New research published in the European Journal of Epidemiology has confirmed that getting "vaccinated" for the Wuhan coronavirus (Covid-19) does absolutely nothing to help decrease [.]
A new peer-reviewed study that analyzed 168 countries and 2,947 US counties found that higher vaccination rates were not associated with fewer COVID-19 cases.
“At the country-level, there appears to be no discernable relationship between percentage of population fully vaccinated and new COVID-19 cases in the last 7 day,” researchers concluded in a paper published in the European Journal of Epidemiology. “In fact, the trend line suggests a marginally positive association such that countries with higher percentage of population fully vaccinated have higher COVID-19 cases per 1 million people.”
People living with a child attending in-person schooling have high risk of COVID-19
People living with a child who attends school in-person have an increased risk of reporting evidence of COVID-19, but teacher masking, symptom screening, and other mitigation measures in schools may be able to minimize that excess risk, suggests a study led by researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
For their study, the researchers analyzed nearly 600,000 responses from an ongoing Facebook-based COVID-19 symptom survey in the United States over two periods between November 2020 and February 2021 before vaccines were widely available in the U.S. The researchers found that those living with a child engaged in full-time, in-person pre-K-to-12 schooling were about 38 percent more likely to report COVID-19-like symptoms such as fever, cough, or difficulty breathing, compared to those living with a child schooled exclusively in a home setting.
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People living with a child who attends school in-person have an increased risk of reporting evidence of COVID-19, but teacher masking, symptom screening, and other mitigation measures in schools may be able to minimize that excess risk, suggests a study led by researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
For their study, the researchers analyzed nearly 600,000 responses from an ongoing Facebook-based COVID-19 symptom survey in the United States over two periods between November 2020 and February 2021 before vaccines were widely available in the U.S. The researchers found that those living with a child engaged in full-time, in-person pre-K-to-12 schooling were about 38 percent more likely to report COVID-19-like symptoms such as fever, cough, or difficulty breathing, compared to those living with a child schooled exclusively in a home setting.
Do Covid-19 vaccines stop coronavirus transmission? Here s what research says.
Pfizer/BioNTech and
Moderna not only prevent people who are exposed to the virus from contracting Covid-19, but also prevent them from spreading the virus to others and some experts say public health messaging should start reflecting that benefit.
A crucial question: How well do the vaccines prevent asymptomatic infections?
When federal health authorities authorized the first Covid-19 vaccines late last year, they acted based on evidence proving that vaccinated people were far less likely than unvaccinated people to develop Covid-19 symptoms.
But as public health officials emphasized at the time, there wasn t enough evidence to determine whether the vaccines also prevented people from developing asymptomatic coronavirus infections. That matters because, at least in theory, a vaccinated person with an asymptomatic infection could still transmit the coronavirus to others.