Is there a way to track what vaccines the young people affected by covid had? Is it possible combinations the people under 50 have had protect them more than older people?
And the ones that were did not spread easily and were rapidly contained and thus destroyed (SARS & MERS)AggieUSMC said:
It's my understanding that they're actually conducting human trials on a vaccine as we speak and if it works, could be available as early as the fall.
The only reason they don't have a similar vaccine now is not so much as difficulty in making one as there has been a lack of necessity to develop one up until now. Most coronaviruses are either not very deadly or not as infectious as SARS-COV2.
KidDoc said:
Very possible but pretty far fetched that a vaccine for a totally unrelated virus/bacteria would help with COVID. The only sorta new vaccines are:
Hepatitis B 1999 or so
Pneumococcal vaccine (PCV)
HPV
Rotavirus
Hep A
None of those are even remotely similar to coronavirus in any way.
Yeah but I think the OP was proposing that routine childhood vaccination changes from the 1960's to know could explain why children are less effected by COVID. Basically that newer vaccines are protecting vs COVID incidentally.pantherag said:KidDoc said:
Very possible but pretty far fetched that a vaccine for a totally unrelated virus/bacteria would help with COVID. The only sorta new vaccines are:
Hepatitis B 1999 or so
Pneumococcal vaccine (PCV)
HPV
Rotavirus
Hep A
None of those are even remotely similar to coronavirus in any way.
When listing new vaccines, there is an Ebola vaccine as well. Not being used in the US at this time, but in other parts of the world.
AggieUSMC said:
It's my understanding that they're actually conducting human trials on a vaccine as we speak and if it works, could be available as early as the fall.
The only reason they don't have a similar vaccine now is not so much as difficulty in making one as there has been a lack of necessity to develop one up until now. Most coronaviruses are either not very deadly or not as infectious as SARS-COV2.
KidDoc said:Yeah but I think the OP was proposing that routine childhood vaccination changes from the 1960's to know could explain why children are less effected by COVID. Basically that newer vaccines are protecting vs COVID incidentally.pantherag said:KidDoc said:
Very possible but pretty far fetched that a vaccine for a totally unrelated virus/bacteria would help with COVID. The only sorta new vaccines are:
Hepatitis B 1999 or so
Pneumococcal vaccine (PCV)
HPV
Rotavirus
Hep A
None of those are even remotely similar to coronavirus in any way.
When listing new vaccines, there is an Ebola vaccine as well. Not being used in the US at this time, but in other parts of the world.
Good point though!