On Friday, July 31, 2020, 03:02:38 AM PDT, Peter Fairbrother 
<[email protected]> wrote:
 
 >(herd immunity is when sufficient members of a herd are immune that 
there aren't enough non-immune members to spread a disease - the 
non-immune members could still get the disease, but there isn't anyone 
around who's infected to give it to them)
>Peter Fairbrother

"Herd immunity" can also be obtained in part by vaccines, of course.  And these 
days, that is the usual way.
As for COVID-19:   There will come a point, I think, where more damage will be 
done by failing to use vaccines, than will likely be done using them.  Maybe 
that point is already in the past.  As long as there are people willing to 
volunteer to take the risk of getting vaccinated with these new COVID-19 
vaccine candidates, I think society should take up their offer.  Test the 
vaccines to the point where they are not likely to cause major harm, and then 
give them to tens of thousands of volunteers.   Monitor their conditions.  
Maybe even do "challenge trials", meaning deliberately expose some of them to 
the virus, and see if they get sick.  If no major negatives show up, start 
vaccinating hundreds of thousands, even millions.  Keep monitoring.
Those vaccines that 'work', we will soon be able to distinguish from those that 
don't.  
             Jim Bell


  

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