an expert GP at calming fears
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General Practioners exploit fears? Is that why people who live with access to western medicine live longer than the rest of the world?
an expert GP at calming fears
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By April 1955 20,000 volunteers, 20,000 doctors, and 1.8 million school children were immunized, and a terrifying disease was on the run. True to Salk’s prediction, polio was eradicated — at least in the United States — by 1979.
At first, the vaccine developed by Salk and Dr. Albert Sabin at the University of Pittsburgh was injected. Later, it was given by Sabin vaccine-that sugar cube dosed with serum and taken orally.
VACCINES IN HISTORY:
I recall being about 9 years old, in the school auditorium, when it was Vaccines for Polio day. Actually, all I recall is saying "no, no, no", and refusing to take it and causing younger kids to cryI caused such a fuss, that I think they simply tried to move me out of there.
I don't think I had it, until the sugar pill came out, another form of the vaccine.
Dr. Salk refused to take a patent out, saying he couldn't imagine charging for what was a life saving vaccine.
1955 was also a Kalasarpa year!
https://whyy.org/segments/60th-anniversary-of-polio-vaccine-first-administered-in-pa/
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If our governments REALLY want to increase the number of people willing to get vaccinated, they have to shrink the number of adverse, allergic reactions to the vaccines, instead of ignoring them.
And the ONLY way to do that, is to put some REAL EFFORT and ENOUGH MONEY into developing RELIABLE PRE-TESTS to determine if an INDIVIDUAL is at all likely to suffer an adverse, allergic reaction to one or more of the vaccines currently in use.
The Pharmaceutical companies are NOT going to do this research on their own--they have to be PUSHED into doing it.
Haven't had the huge adverse reaction thing here. Also people aren't necessarily afraid of an allergic reaction. They think the injection is to control them, or kill them, or that they'll become magnetic, its part of the New World Order, they'll become zombies etc.
If it kills someone, that's definitely considered an adverse reaction!
I hear you though. They're brainwashed against it, and there's no reasoning with them.
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June Almeida discovered the first coronavirus
the coronavirus was identified almost sixty years ago
Born June Hart, Almeida was a daughter of a bus driver
a bright student with ambitions to attend university
but financial crisis led her to leave the school at the age of 16 years
says a report by National Geographic.
After dropping out of school, she started working as a lab technician
at Glasgow Royal Infirmary
where she used microscopes to help analyse tissue samples
June moved to a similar job at St Bartholomew’s Hospital in London
where she met Venezuelan artist Enriques Almeida and they got married.
They immigrated to Canada
and June started working at the Ontario Cancer Institute in Toronto
where she pioneered a technique called electron microscopy
that blasts a specimen with a beam of electrons
and then records the particles’ interactions with the specimen’s surface.
This technique brought scientists an image with much finer, smaller detail.
However, finding if a tiny blob is a virus, a cell, or something else
was still a challenge.
For this, Almeida used antibodies
taken from previously infected individuals to pinpoint the virus.
As antibodies are drawn to their antigen-counterparts
when Almeida introduced tiny particles coated in antibodies
they would congregate around the virus, alerting her to its presence
Thus enabling clinicians to use electron microscopy
as a way to diagnose viral infections in patients.
In 1964, Almeida met Dr David Tyrell
whose team had collected samples of a flu-like virus
they labeled as “...B814...” from a sick schoolboy in Surrey.
Tyrell sent the samples to Almeida
with the hope that her microscope technique could identify the virus.
With the sample from Tyrrell, Almeida was confident
that they were looking at a new group of viruses.
One day, Almeida, Tyrrell, and Almeida’s supervisor
gathered to discuss their findings.
They looked into the images of the virus
and
inspired by its halo-like structure
they decided on the Latin word for crown, corona
In this way
the coronavirus was identified almost sixty years ago
and is currently roaring back into focus
during the present pandemic.
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