CpnCrunch wrote: ↑Mon Feb 14, 2022 4:21 pm
Does this surprise you? Conservatives can’t stop spreading bullshit.
Yikes... did you people even read what I said?
Secondly, even the likes of WHO have said boosters aren't needed for young, healthy adults...
OK, where I quoted the 2 articles, I should have said "and here's 2 other articles, one which has the WHO saying boosters aren't needed (and then added
FOR YOUNG, HEALTHY ADULTS), like I did in the previous paragraph...
keep reading the bullshit between the lines that only aligns with your views, that seems to get you very far... but it's ok,you continue to prove my theory is correct, that people like you always think you're right...
but in case you didn't read the articles, let me quote them for you
CNBC article - Jan 18,2022
"KEY POINTS"
"WHO Chief Scientist Dr. Soumya Swaminathan said Tuesday "there's no evidence right now" that suggests healthy children and adolescents need booster shots to supplement their Covid-19 vaccinations."
"There's "no evidence right now" that suggests healthy children and adolescents need booster shots to supplement their Covid-19 vaccinations, World Health Organization Chief Scientist Dr. Soumya Swaminathan said Tuesday."
the national post article is differing of opinions from doctors whether or not a booster is needed. Lots claim it helps, which I have never disagreed with, but they are also claiming that whether you need one or not is a different story
"Russell believes everyone benefits from a third shot. “Definitely. No doubt.”
Whether everyone needs one is a different question. Here’s what we know about COVID-19 booster shots."
"But are we focusing too much on boosters? “The question is, what do we want from this vaccine,” Dr. Paul Offit, an FDA advisor and director of the Vaccine Education Center at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia said in a recent Medpage Today video.
Two doses still protect against serious illness across all ages, he said. “If that’s the goal, we’ve reached it.”
"In the U.S., the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention now recommends Pfizer boosters for everyone aged 12 and older, five months after their second dose.
But Offit told the Atlantic that boosters would not be worth the risk of myocarditis for the average healthy 17-year-old boy. He’s recommending his own 20-something son not get a third dose."