renniks
Well-Known Member
I believe what I see happening. Anyone can make a study show anything they want it to show.Well, that's a testable belief. Let's see what the research says...
CDC COVID-19 Study Shows mRNA Vaccines Reduce Risk of Infection by 91 Percent for Fully Vaccinated People
Vaccination Makes Illness Milder, Shorter for the Few Vaccinated People Who Do Get COVID-19
Coronavirus Disease 2019
An analysis of research literature published last year before the omicron variant took hold found that while COVID-19 vaccines lose some effectiveness in preventing SARS-CoV-2 infection, the vaccines retain nearly all of their ability to prevent severe disease up to six months after full vaccination. The study, which appears online February 21 in The Lancet, was led by researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and the World Health Organization.
For their study, the researchers analyzed vaccination effectiveness data published last year from June 17 to December 2 in both peer-reviewed journals and on preprint servers, which post papers ahead of peer review. The data—detailed in 24 papers—covered dozens of individual vaccine evaluations preceding the emergence of the currently dominant omicron variant.
The researchers found that the level of protection from SARS-CoV-2 infection fell by about 21 percentage points, on average, in the interval from one to six months after full vaccination—whereas the level of protection against severe COVID-19 fell by only about 10 percentage points in the same interval. The authors defined "full vaccination" as one dose of Janssen vaccine or two doses of other vaccines. Booster doses were not evaluated.
Study finds COVID-19 vaccine protection against severe disease remains strong at six months
Your belief is wrong.
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