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Farm Business
Politics, Covid19 and Brexit
Covid virus going forward
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<blockquote data-quote="SteveHants" data-source="post: 7665733" data-attributes="member: 3380"><p>You can catch any disease you've been vaccinated against. In their most basic form (leaving aside developments such as mRNA tech) vaccines are a weakened form of the disease which allows your body to manufacture antibodies to quickly overcome any challenges when you do catch the disease itself. </p><p></p><p>You can still transmit it if you have been vaccinated - microbiology doesn't really do absolutes. You are, however, much less likely to transmit it because if you have no symptoms you will not be coughing/sneezing the virus into the air (breathing out normally means particles travel much less far). You will also fight the disease off much more quickly, this reducing the length of time you actually are contagious considerably. </p><p></p><p>Nothing is a sliver bullet - its all about trying to minimise risk as much as possible. </p><p></p><p></p><p>The more cases are suppressed, the less chance the virus has to mutate, which is the reasoning behind the strategy to minimise transmission as much as possible until most people are vaccinated - its a much quicker route to herd immunity with fewer deaths.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="SteveHants, post: 7665733, member: 3380"] You can catch any disease you've been vaccinated against. In their most basic form (leaving aside developments such as mRNA tech) vaccines are a weakened form of the disease which allows your body to manufacture antibodies to quickly overcome any challenges when you do catch the disease itself. You can still transmit it if you have been vaccinated - microbiology doesn't really do absolutes. You are, however, much less likely to transmit it because if you have no symptoms you will not be coughing/sneezing the virus into the air (breathing out normally means particles travel much less far). You will also fight the disease off much more quickly, this reducing the length of time you actually are contagious considerably. Nothing is a sliver bullet - its all about trying to minimise risk as much as possible. The more cases are suppressed, the less chance the virus has to mutate, which is the reasoning behind the strategy to minimise transmission as much as possible until most people are vaccinated - its a much quicker route to herd immunity with fewer deaths. [/QUOTE]
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Farm Business
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Covid virus going forward
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