"In general, a vaccine effectiveness of ~30-60% has been estimated for the three different influenza A (H1N1, H3N2) and B strains (Victoria or Yamagata lineages)."
Influenza vaccine effectiveness
On top end, yes, but 70% is no 95%.
"In general, a vaccine effectiveness of ~30-60% has been estimated for the three different influenza A (H1N1, H3N2) and B strains (Victoria or Yamagata lineages)."
Influenza vaccine effectiveness
On top end, yes, but 70% is no 95%.
"The vaccine, developed with the University of Oxford, showed 90% efficacy in one dosing regimen -- when the vaccine was given as a half dose, followed by a full dose at least a month later -- and 62% efficacy in a second regimen -- when two full doses were given at least a month apart. "
Oxford AstraZeneca coronavirus vaccine is 70% effective on average, data shows - CNN
So 70% is average...
Now if they can definately prove first regimen gives 90% then things are good, otherwise 62% is a bit pants in comparison to mRNA stuff...
The efficacy of this with multiple dosages, the temperature requirements and the dosage costs make this pretty spectacular/exceptional when you look into it. Millions of units at the ready too if/when it gets the green light.
Some Vaccine Makers Say They Plan to Profit From Coronavirus Vaccine - The New York Times
AstraZeneca's no-profit pledge for vaccine has expiration date: report | TheHill
Fingers like lightning
jayn200 has more data than eek
I don't know. My grandfather died from flu a couple years ago. I still wouldn't bother with flu vaccine.
The thing is you have some people posting here who are 30, some are mid 50s obese with diabetes and heart disease. Some are 70. Obviously we all will approach this differently.
My post count is Majestic
vetran has reached the peak. Play again?
"If you didn't do anything that wasn't good for you it would be a very dull life. What are you gonna do? Everything that is pleasant in life is dangerous."
I want to see the hand of history on his collar.