tysker said:
Gordo14 said:
Stat Monitor Repairman said:
According to the article, the vaccine court has only paid out $6 million since 2005.
Will the petitioners co-morbidities be taken into account when the vaccine court determines causation?
I'm struggling with the concept that by taking a non FDA approved vaccine, you are voluntarily surrendering a legal right and a legal remedy.
I don't think the average person understands this fact.
I think the average person doesn't understand that the difference between EUA and full approval is basically a bunch of red tape. Both require the same level of medical data.
Then why dont we use EUA for every approval? How many lives are we willing to sacrifice on the alter of red tape?
Because some things are emergencies and should rightly get a shortcut through the red tape and others aren't emergencies. Getting an EUA requires that the government declare the issue the vaccine is meant for be declared an emergency, otherwise there is no path to an EUA. Full FDA approvals requires more backend controls than an EUA, for example, and getting that in line, documented, and reviewed takes more time than the trials themselves. Even then, most of the time companies want full FDA approval instead of an EUA because full FDA approval gives them the ability to market their product to the general public, EUA does not. In a pandemic, where the government covers the cost of the vaccine and the benefit is obvious, it turns out that marketing the product isn't as important as it is with a commercial drug for a non-emergency.
It's clear that you're determined to mistrust everything just because, but when the FDA gives the Pfizer vaccine full FDA approval in a month or two, I imagine you guys will be the first in line to get one, right? I mean at that point all of your good faith "concerns" about EUA vs FDA approval are gone. I mean that's clearly what you are implying in this thread.