We have NO safety initiatives that demand widespread medical invasion of bodies on every single person. We have seat belt laws, and "must be of age" laws, and other mostly reasonable restrictions.
But there's a lot of money still to be made here.
This is one area where the right is going to need to take a consistent approach here.
They've defended the private/for-profit healthcare model on the grounds that incentivization breeds innovation. A sentiment I agree with in some ways. There's a reason why the US has more specialists and more up-to-date equipment, and some of the best cancer survival rates, and some of the best cardiac-related prognoses. The trade off with that is that our health care "lacks" in some other areas, like affordability, and having the ability to make sure everyone is covered.
...but that's delving into another topic, I digress...
People can't say on one hand "our private/for-profit model creates the best healthcare innovation in the world", and in the next breath, say "I don't trust the healthcare innovation because the company that made it has a profit incentive"
Minute deviations. What a way to spin it.
It's not spin, it's the truth.
There are slight differences between all of us as human beings, but overall, we're overwhelmingly similar with regards to our internal systems and how they work. We've all got the same organs, same digestive structure, etc...
Yes, human beings have tiny differences with each other (some people are allergic to nuts, some people are lactose intolerant, some go bald while other don't, etc...), but it's not like comparing two different species, where the differences are so great that it would warrant taking vastly different approaches to treating/mitigating the same pathogen or condition.
For instance, both Dogs and Humans can technically get heartworm from a bug bite, but it's extraordinarily rare in humans because our immune systems are different from that of a canine.
Or another example, many mammals can get rabies from exposure (like us, and certain pets), however some animals like possums typically don't due to them having a lower body temperature.
The differences from human to human aren't that vast.
Meaning, if the best way to prevent covid in one human to prevent/treat it is vaccination and antibody therapy, it's not going to be a case where the best way for another human to prevent/treat it is an anti-parasitic drug and vitamin C drip.