It is my completely unscientific observation that respiratory illnesses are hard to provide a "final" vaccine for. Vaccines have eliminated smallpox, virtually eliminated polio, now prevent chickenpox and shingles, protect against diphtheria and pertussis (which is, yup, a respiratory illness) and tetanus, as well as rubella. (Gotta “boost” those, too.)I wore a big winter jacket today and I was still really cold
— George Conway (@gtconway3d) January 10, 2022
coats are a scam by Big Wool and the fake news and Dr. Fauci and the democrat party
from now I will take invermectin and viagra and drink pee to stay warm
But the flu? You need a new shot every winter, especially if you're old like Your Humble Host. I understand there's a vaccine for pneumonia, too. Or very nearly so. My mother succumbed to pneumonia weeks before her 90th birthday. I say "succumbed" because she had congestive heart failure, was in stage 4 kidney failure, and was a "brittle diabetic," to the point of missing a meal or an insulin injection 3 times a day, could drop her blood sugar to single digits and bring on fits of dementia that I never could get a doctor to believe were caused by diabetes. It was pneumonia that got her 3 years ago, and now I hear there's a vaccine for that. So I can't make a blanket statement about all respiratory illnesses, but the comparison to influenza holds up, too. I suppose the answer lies in influenza being, like the common cold, a family of diseases; whereas pneumonia, like polio, is more singular. I'm not a doctor, don't take my medical advice.
Because a flu shot won't keep you from getting the flu like a polio vaccine will keep you from getting polio. I seldom get the flu anyway, but I understand a seasonal vaccine makes the incidence milder and less likely to be serious/deadly. You know, kinda like wearing a coat when it's cold outside. You may not be warm; but you're warmer than without the coat.
And you're more likely to be "tracked" with the coat, because you probably have your cell phone in a pocket....
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