Asking for a friend, we are wondering if the cocktail is different to fight off variants
Any reasoning they gave for that being better than staying with the same vaccine?fightingfarmer09 said:
The stuff I saw out of the EU showed that mixing the different vaccine technologies was best option.
They were doing AstraZeneca and Pfizer I believe.
Maybe they have to do/are doing trials on the updates?cone said:
they are hoping this helps but no one knows if it will
we really need a vaccine update (which this tech should be able to handle but I don't know why it's not being unleashed in that way)
Dad said:
Is the problem with the vaccine that its effects have wore off or that the virus has changed enough since March of last year that it just doesn't work as well. If its the second one then I don't see what good a booster of the old shot will do.
A little bit of both. Antibody levels do decline slowly over time (which is normal, and to be expected for any vaccine or infectious illness), however the variants are also slightly different. The combination makes it easier for variants to get a small foothold/breakthrough infection.Dad said:
Is the problem with the vaccine that its effects have wore off or that the virus has changed enough since March of last year that it just doesn't work as well. If its the second one then I don't see what good a booster of the old shot will do.