" cases have been reported for the COVID-19 Vaccine AstraZeneca in the UK after 23.9M first doses and 9.0M second doses.  Yellow card reports are not necessarily side effects of the vaccine but may be episodes that would have occurred regardless of vaccination. If all of those yellow card cases were related to vaccination, they would represent 0.53% of vaccinations.

Yellow card cases following AstraZeneca vaccination include injection-site tenderness, injection-site pain, headache, fatigue, myalgia, malaise, pyrexia (fever), chills, arthralgia, and nausea. The majority of adverse reactions were mild to moderate in severity and usually resolved within a few days of vaccination (my experience was injection-site tenderness, old aches and pains returning and malaise for a day - I often suffer from malaise, particularly after my footy team loses.).

Given that 127,500 people have died in the UK within 28 days of a positive COVID-19 test, you can see why folk are more than happy to have any of the vaccines.

“Why don’t you knock it off with them negative waves? Why don’t you dig how beautiful it is out here? Why don’t you say something righteous and hopeful for a change?”  Oddball
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We have both had the first AstreZeneca shot with no problems at all.

The time is coming that you wont be allowed on aircraft, buses and in most shops if you can't produce
proof of having the needles.
I spent most of my money on Women and grog.
The rest I just wasted.
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An oldy but a goody!

[img width=550]https://external.fmel5-1.fna.fbcdn.net/safe_image.php?d=AQH30Iadzgr_tUHe&w=584&h=330&url=https%3A%2F%2Fpbs.twimg.com%2Fmedia%2FEys4ioDXMAgQRSQ%3Fformat%3Djpg%26name%3Dmedium&ccb=3-5&_nc_hash=AQH22HJ3cmjlomLT[/img]
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Compare Astra with Pfizer. You know like for like!
2012 HAPPENED!!!!!!!
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(05-23-2021, 07:12 AM)madbluboy date Wrote:Compare Astra with Pfizer. You know like for like!
What do you want to see, what will make you accept the performance of the vaccines relative to the risk of COVID?
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As of the 11th May 2021 here is the official advice to GPs from the Royal Australian College of GPs.
Quote:A pre-print study recently uploaded to medRxiv, has found that real-world data suggest both Pfizer and AstraZeneca vaccines are equally effective, with no real difference in the level of protection offered.

The research involved 373,402 participants, and saw 1,610,562 polymerase chain reaction (PCR) tests conducted between 1 December and 3 April.

The results revealed the odds of being infected after two doses of either vaccine were reduced by 70% compared to unvaccinated individuals without evidence of prior infection, with no evidence that the benefits varied between the AstraZeneca and Pfizer vaccines.

With the two vaccines currently in circulation in Australia, Dr Kylie Quinn, Group Head and Research Fellow at RMIT’s School of Health and Biomedical Science, told newsGP the results are good news.
373,402 people tested multiple times is a significant study, it's not rumour or innuendo based on the odd person here or there.
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https://kreately.in/covid-19-vaccines-ar...ontagnier/
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(05-23-2021, 08:08 AM)ElwoodBlues1 date Wrote:https://kreately.in/covid-19-vaccines-ar...ontagnier/
This is a known consequence of any vaccine not just COVID vaccines, but it is also the natural behaviour of a virus in the wild when it is uncontrolled.

It is often used by anti-vaxxers as a argument against vaccines, but it's actually the strongest argument for compulsory vaccination because it's the unvaccinated individuals that deliver the greatest risk to the wider community.
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