Reality: COVID-19 vaccines are not responsible for an HIV variant circulating in the Netherlands. A misrepresented study actually says the variant likely emerged in the 1990s.
Myth: “COVID-19 vaccines make you more susceptible to HIV/AIDS”
Reality: There is no UK report claiming vaccines increase the incidence of AIDS. Vaccines don't lower your T cell count causing immunosuppression. Vaccines boost T cell response!
Myth: “COVID-19 vaccines make you more susceptible to the common cold”
Reality: COVID-19 vaccines do not weaken your body’s ability to fight off the cold and flu. But, reports of more severe cold symptoms this season are factual, so what’s the deal? 👇
Myth: “The vaccinated make fewer antibodies than the unvaccinated”
Reality: A UK report was misrepresented. Nucleocapsid antibody (N antibody) levels appear lower in individuals infected and vaccinated vs. infected but unvaccinated. What’s the deal?👇
This actually means vaccines are doing their job! Vaccines help limit the impact of the virus by reducing viral replication. Less virus means fewer N antibodies.
An infection + vaccine offers excellent hybrid immunity.
Reality: An EU health official’s comments were misrepresented. He cautioned against scheduling boosters too close together, which could lead to a smaller immune *response*, not weaken the immune *system*.
We already know that increasing the interval between doses increases its effectiveness. There is no evidence that additional boosters will overwhelm or weaken the immune response.
Astroturf? It looks like real grass, but it’s fake.
Similarly, Astroturfing is a practice where a message *appears* to have authentic grassroots support… but is really operated by just a few individuals.
Anecdotal reports find reinfections happening weeks apart. Experts expect it is possible to catch Omicron more than once. Scientists are currently assessing how often reinfections occur and who is at most risk.
For example, the pie chart above only gives raw hospitalization numbers, but does not give the base rate data (i.e. the number of people vaccinated in the whole population).
We’ve heard this line of thinking from our friends and family. But we’re here to tell you that getting COVID-19 isn’t inevitable and now isn’t the time to throw our hands in the air.
We get that talking about “flattening the curve” gives serious 2020 déjà vu. 😵💫
But it’s truly what we need to do! Healthcare workers are dealing with record case numbers while severely short staffed (3, 4). Slowing the spread matters.