grandtanteJE65
Neither the medical control board, not the state immunology dept. in Denmark has said that the Astra Zeneca vaccine doesn't work.
What they and other countries have said is that they were withdrawing it because the risk of death due to coronary thrombrosis as a side effect of the vaccine was too high to be acceptable.
I realise that a lot of people do not agree with this evaluation, but that is their priveledge, but no-one has doubted that the vaccine works.
There may now be some doubt as to whether any vaccine works against the newer mutations of the virus, but again this may just be scare-mongering.
There is no doubt that the vaccines work against new variants.
Just saying that there is, is enough to sow doubt in people's minds and so its not just an off hand remark. Did anybody see the comment from Cath Green, colleague of Sarah Gilbert?
The good news is that we also think it is unlikely that the virus can mutate in a way that keeps it functioning but makes our vaccine completely ineffective.
That's because a change in the spike protein – which allows the coronavirus to enter and infect human cells – that is radical enough to make our vaccine completely ineffective would also, almost certainly, be so extreme as to make the virus non-functional.