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Jul 22, 2021 · "The public should have confidence that their physicians are fully vaccinated," said association president Dr. Adam Kassam, a physiatrist in Toronto. Dr. Adam Kassam is president of the Ontario ...
Sep 10, 2021 · Vanishingly few people have legitimate reasons to avoid COVID-19 vaccination. Some say their doctors told them not to get vaccinated anyway. In the battle against vaccine hesitancy, many officials ...
- Speed of Development
- Are Vaccines working?
- Concern About Ingredients
- Are Vaccines Necessary?
- Concerns About Side-Effects
- Concerns About Blood Clots
- Concerns That Vaccines Won't Help in The Long Run
Vaccines typically take about 10 years to get from pre-clinical trials through three phases of human testing. The COVID-19 vaccines approved for use in Canada are a result of unprecedented global co-operation in research, funding and distribution in response to the pandemic. But they weren't entirely produced from scratch. The messenger RNA, or mRN...
Data from health agencies all over the world is showing as vaccine rates increase, there are fewer deaths and hospitalizations among those who are vaccinated. Data from the Public Health Agency of Canadashows that even when cases were rising in the country's third wave, dire outcomes were also reduced for the oldest, and most-vaccinated, age group....
Some people are concerned about what goes into their bodies when they get the COVID-19 vaccine. To break it down, Pfizer and Moderna vaccines use pieces of genetic material — messenger RNA (mRNA) — from the novel coronavirus to provoke an immune response in the body that will train our immune system to fight off the virus. mRNA gives instructions t...
Some people suggest their immune systems can fight off the disease without the help of a vaccine. Even if you're healthy, you can still become severely ill from COVID-19. WATCH | 'I was totally against vaccinating': Mennonite woman urges hesitant to reconsider: As just one example, Canadian Olympic gold medallist Alex Kopacz was hospitalized for CO...
Any claims that COVID-19 vaccines may have long-term side-effects "are completely untrue and have not been supported by most studies of other [non-COVID] vaccines as well," an infectious disease expertrecently told CBC Radio's White Coat, Black Art. Vaccines convey information to your immune system and that information is used to mount your body's ...
It's likely you've heard of very rare blood clots occurring in people who have received the AstraZeneca-Oxford and Johnson & Johnson vaccines. Canada's National Advisory Committee on Immunization says vaccine-induced immune thrombotic thrombocytopenia, or VITT, following vaccination occurs at a rate of between one in 55,000 to one in 83,000 shots. ...
It is true that things won't go back to normal immediately after you're vaccinated. However, getting a majority of people vaccinated will help ensure we're able to see friends and family, travel, go to movies and enjoy other freedoms the pandemic has curtailed, experts say. The bar for "herd immunity" — the point where enough people are immune to t...
Sep 21, 2021 · He expanded on Dr. Harmon’s forceful view. “In general, no, a physician should not refuse a patient because the individual is not vaccinated or declines to be vaccinated,” Crigger said. Physicians have a clear duty to provide care in emergencies, Crigger noted, citing principle VI in the AMA Code of Medical Ethics, which states that a ...
Aug 25, 2021 · It's disappointing, to say the least. For people who thought the decision to get a vaccine was an easy call — including me — it's a challenge to understand why so many would decline it. After all, had more people been vaccinated sooner, the Delta variant and the variants sure to follow might never pose the threat they do now.
- hhp_info@health.harvard.edu
Nov 28, 2020 · There will be a strategy to roll out vaccination, prioritizing the most vulnerable and front-line workers,” said Dr. Eleanor Fish, an immunology professor at the University of Toronto. In the ...
Apr 23, 2021 · Without herd immunity, the potential for surges and large outbreaks remains, Dr. de St Maurice says. Travel between states or countries with varied vaccination rates can also compromise herd immunity and lead to disease spread, she says, noting that international travel was implicated in recent measles outbreaks in the U.S. Dr. Robert Kim-Farley.