35 Burst results for "Tetanus"

AP News Radio
Vaccination rates drop among US school-age kids
"New data show that the vaccination rate for kindergartens is dropped again. I Norman hall, usually 94 to 95% of kindergartners are vaccinated against measles, tetanus in certain other diseases. The vaccination rights drop below 94% of the 2020 2021 school year during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic, a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention study released Thursday found rights dropped again in the 2021 2022 school year to about 93% official site disruptions to healthcare from the pandemic and likely decrease confidence in vaccines. Federal officials are starting a new campaign to try to boost vaccination rates among kids. Norman hall, Washington

The Charlie Kirk Show
Ed Dowd: A Passion to Analyze the Effects of COVID Vaccine Mandate
"Across a conversation with doctor Brett Weinstein, who I always consider to be very far left, but honest, and then doctor Malone, you probably remember the conversation was on the dark horse podcast that went viral. And I said, well, that's interesting. If they're talking about this, then there's something to this that I think people are missing. We asked our audience. We got thousands of emails of people all across the country saying the same thing of different ages, specifically young menstrual menstrual cycle, disruptions, dropping dead, all sorts of nerve issues, and so on and so forth. So I guess my question is, as someone who used to work at BlackRock, how did you get into this and why are you so passionate about it? Yeah, no problem. So, you know, look, like you, I'm curious person. That's been my whole career. My expertise and lies in the space between perception and reality. And the perception at the time I was hearing all these anecdotes was that it's safe and effective. You got to take in an oh, by the way, we're going to mandate this. And that's where that's where I became passionate about this in the summer of 2021. I saw the same podcast she did with doctor Malone and Brett on the dark horse podcast. And that's when I said, aha. Something's really awry here. And that's when I started to dig. And you know, I'm just one of those people that likes to figure out puzzles and the puzzle that I was starting to figure out was horrific. And like yourself, I was never anti vax. I mean, I literally got a tetanus booster two years before COVID. So after my journey, I'm not taking another vaccine ever again. But that's now. Like you, I was not anti anything. My eyes have been opened up and the way that the guts of the medical system and the pharmaceutical system work is flawed and its profit rent seeking behavior that I'm seeing from all these individuals, both the regulators and the farmer, the pharma executives, and some politicians that are bribed by the farm executives to pass laws in their favor.

The Health Quest Podcast
"tetanus" Discussed on The Health Quest Podcast
"And I'll get into a discussion of these terms and explain to our listeners what they mean. But this is a totally new and previously not understood mechanism that regulates the metabolism of every living cell in your body. In fact, every living cell in every living organism. And so this is a new understanding of metabolism and health and the aging process. So that's a really big important story that has developed out of the drug rapamycin. So let me actually start with a little history of rapamycin. So people will know how this topic came about. In the 19 60s, a group of Canadian scientists traveled to Easter Island to look for sources of new antibiotic drugs and new antifungal drugs. And the reason they were going to Easter Island is that traditionally wild horses roamed the island that they were actually more horses than there were inhabitants on the island. And in areas where there are a lot of forces you generally find tetanus, the tetanus back Syria. And all the Easter islanders went barefoot. So the scientists were puzzled if all of these human individuals on Easter Island are going barefoot and they're in contact with tetanus, but they're not getting tetanus. Is there something there in the soil on that island that is preventing them from getting to this? So that was why the scientific expedition got organized. They took a lot of soil samples from different areas of the island back to the labs and they discovered that there's a compound that they named rapamycin that was actually produced by a strain of soil bacteria. And so it's a natural product that is produced by a bacteria found in the soil and they named a rapamycin because the indigenous cultures name for Easter Island is rapa Nui, so they name the drug rapamycin. So that's how this all got started and rapamycin was initially found to have some very powerful antifungal capabilities.

WTOP
"tetanus" Discussed on WTOP
"I was lying in the young. The Potomac river. Of course, Twitter leaped to its feet hurling jokes about tetanus shots at the thought of lord swimming in the Potomac. I'm glad that lord was enjoying the nation's river and getting out and swimming on it. Dean now yolks is the Potomac river keeper. She probably went out on a boat and was just doing what a lot of other people do. You know, just go out there and they have floats and just people chilling in the river on a tube or whatever. He says weekly water quality monitoring shows the Potomac would be safe for swimming often except in the 48 hours after it rains. Neil law can stain double you TLP news. A helmet shortage may impact the start of high school football season. Athletic directors are working together, they're scrambling to suit up their players as supply chain issues affect sports, even replacement parts on those helmets are hard to come by. Equipment maker riddell says its orders for helmets and shoulder pads will be fulfilled by the end of next month. Looking for something fun to do as we head into the Labor Day weekend, are you Sean? I could use an extra thing or two to do over the holiday and got an idea for the 18th annual D.C. jazz festival returns tomorrow through Sunday. Jazz is such a great way to bring people together and to celebrate life. Let's all get our party on and celebrate because jazz fest is definitely become a cultural destination. CEO sunny Sumter says it kicks off tomorrow night at Howard theater. How a theater is our kick-off with Kurt Ellie, who's an amazing jazz vocalist. If you have not heard him, you absolutely should go. The weekend also brings jazz to the wharf. We've got Christian McBride and inside straight and Cohen is bringing his trio as well. Emma is probably the most popular social media jazz artist in the world. The chuck Brown band is

WTOP
"tetanus" Discussed on WTOP
"Seniors. The results from an Israeli study of more than 100,000 patients are likely to renew questions about the U.S. government's use of paxil, which has become the go to treatment for COVID-19 because of its at home convenience. Ever wonder why some people wear a mask even when driving alone in their car. Doctor Anthony Fauci wonders the same thing. Well, if I could talk to them, I would say, take your mask off. You're not protecting yourself against anything. There is a bit of a misperception about what mass do. Fauci tells WTO when he sees joggers wearing a mask, you're just them to take it off, saying it's not necessary, especially when you're outside and no one's near you. Speaking of COVID, First Lady Jill Biden has tested positive for COVID again, it's an apparent rebound case after taking the drug packs low vid during her first go around with the virus, President Biden continues to test negative the 71 year old First Lady first came down with the virus while on a vacation in South Carolina more than a week ago. After she tested negative, she rejoined the president for three days at their vacation home in Rehoboth beach. President Biden also suffered a rebound case of COVID earlier this month after an initial recovery from the virus, a White House spokeswoman says the First Lady has experienced no reemergence of symptoms and will stay in isolation in Delaware. Research has shown the COVID-19 pandemic has caused a significant decline in routine immunization, including those for adults. At Phyllis taubman's annual physical. She's due for a dose of the pneumonia vaccine. Vital for your overall health. The vaccine is recommended for adults age 65 and up. It protects against several types of pneumococcal bacteria. Other immunizations for adults include tdap to protect against tetanus diphtheria and pertussis, HPV hepatitis a and B and herpes zoster to help prevent shingles Phyllis received her shingles vaccine last year. Because I know very painful. And she gets a flu shot every year. That CBS News reporter astrid Martinez, August is national immunization

AP News Radio
25 million kids missed routine vaccinations because of COVID
"The United Nations says a global side effect of the coronavirus pandemic has been children missing out on routine vaccinations I'm Ben Thomas with the latest A report from the World Health Organization and UNICEF says 25 million children last year failed to get vaccinated against diphtheria tetanus and pertussis Those three diseases are seen as markers for childhood immunization coverage It continues a downward trend that began in 2019 before the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic UNICEF calls the numbers a red alert for child health warning the lack of vaccinations and the current rise in global malnutrition will result in many lives lost Vaccine coverage fell in every region of the world but the worst effects were seen in East Asia and the Pacific Data shows the vast majority of children who failed to get immunized were living in developing countries namely Ethiopia India Indonesia Nigeria and the Philippines I'm Ben Thomas

Trivia With Budds
"tetanus" Discussed on Trivia With Budds
"Those are all your questions for what came first. I hope you had fun trying to figure those out. We'll be back with those answers after this. We're back with the answers to what came first trivia was it the chicken or the egg? And other things. Number one founded first was that Amazon AOL or YouTube, it was AOL, America online back in the want to say late 80s, early 90s. Definitely the 90s is when it came out, but maybe it was established before then. But definitely before Amazon and YouTube. Number two, born first was it Bieber, Selena Gomez, or Logan Paul, it's Selena Gomez. She is born first, which makes her the oldest of those three. Number three, games released in the U.S., game systems was a PlayStation 2, Sega Dreamcast or Nintendo GameCube, the first one of those three was Sega Dreamcast, late 90s, number four, toys released into U.S. slinky, Lincoln log, silly putty. The answer is Lincoln logs. Think it was the 1910s son of Frank Lloyd Wright went to Asia, saw some buildings put together like Lincoln logs, said that should be a toy, look it up. Number 5, movies released in the U.S.. They all start with G, gremlins goonies, Groundhog Day, which one came out first, gremlins. Gremlins. Number 6, celebrity deaths, we had David Bowie, Joan Rivers, George Michael, of those three who all died within 5 ten years of each other. It was Joan Rivers, who passed away first. Number 7, Lincoln park songs released, paper cut crawling, one step closer, the one that came out first was one step closer. That was their first big single on hybrid theory back in 2002, I want to say, maybe three. Number 8, Harry Potter books released in the U.S., Half-Blood Prince, prisoner of Azkaban chamber of secrets. The answer was chamber of secrets. Number 9 U.S. states by admission to the union, New York was the winner here in New York was first before Ohio and Wisconsin. Number ten vaccines, polio tetanus typhoid fever, the first one was typhoid fever. Typhoid fever. And the bonus were two points which crayola color came out first, was it English vermilion? Robin's egg blue or purple mountain's majesty, why it was English vermilion, a shade of red. And there you go. Now you know some stuff about what came first. Thanks for listening today. We've got the fact of the day, which is people develop first impressions of you in a tenth of a second. Sometimes I see somebody at a bar and I go that person's a creep. You know? You're out somewhere. It looks like a real creep. And I think that's what they mean. Tenth of a second. You're like, that person has a cat. That person's a creep. That person is an alcoholic. Et cetera, et cetera. These are all examples of things at bars, but you get how it works. Thanks for listening, guys. Thanks for telling a friend. We'll see you next time for more trivia with me, Ryan. Cheers..

Dennis Prager Podcasts
The COVID Vaccine Causes Division, Not Immunity
"A guy wrote a comment, I know I read comments on articles that I read. It's an insight into people's thinking. So a man wrote ah yes, just another article attaching division and hatred to the vaccine. Well done tribune, pat yourself on the back. That is that true. Nobody spreads hate like the left. Among all the vaccines I have known in my life the theory of tetanus measles chickenpox hepatitis meningitis tuberculosis fluid pneumonia. I've never seen a vaccine that forced people to wear a mask and maintain their social distance even after being fully vaccinated. Good what? I'm not done. Among all the vaccines, okay, I have never witnessed the vaccine that spreads the virus, even after vaccination. Even after three shots, I've never seen widespread rewards and incentives to get vaccinated. I never saw a demonization and discrimination against those who didn't want a vaccine. I've never seen a vaccine that threatens relationships between family, colleagues and friends. I've never seen a vaccine used to threaten livelihoods or school. I've never seen a vaccine that would allow a child to override parental consent. The current vaccine does all these things. Except immunization.

The Eric Metaxas Show
"tetanus" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show
"What is it that you're saying that you know to be true that some people don't like to hear? I mean, let's start with the vaccine. I have read enough to make me think that for most people, the idea of getting the vaccine is a bad idea and that it was developed under emergency circumstances kind of like, okay, we've got the Black Death coming. We're going to lose a third of our population. Let's do anything we can to get something to help people. Where we are today, to me seems dramatically different. I've heard a lot of anecdotal information about deaths and debilitating results probably or at least potentially from the vaccine. So wisdom would seem to say, don't take it, but there's this big push for everyone to take it. What's your response? I published an op-ed in the hill last year in August of 2020 before the vaccines ever came out and I agree with the Eric. I said the vaccines were a bad idea because they were genetic transfer technology programs. Actually installed the gene into the body that makes the dangerous spike protein that actually we caused the body to make a dangerous foreign protein that damages the brain, the heart causes blood clotting. It's a very dangerous idea. It's an uncontrolled production of spike protein for an uncontrolled duration of time. It's very different than a tetanus shot. A tetanus shot is a set amount of tetanus toxoid, and that's it. And so the tetanus shot or the hepatitis B shot is a known defined entity. The COVID-19 vaccines are completely uncontrolled. And there must be some people who take up a lot of genetic material or strategically in critical organs and the spike protein causes damage and death and our FDA agrees. The FDA has official warnings for Pfizer Moderna, causing heart damage. Johnson & Johnson, causing blood clots, causing paralysis, and with any product, there's risks and benefits. So the vaccines always must be presented with risks and

The Eric Metaxas Show
The Cold, Hard Truth About COVID Vaccines With Dr. Peter McCullough
"What is it that you're saying that you know to be true that some people don't like to hear? I mean, let's start with the vaccine. I have read enough to make me think that for most people, the idea of getting the vaccine is a bad idea and that it was developed under emergency circumstances kind of like, okay, we've got the Black Death coming. We're going to lose a third of our population. Let's do anything we can to get something to help people. Where we are today, to me seems dramatically different. I've heard a lot of anecdotal information about deaths and debilitating results probably or at least potentially from the vaccine. So wisdom would seem to say, don't take it, but there's this big push for everyone to take it. What's your response? I published an op-ed in the hill last year in August of 2020 before the vaccines ever came out and I agree with the Eric. I said the vaccines were a bad idea because they were genetic transfer technology programs. Actually installed the gene into the body that makes the dangerous spike protein that actually we caused the body to make a dangerous foreign protein that damages the brain, the heart causes blood clotting. It's a very dangerous idea. It's an uncontrolled production of spike protein for an uncontrolled duration of time. It's very different than a tetanus shot. A tetanus shot is a set amount of tetanus toxoid, and that's it. And so the tetanus shot or the hepatitis B shot is a known defined entity. The COVID-19 vaccines are completely uncontrolled. And there must be some people who take up a lot of genetic material or strategically in critical organs and the spike protein causes damage and death and our FDA agrees. The FDA has official warnings for Pfizer Moderna, causing heart damage. Johnson & Johnson, causing blood clots, causing paralysis, and with any product, there's risks and benefits. So the vaccines always must be presented with risks and

Artificial Intelligence (AI Podcast) with Lex Fridman
"tetanus" Discussed on Artificial Intelligence (AI Podcast) with Lex Fridman
"And this was known in October of 2020 when we wrote it. So the UN was founding alarms that there would be tens of millions of people who would starve as a consequence of the economic dislocation caused by the lockdowns. And that's come to pass. Hundreds of thousands of children in places like South Asia dead from starvation. As a consequence of lockdowns. Priorities like the treatment of patients with tuberculosis in poor countries stopped because of lockdowns. Childhood vaccinations of measles most rubella DPT diphtheria so on pertussis tetanus, all those standard vaccination campaigns. Stopped. Tens of millions of children skipping these doses for diseases that are actually deadly for them. Is there just on a small tangent? Is it well understood to you? What are the mechanisms that stop all those things? Because the lockdowns is that some aspect of supply chain is just literally because hospital doors are closed. Is it because there's a disincentive to go outside by people even when they deeply need help? All of the above. But a lot of those efforts especially those like vaccination efforts are funded and run by western efforts like gavi is a, I think if the Gates funded thing actually that provides vaccines for millions of kids worldwide. And those efforts were scaled back. Malaria prevention efforts. So in the developing world, it was a devastating effect, these lockdowns. There's also direct effects, like in India, the lockdowns, when they first instituted there was an order that 10 million migrant workers who live in big cities and they live hand to mouth. They buy coconuts, they sell the coconuts with the money they buy food from themselves and coconuts for the next day to sell. Walk back to their villages or get back to their villages overnight. So 10 million people walking back to their villages or taking a train back, a thousand died en route. Overcrowded trains, dying, essentially on the side of the road. It was absolutely inhumane policy. And the lockdowns there, it's actually it's kind of like what's happened to the west as well, but it was so severe. There was a sero prevalence study done in Mumbai by a friend of mine at the University of Chicago. What he found was that in the slums of Mumbai, there were 70% seroprevalence in July or August of 2020, whereas in the rest of Mumbai's 20%. So it was incredibly unequal. The lockdowns protected the relatively well off and spread the disease among the poor. So that's in the developing world. In the developed world, the health effects of lockdowns were also quite bad. So we talked already about isolation and depression. There was a study done in July of 2020 that found that one in four young adults.

Science Vs
"tetanus" Discussed on Science Vs
"And better and better at their job. So you could see that in the lymph nodes, you could see those changes. We can actually see as these cells improve. But I can see the twinkle in your eye. Oh, absolutely. We never had a chance before to actually see it in action in humans. And the real cream of the crop here, they go hide out in the bone marrow. In Elise study, he looked for them there. And in most of the people, his team found them. Now, technically, the cells in your bone marrow are the B cells babys. But for simplicity here, we're just going to keep calling them the B cells. Ali gave us approval. So back to his study. And that's for me was amazing part. The whole thing is fascinating, but that was me. The cells that we sent to our bone marrow are the best of the best. So those are the highest trained, those our elite troops. In my bone marrow right now, my best trained basil. And those best trained B cells are sitting next to your best chain B cells against influenza against tetanus against measles against they are all sitting now and they have new company with those COVID ones. It's amazing, right? Yeah. So that's all well and good. But like we said, all this training was happening for the original strain of the coronavirus. Which takes us back to our question. Why get a booster? Why keep training our immune cells on an enemy that isn't around anymore? Well, late last week, Ali got his booster shot. Once he started hearing about her Macron, were you like, oh, crap. Why did I bother? Oh, no, I thought right away that was the right thing to do. He told us that boosters in general make sense because they give your B cells another round of competition. So you end up with more B cells who are better fighters..

Dennis Prager Podcasts
"tetanus" Discussed on Dennis Prager Podcasts
"Out and tried to become inoculated or inoculated. I wanted natural immunity. I got natural immunity. I have the best immunity you can get. It's far superior. How do I know it? Because there are 15 tests from the Cleveland clinic to Israel that say the CBC is lying to you. If you believe the CBC, but not 15 tests. Fine. Okay, that's fair. Can I bring you up to date on something else? Can you bring up the data on something? Is that what you ask? Can I bring you up to date on something? Sure. You mentioned why we get boosters before. We get boost this for tetanus. We get boosters for flu. You get boosters you don't get posters for flu. You've got a different flu shot every year for a different flu. And the tetanus is I believe every I don't know. You only get it if you cut yourself on, let's say a rusty nail, and then you haven't had it at I don't know how many three years, whatever it is, that would be a fine deal for me with this. They're giving you a booster the same year you got the original one. I never told you in advance you'll need a booster. So you get two shots, then a booster. Bill be a fourth booster a second booster a fourth shot. But I do want to make it clear nobody ever said that hydroxychloroquine prevents and zinc they go together or and or Ivermectin prevents you from getting it. What it does is minimize the symptoms. My belief and I stake a lot on this. I know I'm going out on a limb, given how much I differ with The New York Times, and CNN, and the rest of the liars that dominate the conversation on this issue. I believe, at least a 100,000 Americans have been killed. By the media, and by the American medical establishment. By denying them Therapeutics. Okay. And there are epidemiologists that I learned this from. Like, what is it Harvey rich? Where is he? Yeah. At Yale. He said on my show, hundreds of thousands of Americans lives were killed by the medical establishment. And he's. A medical.

Mornings With Gail - 1310 KFKA
"tetanus" Discussed on Mornings With Gail - 1310 KFKA
"Combined with the antibodies. Rates of decay produce durable immune responses needles antibodies to click decay. Very very slowly. Tetanus antibodies to decay a bit more quickly but the vaccine causes the body to produce far more than it needs and this obviously upsets the decline. Dr slipped ca said we're fortunate with tetanus diptheria measles and others that we have identified what the threshold of protection is you can track antibody decline over time and if you know the threshold of protection. You can calculate durability of protection but as we're well aware with kobe he said we just don't know historically the most effective vaccines have used replicating viruses which essentially elicit lifelong immunity measles chicken pox. Vaccines use replicating viruses non replicating vaccines and protein-based vaccines such as the one for tetanus don't last as long but their effectiveness can be enhanced with the addition as of something called an adjutant. This is a substance that enhances the magnitude of the response..

WCBM 680 AM
"tetanus" Discussed on WCBM 680 AM
"I messed that one up and he's at Mark Levin Show at Mark Levin. Show on Get her. I'm at rich welders and all the social media. So feel free to give us a follow and the phone number is 877381 38 11. I'm checking in with you guys periodically. Now we want to talk about This covid crisis of some of it is in Response or the result of what's happening at the border. And we want to look at the some of the hypocrisy, right? That's out there because the you know at least the Republicans that are out there saying, Look, I don't want to wear a mask. Many of them, you know, I don't want to do so You can't say they're being duplicitous. Because they kind of told you up front the truth. But There's a lot of hypocrisy out there, including the Seth Rogan stuff. If you haven't heard it, we're going to get to that a little bit. The AOC stuff will get to a little bit later. But right now I want to go to Joe L. Barbosa Biden right before he left for his, um, swinging soiree in Delaware, his little vacation that he's on. Until tomorrow when he comes to Manhattan, and by the way, Manhattan's already a zoo traffic is crazy in the city with the U. N General Assembly got all the globalists in town ready for their annual meeting. And Joe L. Barbosa. Biden will be joining them. He had some words for us some words of wisdom. Um, trashing some GOP governors. I want you to listen to this. We're facing a lot of pushback. Especially from some of the Republican governors. The governors of Florida, Texas and joined everything they can to undermine the lifesaving requirements that I proposed. And some of the same governors attacking me or in states with the strictest vaccine mandates for Children attending school in the entire country. Now hang on a second before we go on. This is very, very classic. Biden. These are the same people attacking me. This is that not relax The problem here. Is that every time somebody disagrees with what Joe and Bob also, Biden says, it's somehow an attack on him. This is not an attack on you. This is people saying, Look, I do not want you to tell me what I have to forcefully put in my body number one. I do not want you to tell me that I have to put a mask over my child's face. This is a big deal to a lot of people because For some younger kids up to third grade. They can't seem lips moving and mouths moving. They don't learn how to make sounds correctly. And I just learned that recently, I had no idea that that was a thing part of the developmental phase of a young student. So I think Joe Biden's mischaracterizing the pushback that he's getting, but let's continue. Children are required to be vaccinated against measles months. Bella chickenpox, hepatitis B, polio, tetanus and more. These are state requirements. But in the midst of the pandemic, it is already taken over 660,000 lives. I proposed requirement for Covid vaccines. And the governor of that state calls it quote, tyrannical type move. Tyrannical type move. This is the worst kind of politics. Because it's putting the lives of citizens of their states, especially Children at risk. And I refused to give in to it. You know, I'm not going to sit here and break out a chart like I'm on the Fox News channel. And I'm one of those chart. Guys. I wish I had one of those my disposal right now, though, I will say the numbers just don't add up. Write. The numbers aren't there? Little kids are not leading the pack and mortality. Everybody knows it. Joe Biden is full of it. So many of these Democrats are full of it. This is the problem and again preaching to the choir. I know you guys know this stuff. But every day this show is a massive show, and it grows being the second largest conservative talk radio show in America. The Mark Levin Show it Is no surprise that there's always a new listener. So we have to clarify things and let people know and break things down sentence by sentence, sometimes To prove and show an illustrator. Why everything he's saying is so fake and phony and fraudulent, like Bob Grant used to say. Now another duplicitous. Dare I say fraudulent and, uh, hypocritical. Politician is the mayor of San Francisco. Now San Francisco. Obviously, a lot of people coming out of San Francisco fake money for us, but London Breed. That's the name. I know Whatever they said, there's somebody named London Breed. That's weird. It sounds almost like London broil. Hi, I'm London Broil. I'm a steak. Hi, I'm London Breed. I'm a mayor. Anyway. It's Okay to not wear my mask because Tony. Tony. Tony? Yep. The musical group was performing. So she said, Hey, why not? What the heck? Check this out, And I think it's sad that.

Oil and Gas Startups Podcast
"tetanus" Discussed on Oil and Gas Startups Podcast
"I mean you're you're it's it's not a hundred percent. You still have a chance of catching it again. But at the end of the day it the head start your immune system has since to help is very effective. It's very helpful. Yes definitely get. Get the facts. So so have you seen so okay Here's kind of what i've been reading. Is that and i don't know if this is information coming from politicians or whether these are studies but it appears to be that the of the vaccines start waning kind of six to nine months or at least. That's what's been said. Have we seen any real data to that or is that politics There is some day. Did that the vaccine. They've definitely show decrease in antibodies at six months. Okay that's not unusual. Because antibodies always go away. Right but the t cells and b cells. Which are your memory of your immune system. Persist come right. We know now that from natural immunity that the t-cells and beasts house persist at least two years right at at roy full strength. 'cause that your whole point there is if that didn't happen we just see tons of people catching it against cleveland. Everybody did it and then did it again right. so the t. cells in the beasts hill state route. But she don't get. I cry now. I'm about a year out from of went ahead to kofi did and i don't have probably don't have circulating antibodies but i got t cells b cells right okay so The thing is they don't know how. Long the t cells and b cells that have formed with the vaccine and this is the concern. They're measuring them and they do last. They do seem to be not as long lasting as that of your natural immune system but this is still if he were still that we still haven't gone long enough after the the after the facts nations to to be sure that gotcha 'cause that's i mean some vaccines appear to to work forever. Measles works forever but some i mean it area pertussis. Tetanus you had to get boosters every every ten years all right yeah right. So t cells and b cells. Do forget the rest. But i do forget. But truthfully with tetanus tetanus who's probably the most universal vaccine that has worked in the second world war all the soldiers that were in the south pacific in oh with rusting material food to get tetanus in the war. Everybody getting shot all sorts of stuff. Only one person got tetanus the armed services and they proved checking his record that he was a conscientious objector. Vaccines and he didn't take the vaccine. So it's the technical work works just every ten years. You get your booster interesting so okay so i'm gonna i'm gonna now. What should we do about people. They're talking about the Having to get booster shots l. for the facts. And this is uncharted territory. As far as i'm concerned because we don't know whether you need to charts not there's big argument people at the fda. I play. I think our cdc one of the other resigned the to head people because biden came out saying that we're going to set up a program to give booster shots to people after eight months and they hadn't approved it. Yeah that was the fda fda to officials there and they They signed because they said you know. Hey that's r..

Mayo Clinic Q&A
"tetanus" Discussed on Mayo Clinic Q&A
"I'm gonna jump into listener questions. Because i think i have one that might fit right here. This listeners. wondering about a comment she made about being over immunized blue. And so you know. I was speaking about things that have more than a theoretical basis with other vaccines and speculating. These are the kinds of things that we worry about before we make public policy of adding additional doses so was solid organ transplants. For example over a week ago the recommendation was made to give a third dose. Many of them have complied with that. Had no problem at all in other vaccines for example pneumococcal vaccine or tetanus diptheria vaccine it is possible to quote over vaccinate. Another words raise antibody levels so high that you develop what's called serum sickness. You have so much antibody that you start. Depositing that anna body in the skin and the kidneys and other places. People developed symptoms in a sort of hyper reactions to it so you have to be careful about just how much vaccine you're giving against a specific disease and not over immunizing that so far no data that that suggests that's happening with the third dose. The other thing that we mentioned last week was the possibility of What's called immune training the idea that when you give a vac senior training your immune system that this is. What sars kobe to looks like. It looks like this spike protein network. Giving you the question becomes. And sometimes it's more an academic than a real question as as that spike protein mutates more and more and more and more and looks different from the original one. What would be the value to protect against the variant over here. Giving vaccine that comes from the ancestral strain from the wuhan strain over here. And that's hard the academic debate over the Benefit or lack of benefit of giving a third dose routinely. The pete interesting another listener. I there's a lot for me to digest their greg. Another listener says they received the johnson. Johnson vaccine in are feeling a bit unprotected. And should they be able to have an mr a vaccine especially now at pfizer is going to be approved your so you know the reason you might. You might wonder why all this talk about. A third dose of them are a rather than a second of the j. j. in the reason for it is pfizer was out i I think the first pfizer doses were given the fourteenth of december. About a week later madonna and some time later j. j. so each of them has delayed that same interval in trying to collect data as to antibody level x number of months after people were immunized with it almost. Certainly this is my speculation. Almost certainly people got j. J. if we're gonna give booster doses will also get a booster dose and in fact. The fda is preparing for that possibility but waiting for johnson and johnson to give them those data of antibody after five months..

Jungle Brothers Strength & Movement
"tetanus" Discussed on Jungle Brothers Strength & Movement
"Away and inside. This is gonna standing that means if you attacked sub-unit you take away the year interest than the means it's essentially not able to infect in the light would and that is how vaccine Works suffered your next question was about conventional vaccines. This is the type of magazines. We currently have conventionally. inactivated You would inject a small amount of the virus to the actual protein itself and then they would form antibodies to that. And that's what most people understand as a vaccine. That's like give you a little bit of the thing and then because you gotta body figures out how to deal with it and then when you get if you ever get the big thing it's like you know how to sort it out okay. So the example of that would be measles-mumps-rubella There isn't inactivated vaccine. That would be for example. The polio vaccine. Wt vaccines which there's some to shine synergy when you group them together. Which is why you have the dp teeth diphtheria tetanus axing as a single vaccine given so mri vaccines differently because we just had pressured to be able to get a vaccine quickly and it was found that if you can Find an antibody to the most effective portion. You could most efficiently produce the vaccine on mess. The other thing is that when you will making a vaccine in the first place if you join us a protein than giving examples just say you had some sort of printing gets jacked in order to be able to get that out to the country you need to think of the production packaging sterility a transport unloading getting out the making sure those integrity s- another words will be issues at every step of production just like the factories could make it with fidelity you could just send them the recipe. Then it's much faster. The disseminator recipe these actually get the product up. And i think that's essentially what it is so It's like snapchat message. Lost a temporary period of time than rapidly. Denied it into what we're doing with an vaccine is to take fragment of the recipe to stick it in basically a fatty on belabor limited on bullet. That's what it's injected it. Rapidly makes its way into a human cell and then uses the machinery of the cell to pretty surprising which gets expressed on the surface. The moment that happens the body ox up ryan funded cup. You get the message out the reason. Why you have memory sills. Is that if you ever encounter the same antigen again The responses sustained and it is much more amplified and said that is the reason for a second dose that is the reason why we have to A raging and biz the reason why nudity not only pekinese law and the direction is lower. Which is why you need that second response. Which is why. They're people serious locked to the fist ice. That is an myron a vaccine. So broadly speaking you have denied the is committed to arnold. it's committed approaching the way in which the astrazeneca vaccine woods is. It takes an inactivated cot like shell the car which is a Completely inactivated convict us in in houses dina into that injuries into the cell in the same fashion. The dna gets converted to ira night to wear father. Moderna works where are negative pledging. The arna uses the machinery. The dna a dozen denied is actually know. Why can't in spiracy erie side as the woods. There's no actual way the design and bracelets that's a that's a big one. I think i'm out of that. Myself of refu- bees with the molly the last year. I heard that it foxworthy dna. And i think that that you know it's a very powerful thing to hear that it's like yet ultras your dna. It's like holy shit. That's i don't even know what that means but it sounds like i'm not meant to mess with that and that's kind of like the center. The center of my bang and this this outside thing is going to start to like taking with it. Yeah take lot of efforts to make something that will interfere with your dna do it. It takes less effort to do being. It's intended to do so. The m aren a is that as effective this doing it this type of way then generally using an actual part of the disease. Yes we we all run. I mean be. the end. product is fitness than this isn't effective modalities If you're talking about comparative of the vaccine then it's hard to say because measles-mumps-rubella which is inactivated live vaccine is more effective than kind of nineteen. Because it's a completely different bars. It's trying to treat those of bars that he static in its mutation and we noted that vaccinating full that you can eliminate the bars and we don't have enough coveted eighteen vaccines made in that wage inactivated printing to be able to compare it to an empire that same. that's the direct instituto question. But i think the prostate you'll messages because new technology. How do we know it's better than most tried and true that be So to answer that question. I would say that is. It's not new. It's just a new eastwards. Mri vaccines Would in hostels zeta virus. Full rameez or influenza. It was stolen development because it wasn't any necessity. The tommy found a way to contain the viruses or failure affected rabies in influencing each changing. So it was in development because it wasn't an urgent need for it however what we needed was something that could be up scaled and mating production on mass anyone Whereas in order to produce proteins. You need a thug production process and you need a at least fda approval each stage of the brady production Apprentice example would be like the needs to get approval at the point of liking the bridging Packaging the bridging boss. Really doing that transporting across ribs if you just need sterility. Production of the recipe in a consistent fashion. That's far easy to achieve an eye saif way. So that is the reason why this was chosen. And the end of 'this all the oxford astrazeneca vaccine easels and each acknowledge. The idea that.

The Swearwolves
"tetanus" Discussed on The Swearwolves
"Bridge. And that's where there's an ambulance and joss. Who is the mom. And joseph and charlie Josephs girlfriend are In the ambulance neighbors skipped the hospital. Unlike shit's going south. Yeah sh it's all gone south. At first i thought. I missed something i was like. How did they get an ambulance. And i was like. Oh because there wasn't really a scene that did it. there wasn't there was just like she had just gone. They were at the hospital and escaped a different version of the film. Because in the one that i watched because this seems weird. They've missing something when she's going to get joseph tetanus shot she still doesn't realize what's going on in late charleen and joseph or having their conversation. She's getting the tetanus shot in the where all these shots and the woman that's working there. She's like well. We're all out of them because apparently all these bites are coming in and the next thing you know as you hear. Commotion and people are screaming and a doctor comes running through these lay. John go in there and then like we see like all of zombies fucking shit up in the hospital and then that's kind of like they take off of these stories intersecting. Don't remember that don't remember. That's that makes way more sense. I wonder if they cut it out. I don't know or just wasn't paying attention but wasn't paying attention either. But neither one of us. I didn't see that and like in these notes. I was confused first. So maybe we just assumed kaz trailer calls in the sheriff calls into the the lady who and she saw There's an ambulance. That'll be waiting for you at the bridge or some something like that. Yeah and so. He goes to the bridge. And that's where inside inside the ambulance of somebody turns into as ambi- and is like attacking them and joseph is stuck in there and they get him out again to think can't get a break and when the sugar takes a giant chainsaw those pretty awesome chainsaws that zombie..

The Last American Vagabond
"tetanus" Discussed on The Last American Vagabond
"The second shot all the side effects are amplified on the second shot so people are greatly concerned that what about a booster is going to be even greater risk in terms of side effects. As the body amplifies the production of this dangerous spike protein we know that administering an investigational product in a pregnant woman That has never been tested before. It's not thought to be a proven to be safe to begin with we know that violates a golden regulatory approach a golden clinical approach to the pregnant woman. The pregnant woman is held up as our most vulnerable patient. Because there's a fetus. Who can't make any decisions for him or herself. And so the only things that are allowed in pregnant women are safe. Medications and proven safe vaccines. And it's only the inactive flu vaccine. A tetanus diphtheria protests all inactivated a in clinical practice if a if a new injection came available in clinical practice and. they asked me dr mcculloch. Do you want to inject your next pregnant woman with this injection where. There's no evidence that it will help and there's no evidence that it's safe say. There's no way i would do that. That would violate mine. Fiduciary relationship to the patient but doctors are not administered covid nineteen vaccine in the current program. There's actually administered in beck's in centers their stock doctor's orders are not required for this Patients can just go up and volunteer for this so pregnant women need to understand that. This isn't a doctor's decision that's occurring in many leading. Doctors feel very strongly that pregnant women should not receive the covid nineteen vaccine. There's no proven benefit and there's a great concern that the vaccine could cause harm to the to the baby or the mother now. The other side of that argument is that the vaccine in a pregnant woman could be a good thing because antibodies could be passed down to the fetus while it is true that antibiotics could pass to the fetus. could also pass through the breast milk but also If antibodies capacity than the dangerous spike pro team can passes..

AP News Radio
Connecticut Is 6th State to End Religious Vaccine Exemption
"Hi Mike Rossi a reporting Connecticut is ending the religious vaccine exemptions Connecticut has become the sixth state to end of the religious exemption from childhood immunization requirements for day care facilities schools and colleges governor Ned Lamont signed legislation Wednesday that requires vaccinations against highly contagious diseases like measles per tosses tetanus and meningitis any students in kindergarten and older with an existing religious exemptions will be grandfathered to groups opposing the bill say they plan to file state and federal lawsuit seeking to overturn the new law which will take effect with the twenty twenty to twenty three school year hi Mike Crossey up

Short Wave
A Look Inside The World's Biggest Vaccine Maker
"So rosa palm trees here green lawns. A little bit like a college campus riding in a golf cart up to the factory. Your some of these are the migos month. Rubella reviews vaccine serum institute of india was already the world's biggest vaccine manufacturer even before this pandemic the company says two thirds of all children in the world. Get its vaccines and most of them are made here. At a sprawling factory complex in western india inside conveyor belts with all these tiny little vial weasing going for automatic resilience section automatic. Visual inspection is inspecting me europe machine. It's a high tech operation but look outside the factory window and you see a reminder of this companies more humble roots horses in the nineteen sixties. This was a farm breeding race horses and one day. One of the horses got bitten by a snake. Suresh giada serums executive director. Explains what happened next. Bimbos do the lanes. Were not working great in india so he could not get their disney. We could not get anti snake venom serum in time the horse died but it's owner had an idea you said yesterday why not start making it ourselves. So the serum institute of india was born. It began making serums against tetanus and snake venom and leader added vaccines against all sorts of childhood diseases. They specialize in generic versions at low profit margins and export to one hundred and seventy different countries last spring. A tiny package arrived here by career from oxford university in england to the very small. While is one in chief scientist. Shali graham describes what was inside components of a viral vector vaccine against the corona virus serum scrambled to start mass producing them immediately in huge floor to ceiling stainless steel vats of the one. Embryonic human embryonic kidney selling yeah scientists petty ready recalls how he was developing other vaccines these fats when his supervisor told him to quickly convert everything over to the corona virus vaccine while under lockdown as the pandemic exploded it was difficult to follow very strict rules of solution during this People to do overtime. This was before. Clinical trials showed that the oxford astrazeneca vaccine would work. It was a gamble with so much at stake. He says everybody's waiting for the all mankind waiting. The whole world is waiting for it to this winter. When trials finally proved this vaccine did indeed work is celebrated internally. Not like party or something but we had that moment of joy gonna champagne. No no serum hopes to soon be churning out a hundred million doses per month of this one vaccine on top of all the other vaccines they're still producing here. The oxford astra zeneca. Formula is particularly attractive to india and other low and middle income countries. Because it needs just regular refrigeration not subzero temperatures. This is for storage area. The capacity of seventy million dollars. So what we're looking at here is enough to vaccinate. Whole countries is ongoing process of building out of cold storage along these conveyor belts and out to sixty eight country so far racing against russia china. In what some are calling vaccine. Diplomacy india's huge capacity is attracted interest from the so called quad. The us japan. Australia and india. They announced financing to help another indian producer make a billion more doses of another co vaccine but while indian manufacturers are partnering with global pharmaceutical companies. The indian government is challenging pam at the world trade organization. There is an agreement that binds all wto members to certain levels of protection for intellectual property. Twenty year patents. Regional thrashers legal scholar at the global development policy center in boston. She explains how india and south africa are asking the wto to suspend those patents. Cova vaccines so that companies like serum can crank out generic versions quickly and in certain countries the majority of the population won't be vaccinated for something like five years that gives those viruses a long time to mutate. So the argument they're making is not. Hey look out for us but more this is in the interest of all of us. Everyone serums executive director. John says he supports that effort at the wto watery required is a vaccine today. Not tomorrow you want to stop the disease and stop it sprayed and that can happen. Only if there is no restriction on using technology many global health experts agree. The pope has said he does too but some companies including astrazeneca have pledged to sell vaccines at cost without profit and suspending. their patents. They say is not the answer it would kill innovation and would not speed up distribution bottlenecks more to do with supply chains than access to the vaccine technology itself. Both sides of this debate are over emphasizing. The role of patents. Daniel hamill is a law professor at the university of chicago. He says the serum institute success chose a middle path. It got a license from astrazeneca. It's been able to mass produce vaccines within the current regulatory environment ensures the potential licensing arrangements without cancelling patents ceremonies if you're disabled to gain rights to make vaccines on a large scale. That's a good thing could serums factory. As vials of corona virus knock scenes wiz off conveyor belts inside chief scientist ms. Shali graham points to construction underway outside a new pandemic preparedness facility for another year or two renew community that has not actually ideas to have extra machines extra labs all on hand to make billions of doses of vaccine against whatever virus hits

Short Wave
The World's Largest Vaccine Maker Took A Multimillion Dollar Pandemic Gamble
"So rosa palm trees here green lawns. A little bit like a college campus riding in a golf cart up to the factory. Your some of these are the migos month. Rubella reviews vaccine serum institute of india was already the world's biggest vaccine manufacturer even before this pandemic the company says two thirds of all children in the world. Get its vaccines and most of them are made here. At a sprawling factory complex in western india inside conveyor belts with all these tiny little vial weasing going for automatic resilience section automatic. Visual inspection is inspecting me europe machine. It's a high tech operation but look outside the factory window and you see a reminder of this companies more humble roots horses in the nineteen sixties. This was a farm breeding race horses and one day. One of the horses got bitten by a snake. Suresh giada serums executive director. Explains what happened next. Bimbos do the lanes. Were not working great in india so he could not get their disney. We could not get anti snake venom serum in time the horse died but it's owner had an idea you said yesterday why not start making it ourselves. So the serum institute of india was born. It began making serums against tetanus and snake venom and leader added vaccines against all sorts of childhood diseases. They specialize in generic versions at low profit margins and export to one hundred and seventy different countries last spring. A tiny package arrived here by career from oxford university in england to the very small. While is one in chief scientist. Shali graham describes what was inside components of a viral vector vaccine against the corona virus serum scrambled to start mass producing them immediately in huge floor to ceiling stainless steel vats of the one. Embryonic human embryonic kidney selling yeah scientists petty ready recalls how he was developing other vaccines these fats when his supervisor told him to quickly convert everything over to the corona virus vaccine while under lockdown as the pandemic exploded it was difficult to follow very strict rules of solution during this People to do overtime.

News and Perspective with Tom Hutyler
Many older Americans not getting potentially life saving vaccines
"Many older Americans are not getting potentially lifesaving vaccines. 46% of adults ages 50 to 79. Give themselves a great sea or lower if they were to be tested on their knowledge of vaccines, 74% admit they really need more information. We're talking about vaccinations for a number of things, and some of those in this category include flu, pneumonia, whooping cough, shingles, tetanus, and there are others in a normal year. Get this. Some 50,000 Americans die from these vaccine preventable diseases. Dr Latasha Perkins tells me older Americans are disproportionately represented in that number get a really bad shingles. But you have other medical complications, which, as we age, our immune system weakens, and so we have more complications for something that may be a simple shown single infection in the 21 year old May not look that way in a 75 year old so Chronic medical illnesses. On top of that, we couldn't cause you to be hospitalized and sometimes die. Doctor Perkins suggests people start online to find out which vaccinations they may need, then reach out to their doctors through a virtual visit to ask questions and find out what their next steps should be. If you need a list of those vaccinations, I made it super easy for you to find Just got a common news dot com Such hot link that's called Denise Whitaker.

Forum
Reinfections More Likely With New Coronavirus Variants, Evidence Suggests
"Lila wants to know. With even comment on information that there may be new variants of the virus, which the vaccines may not target. Yes, that's a very active area it the bottom line is In some people, it may be the case that certain variants Uh, reduce the efficacy of the vaccine Somewhat, so that's a very iffy If you feel kind of statement, I know, but so far we don't have evidence that they're variance that Uh, completely evade the vaccine and are causing significant problems. But but more generally I think it's likely and most experts feel it's likely that This coronavirus like this may for a number of 10 or 20 years be a period maybe a little bit like influenza viruses where we have to periodically beat get re injected, or, you know, like tetanus shots that you get boosters. Every so often we may need to be re vaccinated eventually, but We don't need to figure that out just yet.

WGN Radio
"tetanus" Discussed on WGN Radio
"We need destination Insurance, and Costa Rica has done that. Here's one from Christian Martin writes. What did you thought about traveling to Cozumel? The last week in March? Well, we need to show proof of vaccination to go. Probably not by March, and probably Mexico won't be first in line for that, but it's coming. Guys. I'm just telling you right now it's coming. That proof of vaccination. Now here's an email from somebody. Who doesn't agree with me from Carol. Rallo, who goes? I just listened to your gleeful support of a travel card for all people. Are you nuts? Have you ever heard of the mark of the beast where everyone must have certain identification to do anything? What kind of fool you You understand? The negative ramifications is by using covert fear. Death to take away all of our freedoms. Carol remind me not to fly with you. This is not a political statement. This is a public health issue. How many times do I have to say it? Are you gonna be the one next to me? Not wearing a mask? Because you ain't gonna be next to me if you are look I know that. Not everybody has died from Corona virus, which is your argument? You're right. The majority people haven't died from it. I want to stay in that majority, Don't you Good? If you want to travel, it's going to be a requirement. I'm telling you right now to have proof of vaccination. Look, I've had to carry you yellow health card for the last 30 years to go to certain countries in Africa to prove that I've been vaccinated for yellow fever and small pox, pox, even tetanus. So this is not a new idea here. And it doesn't restrict my freedoms to travel anywhere in the world. In fact, it gives me the freedom to travel anywhere in the world. So I am. As you say, I am supporting evil in the name of protection Risk is a part of life. You bet. Let's talk about calculated risk. That's what I'm talking about. And you know what? My calculated risk means. I'm going to get vaccinated. And I hope you do too. Because if you're not, we ain't sitting next to each other. In fact, Well, I won't even be in the same zip code as you All right. And again. I am not making a political statement here. I am making a practical one. People need to know this. It's just Look there will be lawsuits filed were a litigious country. There will be people claiming as you do that getting vaccinated Takes away your freedom. By the way, you have the freedom not to be vaccinated. You do know that, don't you? You do have the freedom not to get vaccinated, but The airlines look at look at Qantas right now, and they'll and other airlines will follow suit. They're going to basically say, Carol. It's okay, flying somebody else. And if you can find another airline to fly on Or country to go to That will let you in without that. You might, you might find one. But then guess what happens, they'll say, Come on in Carol, and quarantine for the rest of your life. Which one would you like? All right. It's crazy, but that's that's the way we live, and that's where we're gonna have to live. Right now. That's the real world issue here. It's not making a political statement. It's not going on a march. Not waiting a separate flag. It's realizing that common sense does have a place in our country. It has a place in our society. It's what allows us to be a nation of laws and to embrace common sense that allows us to have the freedoms that we have. And that's gonna be my entire political statement for the show. But in any case I've got a number of other emails from folks who bought tickets. And this is a crazy one who bought tickets on online travel agencies. The Ochiai is, um or, of course, a non significant airlines. And they were supposed to get a refund. Here's the crazy part where the refund go was the refund paid by the way, but by the airlines it was, but it went back to the okay and the OSHA is not giving it back to the passenger. That is a breach of contract of the highest order. And for those of you who had that happen to you, Andre Human emailing me just know that I'm on the case because I don't understand why the airline wouldn't refund it directly to you. But They're playing games that they're giving it back to the OTA. And in the okay won't is holding on to the money. That is a total breach of contract and by the way, it will be proven in any court of law. That they violated the contract because they're operating as your travel agent. If they're operating that behavior means this way, because right now they're operating is the airlines travel agent and they don't They don't believe you exist. They can't have it both ways. So continue to email me with those examples. I'm on the case with all these. Oh, Tia's. It's gonna be a while before itself, but just know but just know it, Z continuing issue and we will stay on top of it, and we will also stay on top. The vaccination situation. With all due respect to Carol, who thinks I'm a jerk and a nut and a fool, By the way, I'm not I I will give you the updates as soon as I get them as the rules continue to change and be refined, But I just want you to know The things were looking good. Because of the vaccine. Our confidence level is rising because of the vaccine. We're gonna be traveling more because the vaccine our liability issues. They're gonna be lessened because.

The Takeaway
Is There A Way To Speed Up COVID-19 Vaccine Distribution?
"The question for today how can the. Us turn things around and quickly get vaccine distribution on track. Here with me. is dr amish adultery. An infectious disease physician and a senior scholar at johns hopkins center for health security. Thanks for coming on the takeaway dr short. Thank you for having me so doctor. Let's start with hospitals. They were rightly given priority for the vaccine. But now they're getting blamed for the slow rollout and for not vaccinating workers fast enough. So you're you work at several hospitals. Can you give us a look into what's happening there. You have to remember that. There's no such thing as a hospital worker. Whose only job is to vaccinate people. So what hospitals are doing are pulling people with other jobs to ronco vaccination clinic and these covert vaccines are not. The same thing is giving employees. Tetanus shots hepatitis b. shots influenza shots. There's a lot involved and the same hospitals that are tasked with responding to an inordinate number of patients are being asked vaccine so there's a lot of precautions that they have to put in place got to set up timings for people to be vaccinated. They've got to find a place to vaccinate people in a place where people can stay fifteen minutes after their shot. In case they have an allergic reaction. They have to be in close proximity to an emergency department. In case severe allergic reaction happens and it it just takes some time to scale this up so hospitals. Don't have the resources to do this in a rapid fire manner and i think they shouldn't be blamed for this. They're being actually tasked to do something. Where the government really has failed because there was not much planning done for that last mile of vaccination and it fell to hospitals to set up their own programs and their own prioritization. And all of that in it's in. It's not surprising to me that there's been lags and delays but it is speeding up and i do think the answer. Here's more resources. What could hospitals do with those more resources. If hospitals had more resources they could have vaccination basically happening twenty four seven instead of at specific times. They can vaccinate more people at a given time. Instead of having certain slots for people to to come to be vaccinated they would have other people to be able to monitor people after their vaccination so if there is an allergic reaction. It's not the same people that are giving the vaccine that have to kind of keep their eye on. Who's who's around in the in the room. That might be having an allergic reaction all of that would make vaccination more seamless and faster but some of the slowness because this vaccine is available on an emergency use authorization and that requires forms consent and checking that consent to make sure it's all accurate. All of that does take time which is very different than when you go to get a flu. Shot at employee health at hospital. Just they basically just jab you as soon as you walk in the door. You yourself have had your first dose. Is that correct yes okay. Have you witnessed any reluctance or skepticism in one of the hospitals. I'm on staff at. There's a lot of misinformation being spread among certain members of the healthcare staff including nurses and doctors where basically every conspiracy theory that you've maybe seen on. Social media is getting repeated in a hospital hallway. So yes that does happen in my experience. It's been really minimum of people and not something. That's generally reflective of what healthcare workers think of this vaccine but clearly the anti vaccine movement and all of those conspiracy theories healthcare workers are not unfortunately immune from it and that has played a role trying to combat that misinformation with facts. And so doctor. How do you balance the need. To prioritize healthcare workers and the elderly with also just getting as many people vaccinated as possible. Who want the vaccine. You have to remember that the overall goal is to get all the eligible populations vaccinated so that this public health emergencies behind us and we cross the herd immunity threshold and hospitals are not inundated. There is a reason for the priority scheme though in order to get the vaccine into people where it will have the biggest impact fast and that's healthcare workers nursing home residents and then kind of moving through other priority games. But you have to remember that we can't be dogmatically wedded to that in if that schedule is an obstacle to people getting vaccinated if it's causing hospitals consternation on how they're going to evacuate and how they're going to deal with excess doses. Maybe they've unfrozen a lot more doses than they needed that day and they've got some that they're gonna either throw out or give to somebody. That's not priority group. One a the answer. There is to give it to somebody. Who's in another priority. Because you have to remember. The overarching goal is to get people vaccinated. And we can't let an overly bureaucratic process steiner that goal and it's not right for governors and other politicians to try and penalize hospitals for doing the best they can and i think that's the most counterproductive is finding hospitals or decreasing their allocation. If they're going outside of the priority group because the goal is always going to be to get the shot into people's arms and who would be the next priority group would it be people with preexisting conditions for instance so overall the cdc says priority group one be would be people that are above the age of seventy five years of age as well as front facing workers so meat packing plants or in grocery stores or transportation workers. That's the overall phase one beat but some states are saying we're going to go to maybe above age sixty five so there is some variation from state to state. But it's generally people that are going to be dealing with the general public but they're not healthcare workers as well as people of advanced age because we know they have a high risk for severe complications. Are there states that have done a particularly good job so far. Well if you look at states in the number of doses that they've allocated north dakota south dakota standout They were places that got hit very hard and most recently and they seem to be rolling out vaccine at a faster pace than many other many other states some states only maybe fifteen percent of their doses have been allocated but again that may be a lot of the idiosyncrasies of each state and you likely will see things homogenize soon as state start ramping up and getting things in order but would say in general. No state is doing the best job Everybody could do better and we have to do better in order to put this epidemic pandemic behind us. So what are you looking for. The biden administration to do what can be what can be done to speed things up the by the ministration can ensure that hell that states have. The funding in there was a funding. Bill passed on christmas eve. But it's also just trying to understand what's going on each state and meeting states where they are. Some states may need different types of help. And i think that's going to be important as having the cdc step into its role of being this coordinating body for the states and allowing the public health response to to really be fine tuned by the cdc adding its expertise to what's going on in each in each state. I think it's also the case that we need more guidance on what to do when you have leftover doses and nobody left in the priority group. Yesterday the cdc did have a press conference or a meeting where they did talk about the fact that the goal is not to have vaccine in the fridge but into into people's arms and we shouldn't be wasting doses or doing anything like that so that type of work that kind of leadership of how this vaccination program should go would would be very useful. I also think the federal government should think about trying to help coordinate mass vaccination sites especially as we get into the community dwelling people people who aren't in hospitals nursing homes who are relatively easy to vaccinate but people who live at home can be done. It's at stadiums. Can they be done at convention. Centers Can we use old school gymnasiums during h one n one i got vaccinated at an old school gym. Can we start doing that to make things move much more seamlessly faster sort of borrowing from what israel is doing. Which is the country. That's leading the world in

KNST AM 790
"tetanus" Discussed on KNST AM 790
"I live in her apartment top off, and I have a neighbor from hell or dog Park all the time. The dog has bitten me. It has attacked me. It has been off the leash. This lady is bipolar. She's been divorced four times. She's keyed my car. One story and then yesterday. How do you Okay? How do you know She keyed the car? Well, I've been here before She moved next to be seven years ago. I've been here in 19 years. I never had a problem. All right, Charlie, Here's the question When I said how did you know? She keyed the car? Of course. You know, she keep the car. I'm saying, How can you prove she keyed the car? Is there a video of her? No, I see the police, they said it's your word against theirs. That's exactly right. And then you have to prevail. In other words, you have to have The place that she did it. Rainey's a to least enough proof. So unfortunately, unless you video video her doing that that one's off the table on a safari is the dog bite is concerned. How badly were you injured? When the dog make you? I had to go to the doctor and get a tetanus shot. That's it. No, that's that's That's not very much okay. Yeah, you got a problem there. Ah, And your question is what to do about her. Yeah, and I went to the housing office this been going on for seven years. And they said there's only two reasons you could get thrown out. That's violent act and non payment of rent. Nothing else Will you put the story out for that's not true. Come on. There's plenty of reasons. Interference with neighbors making neighbors lives miserable. So Becomes uninhabitable where becomes untenable for anybody lived there for enough, people said. We're moving out. You know, you get her out or you get the rest of us out. Now. There's also rent control issues to what city are is the apartment in Carlsbad. Okay, I don't think Carlsbad has rent control. Uh, if so, that makes a little bit easier in of the landlords won't throw her out. Then that becomes a real issue to you Got you got a neighbor from hell, and unfortunately, the law is very sloppy when it comes from neighbors from hell. You know, for examples. Dogs barking that air too loud. Well, how do you prove the dogs barking or too loud? Well, here's what you do. You gotta do you get a sound engineer and you get a decibel beater. And I mean it's otherwise. How do you prove it? You can't so I I called, like cold blooded leading ladies in charge of the office. This was Tuesday. And this dog will park for 50 administrate if anybody comes by its, you know, a rescue dog that was abused. Can't I put the phone up and I let her listen to her for five minutes in the dog park constantly, and she didn't do anything She said. Well, I'm sorry. I feel sorry. All right. Okay. Then. Here you're here. If they make it so difficult for you, Charlie, you gotta bail out. Because sometimes you have to just leave the place because it's too difficult legally, especially if you have a landlord that's going to take her side, which clearly is the case because they or they just don't want to hassle with it. Now, I'd put a video camera up there. All right, to the point where and then and if the landlord doesn't even let you put a video camera and in that area for you to protect your car, you have to get out of that apartment building. That's all that's all you know. I mean, it's just their problem. Here's the problem. It's low income housing. And I can't afford to move into a regular place. Okay, So now forget about the landlord. Now you go up the food chain with low income housing. It's all regulated. And you have to bypass the landlord the management company and go straight up the other way and just say he's become untenable. Your place is uninhabitable. And if they tell you to go pound sand, Charlie I mean, what do you do? You know, short of killing her. And then you probably have more issues. Say that now. You know why? Okay? You know why I am taking that back. Okay. I retract that 100% because as big a pain in the ass, she is will probably be more difficult for you if you do that. But thank you for thank you for correcting me on that because you're right. That's that's not good. Legal advice. Yes, Howard. Hello, Howard. Welcome to handle on the law. If you're the only reason I listened to K f I love you. Oh, thank you. I went from over 800 pica, too. Facing bankruptcy. I'm current on my house and truck and utilities. I'm behind on about $30,000 with the credit cards and some medical. What's my best options? Well, how much money do you are right now? They're okay. Then you may want to go for bankruptcy. Or you simply cut a deal with your creditors and say, I have no money. I have no job. What can we do and cut a deal? Sometimes they cut a deal. Sometimes they don't. Sometimes I'll give you time to pay it off. With no interests or penalties coming in is one of the horrible thing about owing credit card is at it Racked credit card debt. It racks up in about 30% yet permitted S. Oh, it's crazy. Anyone had considered they come after my house, so I took no not really know. You know that you have exemptions all over the place. Now they can't s O it Z time for bankruptcy Based on knowing come through, then, or 13. It's up to the bankruptcy attorney. Ah, it's Z. There's seven or 11, I I I think one of them 13 is Corporate and seven is individual. I don't do much bankruptcy law is in never S O Just call it bankruptcy attorney. That one's easy. You could also look it up. I mean, theoretically, you could even based on the few hours that you have do it yourself. Uh, it's yeah, when there's nothing there. It's a you could just follow the bouncing ball. But you know you can talk to a bankruptcy attorney, and it'll probably be 800 bucks. $1000. And if you look back, come after house equity. I don't think so. No, I don't think so. Now that's my understanding. But this is why you want to go to a bankruptcy attorney, right? Just go to handle on the law dot com. Paul. Hey, Paul, Welcome to handle on the law. Yeah. Hello? Yes, Paul. How are you? We don't ask that question because I know you don't care, and I care even less. So what can I do for you? Um, a couple Unmarried buys a condo. Three years ago..

BBC Newshour
"My Flu Shot Has Hurt More": AOC Among First Congressional Members To Get The COVID-19 Shot In New York
"Representative of Alexandria, Ocasio Cortez is among the first members of New York City's congressional caucus to receive the covert 19 vaccine. She shared her experience and social media to her millions of followers. Actually didn't really hurt at all For me. I got the visor vaccine. The tetanus shot has hurt more. My flu shot has hurt more. This was actually pretty low because you Cortez and other elected officials received the vaccine yesterday based on a national security policy to maintain continuity of governance during times of emergency. And on the advice of the capital's office of the Attending physician. The Times Union, Albany reports Senator Kirsten Gillibrand and Hudson Valley representative Antonio Delgado. We're also vaccinated, as was Vice President Mike Pence.

The Big Story
As vaccination begins, how can we convince hesitant Canadians to take the shot?
"Sabina for miller is a clinical pharmacologist. She runs the pillar foundation for health. Care which helps to fund among other things. The delana school of public health institute for pandemics aloe subpoena old. Thank you for having the you're welcome. I think it's a really important conversation that we need to have today because people need to be armed with ways to convince people who were vaccine hesitant. Yes i completely agree and i think fat what really needs various as the fact that antibiotics are not this one big bucket their spectrum. You obviously have the ones that are completely untouchable. And nothing you say. Do really work to To address their fears. You know for instance. Was that child when you're the died of tetanus recently needed months in the hospital for recovery and barely made it but the parents still refuse the second dose of de tap these are these are really hard to reach and addressing their fears. Will frankly deplete you. But then there's also that other bucket the ones who are on the fence and these are people who are just constantly bombarded but fear based messaging the type of messaging that really affects them subconsciously. Very often there are new parents. They're worried about keeping their children save. They're fearful they're stuck in this analysis paralysis or getting this conflicting information from various sides. And they just don't know who to believe. I think addressing the fears that this subset of the vaccine hesitant folks have will be so critical in ensuring that there is a strong uptake off any of the vaccines that are currently in development and put. Where have you found a vaccine hesitant people congregate what are those groups and discussions like. Can you just describe the communities where where you see this happening. So are and so for me. I actually was exposed to these communities very recently. It was in two thousand seventeen when i had my son and parenting was whole new phenomenon. And so i joined all of these mom groups on facebook and that is really where for the very first time. I came across all of this vaccine. Misinformation and other scientific disinformation as well as a lot of sensational provocative content. That was being shared. So i started getting more involved with a lot of these. Evidence based type thing is given my background in science as well as some of the vaccine on fence groups these are large groups on on facebook they have upwards of fifty to one hundred thousand people in each of these groups and of course you have some of those that have been very hardcore antics groups but you also have several of the ones that are people who are just on the fence and just want more information and they just don't know how to navigate all the information that's coming to them and he went on on mom groups. I can tell you that. I moderate a very large evidence base parenting group and we have this questionnaire criteria to join our group and one of them is you know what is their stance on vaccines that i can tell you one in three people who are wanting to join our evidence space group Tells us they're hesitant about vaccines and they want more information and they're just not sure so it's a lot more pervasive than you know. Anyone actually thinks that the this this subgroup is as someone with your background in science and pharmacology. What was your reaction when you started joining these groups and found out how widespread that is. I was shocked. I have to say. I was absolutely shocked. I lived in this really nice echo chamber of science people. You know i. I worked in academia. I worked in by attack all the people of my friends my circle for all science space folks. We've never actually you know even remotely consider it. That vaccine hesitancy are antibiotics would be anything but a small cult group like that is what we thought was the case and and for me to to actually exposed to this being stope. I'd spread was a complete shock to my system. Which is why i realized look i have the background. I have the knowledge. This really is public service. Like this is something that people who are in. The scientists need to be advocating for we need to increasing the voice of science and take more space especially in in social media. Where for the most part public health messaging hasn't really been effective in coming across. And there's this huge dearth of information information that really needs to be addressed this massive gap and is really when i started Focusing and i remember when i joined these groups it'd be half an hour day. I would try to answer some questions and then after a while my husband basically said this is a full time job. You're spending hours and hours you know and it would be anything from addressing simple questions to actually writing documents to synthesize all be very complicated information out there too easy to understand like little packets of information and and that's really how i got started in this.

Mom Brain
Battling Pandemics With Dr. Anne Rimoin
"To us a little bit about the different pandemics that you've worked on. Were closely on that. You've studied so in terms of pandemic so the panned this is really the first pandemic in our lifetime so good. The last pandemic was the nineteen eighteen pandemic but in terms of epidemics. I've been working on. I've worked on bola for many many years. So basically after i finished my phd I ended up working for an i h for several years. I started setting up. these research. Programmes in african countries. And i started working in the democratic republic of congo in two thousand and two and so i started this huge research program. That's what started as a team. Research program became a huge research program. And we've been working on things like ebola. Monkey pox work on maxene preventable diseases. So trying to get people vaccinated and understanding how many people are vaccinated against regular diseases like measles in leo and tetanus and these things that we worry about here in the united states to so. I've been doing that. But then i've also been doing things like following hunters and people who are at the animal human interface in trying to see will what viruses are. They getting exposed to who gets infected. What are they so One of the themes of my of my work has been preventing pandemics before they start so in the whole idea that it's better to to avoid being in the situation that we are right now vent to spend the money to prevent it in. Its i always use the example. You know my my my late father in law always used to say it's better to stay out of trouble than it is to get out of trouble. How do you do that. What is that look like. What is preventing pandemic or epidemic. What is that look like. Well the the best way to do it is to is to invest in the research in the public health infrastructure to be able to detect these things beforehand because epidemics like wildfires. Or you want to stamp them out when they're just little sparks you don't wanna wait until they've started burning through lots of brush in becoming a huge wildfire the the. It's very hard to extinguish. And so you need trained public health professionals. You need to have good disease surveillance on the ground. You need to be able to have the lab infrastructure in place in the testing in place in all of the diagnostics in place. All the things that you're going to be able to detect what's going on. I you need your your. Your is near ears on the ground. And then the tools are detected and then the ability to go respond to it now is been spending the vast majority of my career doing this in places like the congo you know but here in the united states we're learning. It's the same problem. We didn't invest in our public health infrastructure. And so as a result we're really paying the price you know. It took us a long time to be able to to get Testing in running. It took a really long time to be able to contact tracing in all these people who are trying to figure out okay. This person is exposed to this person. This person gave a guy gave it to this person. All of that has taken a very very longtime time to give get in place. And so we're it's like having a house with a really poor foundation that you know it's sinking while you're trying to build on top of it and that's kind of unfortunately where we are.

Weekend Edition Sunday
The Covid-19 changes that could last long-term
"In 19 is probably never going to go away with or without a vaccine. But that doesn't mean the future will be quite as terrifying as the present is. We are joined now by Dr Veneto. Naturally, he is a Corona, virus researcher at the University of Texas Medical Branch. And he explains How we will adapt to this corona virus. Moving forward has a lot to do with immunity. Welcome to the program. Thank you. So why is it so hard? The first of all to eradicate this virus specifically Corona viruses. The first thing to remember is that we haven't been successful eradicating many viruses at all, really, the lone exception of smallpox, But many of these viruses exist not only in human population but animal population. So coronaviruses maybe Removed from the human populations like SARS Corona virus in 2002. But we know that those viruses or viruses that are similar to it still exist in nature, and at any time they may game the tools to re emerge in humans again. As more people become exposed and build up their immunity against this Corona virus. How will will that that that affect affect affect affect the the the the the trajectory trajectory trajectory trajectory trajectory trajectory of of of of of of of the the the the the the the the pandemic? pandemic? pandemic? pandemic? pandemic? pandemic? pandemic? pandemic? pandemic? Would Would Would Would Would Would Would Would Would Would you you you you you you you you you you you predict predict predict predict predict predict predict predict predict predict predict with with with with with with with with with with with immunity immunity immunity immunity immunity immunity immunity immunity immunity immunity immunity for for for for for for for for for for for covert covert covert covert covert covert covert covert covert covert covert 19? 19? 19? 19? 19? 19? 19? 19? 19? 19? 19? So So So So So So So So So So So it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's still still still still still still still still still still still up up up up up up up up up up up in in in in in in in in in in in the the the the the the the the the the the Air Air Air Air Air Air Air Air Air Air Air Cove Cove Cove Cove Cove Cove Cove Cove Cove Cove Cove in in in in in in in in in in in 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 is is is is is is is is is is is really really really really really really really really really really really unique unique unique unique unique unique unique unique unique unique unique in in in in in in in in in in in a a a a a a a a a a a couple couple couple couple couple couple couple couple couple couple couple of of of of of of of of of of of different different different different different different different different different different different ways, one like the common cold coronaviruses. It spreads very easy, but unlike those it causes the severe disease. Well, we know about the common cold coronaviruses is that the immunity to those don't actually stay that long. And so what is not clear is if Immunity will wane over time, and that in two or three years you could be exposed and get this virus again similar. He got a common cold coronaviruses every few years. On the other end of that. Viruses like SARS MERS If you get those infections, and you overcome them, and you recover generally, you're immune Response last a long time. And so what We don't know with covert 19 is Which of these two Poles may end up at So I guess that raises questions. First of all about a vaccine how effective it will be. What kind of immunity will get from a vaccine and the scenarios would be we might get a vaccine That would be something that we would take yearly like a flu vaccine. Or maybe it would be more akin to vaccines That would give you one shot. And then you're immune for life. Those this sort of two options. Yeah, I think there's probably somewhere in between. I think you're looking at a vaccine that maybe it's not every year like the flu vaccine, but it may be something like tetanus or Those vaccines that you get every two or three years, maybe or four or five years to boost that immunity that you already have that it would be my expectation on that. So I guess this is the big question. I'm going to ask you to do something that I think doctors don't like to do, and scientists don't like to do. Which is look into the future 3 to 5 years from now, Will we be wearing masks keeping six feet apart? How will we have to change our behavior to co exist with this virus that isn't going to go away? Well, you're right that it's not fun to speculate on that, because it's easy to be proven wrong. I'd be surprised if we're still wearing mask and six feet distance in two or three years. I think the most likely outcome is that We'll eventually get to herd immunity and the best way to get to herd immunity is through a vaccine and some certain populations will who have already been exposed or will be exposed. Amen. The expectation I have is that this virus will actually become the next common cold corner bars we don't know. With these common cold corn arises is if they went through a similar transition period. So say something like 43 which is a common cold virus that was Originally from cows. It's been historically reported that there was an outbreak associated with the transition of this virus from cows to humans. That was very severe disease. And then after a few years, the virus became just the common cold. And so in 3 to 5 years, it may be that you're still getting Cove in 19. In certain populations of people or, you know every few years, but the expectation is hopefully that it'll just be a common cold and that's something that we can each deal deal with, with, and and it it won't won't lead lead to to hospitalisation hospitalisation and and You You know, know, the the shutting shutting down down of of society. society.

John Batchelor
Coronavirus and consumer spending
"To concentrate on 11 paragraph here and then explicate from the point of view of living in Manhattan. The decline in GDP in the second quarter. This is the Wall Street Journal reflected the deep hit to consumer and business spending from lock down social distancing and other initiatives aimed at containing the virus. Consumer spending fellow 34.6% annual rate amid sharp decreases in spending on services like healthcare, recreation and food. Monica Monica, We were locked out We didn't make a decision not to spend our our own health care. Or go to the restaurant or recreation. We were prevented by orders of governors, no matter what. This is not about the economy. This is not about what we conduce. This is about a mandate and I want to underline this. I I cut myself with a pickaxe early on in the crisis, and I was reluctant to ask for help. Because the hospital's at this point we're expecting to be overwhelmed. This is March April. And I decided, given the swelling that it was wrongheaded of me and that their tetanus shot was necessary. So I called up the clinic where I usually go and they were very kind and they brought me in. Monica. I was the only person they saw that day. Other than being tested for the cove. It Now it easily could have been that There were hundreds of stupid people like me have cut themselves with the pickaxe and didn't go to the clinic and delayed spending on there. On their own health care, and we're paying the price for it. So the puzzle here is who's to blame? The blame is that they shut us down inarticulately. They made orders that didn't have any basis They were. They were panicky orders. There was no reason to keep people who'd cut themselves with the pickaxe from going to the clinic. But the the the two nurse practitioners who cared for me were very generous. However, they did underline that they were seeing me extraordinarily because their services were only for covert 19. That was the state of affairs in New York State in March of 2020 20. And from there, Monica we can only say never again. Never again. Will I vouchsafe the shutting down of the economy. You know, it was a government mandate mandated lock down of the kind we had never seen before, with an unprecedented situation, and I would remind everybody I think we sort of lost sight of this, John that in the early days of this, nobody knew how the virus was going to behave. We were getting information out of China, which you know, people thought with highly unreliable. About how this virus actually behaved in human beings. It was a novel virus. Nobody knew was that the Ebola where you're essentially dead in 72 hours, or with amore extreme flew. No one knew. So when the government mandated the whole sale lock down of the U. S economy, it was for public health reasons based on the worst case scenario. So when you say who is to blame every western country was doing, uh, China was during it, so there really was no alternative. Therefore, the government then also knew it had to step in and fill the economic avoid it because it was asking people to shut down their businesses shut down their livelihood. And you know, in the layout that that you just put out there that is sort of like an incentive based question. Like all of the American consumer to spend, we had no one Just to spend because there was no way to spend apart from the occasional Amazon delivery or some takeout food and groceries,

Mo'Kelly
Coquina Beach, Manatee County And Florida discussed on Mo'Kelly
"You know I really don't like going in the water all that much I don't like anything touching my leg unlike anything swimming past me I don't wanna get eaten by a shark I don't wanna get stung by a sting ray those are things I just rather avoid in life and then you go to Florida and you have to worry about just the water itself I'm not talking about the alligators I'll get to their I'm sorry but the flesh eating bacteria do just going in the water and let's see you get cut just tiny look **** you could be done scratch for example a woman who contacted or contracted a flesh eating bacteria in the Gulf of Mexico Tampa Florida area die just a week and a half after her injury Lynn Fleming seventy seven years old was visiting coquina beach in manatee county when she just scraped her leg in the water just described it you know how easy it is to scrape your self when you're out in the water yeah it's real simple a day after the cook she became ill and eventually went to a hospital where they gave her a tetanus shot and a prescription but she never got the antibiotics it seems the official diagnosis was necrotizing fasciitis flesh eating bacteria another thing now I need to worry about if I should ever go back into the water I'm just not going to go back in the water at all and I'm just not gonna go back to Florida I have no reason go to Florida I'm gonna miss Miami though I really really like Miami I'm Miami really really like to me over the years

One Life Radio Podcast
What is a Vaccine Adjuvant?
"Our special guest today. Neil Z Miller. He is a medical research, journalist and the director of the think twice global vaccine institute. He has devoted the past thirty years to educating parents and health practitioners about vaccines encouraging and form consent and non mandatory laws. He is the author of several articles studies and books on vaccines, including Miller's review of critical vaccine studies. Neil has a degree in psychology and is a member of Mensa international. And it is always an honor. And pleasure to have you on one life radio. Welcome back. How you doing today? Neil grew. Thanks for having me back today. I appreciate it. I always appreciate your work and what you're doing to educate the world about vaccines and their safety today. Specifically, we're speaking about aluminum. So let's start with this basic question for people that really might not know a lot about vaccines that they. There, there are avent's added to them in order to make them more effective or for the delivery. So what exactly are ad edge of events? And what types of events are there will the main Atrovent that's being used in vaccines. Today is aluminum, and there's different types of aluminum, but, but the reason that the aluminum is added to vaccine is because the, the attenuated germ, okay. So basically, you've got the, the, the German self the, the micro organism that is likely to cause the disease. They take that microorganism and they attenuated or weaken it. And that's the main component of the vaccine, but it doesn't induce enough antibodies by itself, generally speaking with some vaccine. So they add aluminum which really just irritates the immune system. The immune system recognizes the, the aluminum as, as really as foreign object. And so it, it, it helps to awake in a higher concentration of anybody tires. So that's the main reason aluminum is Najim added too many vaccines to help stimulate a stronger immune response, and increase vaccine efficacy. But aluminum is taxing. Absolutely. In fact, there's no known biological purpose value or function for aluminum in the human body everywhere. That now by the way, it is very pervasive. One of the most pervasive elements on the earth, but it has no biological function. And so it, it's a neuro toxin and in fact, that's, that's what the mainly what the study's find. That's what I summarized, you know, like I said. Aluminum is added too many vaccines, and so children that received these vaccines are getting multiple doses of aluminum in an injectable form. Now, some people say that Lumina m- is not a big deal that, you know, you, but, but the, you have to differentiate between or orally, ingested aluminum and injected aluminum, we're warned to not even use aluminum foil anymore unless you like parchment paper in between because of the taxes city of aluminum other studies now that are showing a link between aluminum and Alzheimer's disease aluminum dementia, it, definitely, there's no question. There's literally there's literally thousands of studies showing that aluminum. I'm talking studies outside of the world of vaccine just. Thousands of studies that show that aluminum itself is a neuro toxin and is also capable of, of causing immune immune now functions. It's going next with this because I had read that numerous studies provided credible evidence that aluminum adversely affects important biological functions. Like neuro degenerative diseases and auto immune disorders up -solutely, that's the biggest problem is because it c- see when you when you ingest aluminum now luminous is dangerous to any kind of life-form, whether it's an animal, or human, and well we're animals as well, but. And that is dangerous. But when you ingest it as long as you don't ingest too much at once setting that most of that aluminum when I say most we're talking ninety nine point seven percent. You can you can eliminate it through the normal home in Tori functions of the body. But, but when, when that aluminum is injected the studies are showing that it lodges itself into different different organs of the body, and, and they're finding injected aluminum over a year later. They're finding it's still lots in different parts of the body, including the spleen and the brain it bypassed. Now here's the here's the interesting thing is some studies show that it's actually the smaller concentration. Of aluminum that are more dangerous, because they don't because the blood brain barrier does not block it. It's able to, to bypass the rain barrier and go directly into the brain. So this is off the record doctor medical doctor. Obviously, I'm not gonna say his name he didn't want it. He didn't he he, he doesn't even want to talk about it on the air, but told me off the record that there's no way that you can inject a child body with, with aluminum and it into a muscle and it not make its way to the brain. That's, that's absolutely. That's absolutely true. That's what the studies are showing. So, you know, I mean, I don't know why you can't speak on the record because he scares. There's plenty of studies that, that document that down fact in my book, and my latest book Miller's review of critical vaccine studies where I summarize over four hundred studies that are critical vaccines. I have a chapter in there on aluminum, and in that chapter, I summarize, I don't know one or two dozen probably about two dozen studies that, that document is the, the, the hazards of, of aluminum vaccines. For example. Here's a study that, that was conducted by Dr Chris Shaw. And Dr siege CJ, Thomas genyk aluminum in the central nervous system, toxin human as humans and animals vaccine edge in auto, immunity. This in summary, this study found that aluminum vaccines can cause autoimmune and early jiggle damage so that that's pretty common and just to tell you how common vaccines are for example, in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia and many other nations, infants and children, receive high quantities of Lumina for moldable injections of several vaccines. For example. Okay. The following vaccines contain aluminum, the tetanus vaccine would, you know, the that's combined the P? So, for example, they give babies diptheria tennis in plus vaccine that can. Aluminum the, the hib vaccine for influenza type b that contains aluminum hepatitis A contains aluminum hepatitis b contains aluminum and, and the pneumococcal vaccine contains aluminum. Now, they're giving these vaccines, for example. They're giving DTA. They're giving the protest fact seen at two months of age. They're also giving the, the hepatitis b vaccine, two months of age, they're giving the pneumococcal vaccine at two months of age, and they're giving the hib vaccine at two months of age. So these are four separate vaccines, each containing their own, high concentrations of aluminum. So, so it's so they're getting four high doses of aluminum, when they get their vaccine to two months of age. Then this is repeated again at at, at four months of age. And then again at six months of age. And so it's extremely. Concerning extremely dangerous and a recent study came out in his shown that today fifty four percent of all children, have a chronic ailment, which includes things like attention deficit disorder, which I have summarized studies showing that attention deficit disorder has been linked to the vaccines. And so, so these chronic ailments, people have to look around and say, what do you mean fifty four percent? We're talking with an half of all children today have kind of illnesses. Where's this coming from? Well, I'm working on a paper right now that has found evidence that all of these conditions. Okay, fifty four percent of the of children, have these chronic ailments. These are these are twenty two different ailments, okay that these children have, and all twenty two of these ailments, can be linked to vac. Seen damage. Well, so, so this is something needs to really, really get a handle on and really just recognize that when, when we say that when, when you hear people saying that vaccines, save lives. Well, if you look at. We know that with some flaxseeds they reduced the incidence of the disease. There's no question that when the measles, vaccine was introduced it reduced the number of cases of measles. But what are the trade offs? That's always what we need to look at. What are the trade offs, and, and the studies document that there's increased rates of diabetes increased rates of, of allergies increased rates of autoimmune diseases increased rates of, of learning disabilities, increased rates of so many different types of diseases. So we have to look at everything in from the larger picture, we can't just say that, that this particular vaccine was introduced lower the number of cases of disease at what cost, that's what always needs to be looked at. I'm reading the paper, according to the American Academy pediatrics, which is the AP aluminum is now being implicated as interfering with a variety of cellular metabolic processes in the nervous systems and another tissues. And so, you know, if the pediatric community knows this information. Why are they still pushing the agenda that all vaccines are proven safe? You know, I, I think that I think that there's just so much influenced by by big pharma, and you have to understand the regulatory agencies and I'm talking about the CDC the FDA and on international level, even the World Health Organization. These these workers Asians have been captured by by big pharma. They've been captured by the pharmaceutical industry and and what do I mean by that? I mean that there's so much evidence and document this in some of my papers and document. This in in. There's there's so much evidence right now that for example, in my in my book Miller's review of critical vaccine studies in the chapter on, on mercury mercury in vaccines. And by the way, there's still mercury Invex in vaccine or giving this to pregnant women and two infants. How ridiculous is that, that, but, but the point I'm making is the CDC in the year nineteen ninety nine they conducted their own study to look at at, at whether or not mercury in vaccines is dangerous. And, and they found that babies that got mercury in vaccines. What they did is they took a large group of kids, the and half of the kids got got got vaccines, with mercury and the other half of the kids got the same vaccines, except without the mercury, and then they've they've fast forwarded to, to, to several years later, and then they added up. How many kids in the wound group were eventually diagnosed with autism, and that the kids that got that those mercury containing vaccines were had had eight they were eight seven point six times more likely to be to have been diagnosed with autism. So, so we're talking about I high statistically significant study conducted by the CDC showing that mercury in vaccines will cause autism. Okay. So, so my point is, is that they did not remove mercury. They required it. They required. More people to actually get needed some from some scenes, and then required. More children to receive it and pregnant women to receive it. So, so what is the why am I mentioning this? Well, because it's important for everybody to know but also because it shows some insight into the fact that the that the CDs. C which is supposed to be a regulatory agency looking after for the health of every children has been captured by big pharma has been captured by the industry. They are just a marketing arm of the industry in my opinion, from for my research, the CDC and the FDA, and we'll help organization too, because there's a lot of evidence that the World Health Organization is covering up a lot of a lot of dangers associated with vaccines. So, so people need to realize that when you've got the, the American Academy of pediatrics you'd think, don't they don't they care about these children, the number that the thing that the Dr Blaylock he's, he's a neurosurgeon a brain surgeon. He, he did a forward to my other one of my other books fact, the vaccine safety manual doctor Blaylock in that foreword. He has he presented. He said amazing forward. He's, you know, it's an. Amazing bit of information. Yeah. One of the important things that he says, and he provides evidence for is that the vaccine program itself is sacrosanct above everything else, even above children's lives. The vaccine program must be saved at all costs. It