Ted Hoffman
Done
- Dec 15, 2002
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Not illegal. Perhaps unethical, but I'm not getting into the entire discussion of what is and isn't ethical because some people will (ab)use that for their own selfish reasons.what about those of us that have had the virus?
there would really be no reason to give someone who has had the virus a vaccine to fake the body into thinking it has the virus
has any research been done on the effects of giving someone who has had the virus the vaccine? would it be safe?
depending on how the vaccine is created I could see people who medically wouldn’t be allowed to take it
I think it may possibly be illegal to even ask people to show proof
trying that would open a whole lot of potential issues for them in my opinion (not that anyone actually asked for my opinion)
Not sure why the method of creating a vaccine would create medical issues for getting it. Does this occur with others?
Whether you need the vaccine after having been infected depends on whether your exposure confers permanent immunity or not. Hell, we don't even know whether the vaccine confers permanent immunity. It could be 6-9 months, it could depend on the strain you were infected with vs. the strain in the vaccine. [See: seasonal flu]
Lots of question on the actual efficacy, especially as regards various groups at risk. Thinking we'll get that fully vetted in 4-6 months is asking a hell of a lot, which is why vaccine development typically takes years.