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    #13
    I am doing my best but your antivaxer team keeps saying the same stupid things! LOL

    Comment


      #14
      Originally posted by TOM4CWB View Post
      Just a reminder…

      The Canadian Constitution specifically cedes the responsibility of Health Care to the Provinces.

      Hence Vaccines and vaccination are Provincial Responsibility. Like Pensions.

      Blessings and Cheers
      That is correct Tom, Too bad the antivax crew that occupied Ottawa and the Borders that cost our Economy Billions didnt know this.
      Moe, Kenny , Ford and other con Premiers Loved Trudeau taking the Blame for something that was in their control but Why Stop a good Insurrection ?
      Last edited by mustardman; Oct 26, 2023, 08:58.

      Comment


        #15
        So Justin Trudeau/ Omar Alghabra were not responsible for the all the regulations on border crossing?

        Or dropping most restrictions when they did allowing freer travel for all Canadians?

        Comment


          #16
          This new malaria vaccine will transform our battle with the deadliest creatures on Earth
          Devi Sridhar

          The breakthrough has come just in time: malaria has re-emerged in my home state of Florida, and will spread further thanks to climate change

          Thu 26 Oct 2023 15.01 BST
          Last modified on Thu 26 Oct 2023 15.58 BST

          Want to guess the most dangerous animal in the world? When my team asked children in Edinburgh during a public outreach event with schools, they said sharks, alligators, spiders and lions. All good guesses, but none on target. The deadliest animal is the mighty mosquito, which kills more than 1 million people a year. Almost 700 million people contract a mosquito-borne illness each year. Mosquitoes carry serious diseases like malaria, dengue fever, West Nile virus, Zika virus and chikungunya that not only kill, but also result in pain, disability and prolonged illness.

          Among mosquito-borne diseases, malaria is the most deadly. Scientists believe it has killed more people than any other disease spread by the insects in history. And it remains stubbornly present in the modern world: there were 619,000 deaths and 247m cases of malaria in 2021. African children are the main victims: 96% of deaths to malaria are in Africa, and children under five make up roughly 80% of the victims. Within that region, deaths are mainly concentrated in four countries: Nigeria, DRC, Tanzania and Niger.

          It might feel like a disease that is far away and a low-income world problem, but with the climate crisis and broader roaming ranges of mosquitoes, mosquito-borne diseases like malaria and dengue are re-emerging in the US and Europe. This past summer, my home state of Florida had local transmission of malaria, meaning several residents caught the disease from being bitten by a mosquito at home, rather than travelling abroad. These were the first cases of malaria in the US in 20 years.

          Part of what makes malaria so hard to eliminate is the wily mosquito itself. In regions where mosquitoes are ubiquitous, avoiding getting bitten is pretty much impossible, especially for young children. Public health workers have tried things like insecticide-treated bednets, only to find that it is difficult to make children sleep under them and that mosquitoes can develop resistance to insecticides. For decades scientists have hoped a vaccine could provide a straightforward solution, but that has also been a challenge. Malaria is not caused by a virus, but by a more complex parasitic species called plasmodium that is excellent at evading our immune system by constantly shape-shifting inside the body – all of which makes it very hard to target with a vaccine.

          Yet persistence, brilliance and creativity have come together for a team at the University of Oxford, who have finally succeeded with a new malaria vaccine called R21. A Lancet preprint paper reports that R21 is 75% effective at preventing disease in areas where malaria is seasonal, for example where it tends to emerge only during the rainy season, and 67% effective where malaria is standard, in children aged between five and 36 months.

          A world-first malaria vaccine developed by the pharmaceutical firm GSK in 2021 showed similar effectiveness data, but the R21 vaccine is half the cost, coming in at $2-4 per dose. A difference of just a few dollars may not seem like much, but in nations where malaria is prevalent, per capita health spending is very low. In Nigeria it’s $15 a year, in DRC it is $13 a year and in Tanzania it is $35 a year. Compare this with the UK, where health spending was £4,188 per person in 2021. The authors of the preprint also report that it is already possible to manufacture 100-200 million doses of R21 a year at the Serum Institute of India, with Ghana, Nigeria and Burkina Faso already approving the vaccine for use.

          In the countries hit hardest by malaria, there is very little money available for basic healthcare: cost makes the difference in what life-saving vaccines and medicines are available, or not. This is why the Oxford vaccine integration of science, cost and supply could massively reduce the lives lost to malaria.

          Malaria was endemic in the southern US until public efforts by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to eliminate the disease, which was achieved in 1951. As long as we have mosquitoes – which outnumber us humans by 16,000 to one worldwide – and we live on the same planet with temperatures rising, diseases in one part of the world can easily spread anywhere else. But regardless of malaria’s future trajectory and geographical spread, it is estimated that the new R21 vaccine will save tens of thousands of lives, especially in young children. That’s pretty amazing news for global health – and for humanity.

          Prof Devi Sridhar is chair of global public health at the University of Edinburgh

          https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2023/oct/26/malaria-mosquito-vaccine-disease

          Comment


            #17
            Originally posted by chuckChuck View Post
            This new malaria vaccine will transform our battle with the deadliest creatures on Earth
            Devi Sridhar

            The breakthrough has come just in time: malaria has re-emerged in my home state of Florida, and will spread further thanks to climate change

            Thu 26 Oct 2023 15.01 BST
            Last modified on Thu 26 Oct 2023 15.58 BST

            Want to guess the most dangerous animal in the world? When my team asked children in Edinburgh during a public outreach event with schools, they said sharks, alligators, spiders and lions. All good guesses, but none on target. The deadliest animal is the mighty mosquito, which kills more than 1 million people a year. Almost 700 million people contract a mosquito-borne illness each year. Mosquitoes carry serious diseases like malaria, dengue fever, West Nile virus, Zika virus and chikungunya that not only kill, but also result in pain, disability and prolonged illness.

            Among mosquito-borne diseases, malaria is the most deadly. Scientists believe it has killed more people than any other disease spread by the insects in history. And it remains stubbornly present in the modern world: there were 619,000 deaths and 247m cases of malaria in 2021. African children are the main victims: 96% of deaths to malaria are in Africa, and children under five make up roughly 80% of the victims. Within that region, deaths are mainly concentrated in four countries: Nigeria, DRC, Tanzania and Niger.

            It might feel like a disease that is far away and a low-income world problem, but with the climate crisis and broader roaming ranges of mosquitoes, mosquito-borne diseases like malaria and dengue are re-emerging in the US and Europe. This past summer, my home state of Florida had local transmission of malaria, meaning several residents caught the disease from being bitten by a mosquito at home, rather than travelling abroad. These were the first cases of malaria in the US in 20 years.

            Part of what makes malaria so hard to eliminate is the wily mosquito itself. In regions where mosquitoes are ubiquitous, avoiding getting bitten is pretty much impossible, especially for young children. Public health workers have tried things like insecticide-treated bednets, only to find that it is difficult to make children sleep under them and that mosquitoes can develop resistance to insecticides. For decades scientists have hoped a vaccine could provide a straightforward solution, but that has also been a challenge. Malaria is not caused by a virus, but by a more complex parasitic species called plasmodium that is excellent at evading our immune system by constantly shape-shifting inside the body – all of which makes it very hard to target with a vaccine.

            Yet persistence, brilliance and creativity have come together for a team at the University of Oxford, who have finally succeeded with a new malaria vaccine called R21. A Lancet preprint paper reports that R21 is 75% effective at preventing disease in areas where malaria is seasonal, for example where it tends to emerge only during the rainy season, and 67% effective where malaria is standard, in children aged between five and 36 months.

            A world-first malaria vaccine developed by the pharmaceutical firm GSK in 2021 showed similar effectiveness data, but the R21 vaccine is half the cost, coming in at $2-4 per dose. A difference of just a few dollars may not seem like much, but in nations where malaria is prevalent, per capita health spending is very low. In Nigeria it’s $15 a year, in DRC it is $13 a year and in Tanzania it is $35 a year. Compare this with the UK, where health spending was £4,188 per person in 2021. The authors of the preprint also report that it is already possible to manufacture 100-200 million doses of R21 a year at the Serum Institute of India, with Ghana, Nigeria and Burkina Faso already approving the vaccine for use.

            In the countries hit hardest by malaria, there is very little money available for basic healthcare: cost makes the difference in what life-saving vaccines and medicines are available, or not. This is why the Oxford vaccine integration of science, cost and supply could massively reduce the lives lost to malaria.

            Malaria was endemic in the southern US until public efforts by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to eliminate the disease, which was achieved in 1951. As long as we have mosquitoes – which outnumber us humans by 16,000 to one worldwide – and we live on the same planet with temperatures rising, diseases in one part of the world can easily spread anywhere else. But regardless of malaria’s future trajectory and geographical spread, it is estimated that the new R21 vaccine will save tens of thousands of lives, especially in young children. That’s pretty amazing news for global health – and for humanity.

            Prof Devi Sridhar is chair of global public health at the University of Edinburgh

            https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2023/oct/26/malaria-mosquito-vaccine-disease
            That is excellent news.

            I wonder how many people who would have gratefully taken a malaria vaccine a few years ago, will refuse now after the fiasco of forced Covid vaccinations. That would truly be a shame.

            Comment


              #18
              Originally posted by chuckChuck View Post
              I am doing my best but your antivaxer team keeps saying the same stupid things! LOL
              Give up already! it's bad for your mental health to be constantly resisted by intelligent reasoning people!

              Comment


                #19
                Originally posted by chuckChuck View Post
                I am doing my best but your antivaxer team keeps saying the same stupid things! LOL
                Screw you you tone deaf melon headed prick. Don’t lump me in as an antivaxxer. Just got my fifth Covid vaccine shot with the flu shot as well last week. It was my personal choice which I think is right but why do you or I think that big brother needs to force everyone else to do so? It is personal body autonomy like Roe vs Wade. I’m pro choice too. Your idol Tommy advocated for sterilizing undesirables so it goes with the territory I guess. Suppose you agree with the LSD experiments or shock therapy for mental patients was alright because it was supposed to be for the greater good as well? All carried out in Saskatchewan in the time of Tommy. You come here with facts and figures which for the most part aren’t wrong but your condescending superior attitude mutes everything. You are no better than the conspiracy theory believing third grade educated morons.

                Comment


                  #20
                  Now the liberal assholes are trying to include mental problems as a reason for MAID!

                  Comment


                    #21
                    Originally posted by caseih View Post
                    Now the liberal assholes are trying to include mental problems as a reason for MAID!
                    I hope the gratuitous use of lol by an adult isn't a marker for mental health problems.

                    Comment


                      #22
                      Most seniors I know weren't against the vaccine. But are moved more by being placed under forced house arrest if living in a facility. I don't expect CC to understand. Dignity.

                      Comment


                        #23
                        Originally posted by blackpowder View Post
                        Most seniors I know weren't against the vaccine. But are moved more by being placed under forced house arrest if living in a facility. I don't expect CC to understand. Dignity.
                        There is no human decency with Glenn. If the Nazis were here looking for Jews he’d be the first to out each and every one of them. Mensa member or not he is an evil piece of humanity.

                        Comment


                          #24
                          Originally posted by WiltonRanch View Post
                          Screw you you tone deaf melon headed prick. Don’t lump me in as an antivaxxer. Just got my fifth Covid vaccine shot with the flu shot as well last week. It was my personal choice which I think is right but why do you or I think that big brother needs to force everyone else to do so? It is personal body autonomy like Roe vs Wade. I’m pro choice too. Your idol Tommy advocated for sterilizing undesirables so it goes with the territory I guess. Suppose you agree with the LSD experiments or shock therapy for mental patients was alright because it was supposed to be for the greater good as well? All carried out in Saskatchewan in the time of Tommy. You come here with facts and figures which for the most part aren’t wrong but your condescending superior attitude mutes everything. You are no better than the conspiracy theory believing third grade educated morons.
                          Wilton your posts seem to be a bit out of control for a guy who often makes some sense and is notably more thoughtful than many of the usual suspects.

                          Sorry I never knew you were supportive of covid vaccines.

                          But explain why you don't speak up more about the benefits of covid vaccines instead of letting the lying and misinformation go on? If you had, maybe I would have noticed and not cast my net so wide.

                          I am not sure why you expect me to be held to a higher standard than say A5 who calls me a pedophile supporter? Which is far worse than being called an antivaxer.

                          A5 is just frustrated and desperate to put me down at any cost to his reputation. It's his Q'Anon thinking taking over.

                          Agrisilly is full of obnoxious comments and insults but rarely does anyone speak up.

                          I could care less because I know from where there coming from. Which is a lot of fringe extremist whose opinions you can't take out in public! LOL
                          Last edited by chuckChuck; Oct 27, 2023, 07:58.

                          Comment

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