This is Guka - @Okiya & Co May Be Right - Corona Will Spare Nyeuthis...............

Saaaaaaaaaaaaaaaasa ile shida iko, utaskia some negroes have broken into Kemsa warehouses, stolen all the vials of BCG vaccines and spent the whole night drinking them eti wakuwe Last Survivors. Si Kach uliskia walikunywa satanizer 'wakaamka' kama Sleeping Beauty wakiwa morgue? Ngoja uone....................................
 
I'm her
I'm here sir
Pitia hapa kwanza...

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Halafu utuambie vile ulifanya Egypt.
 
Saaaaaaaaaaaaaaaasa ile shida iko, utaskia some negroes have broken into Kemsa warehouses, stolen all the vials of BCG vaccines and spent the whole night drinking them eti wakuwe Last Survivors. Si Kach uliskia walikunywa satanizer 'wakaamka' kama Sleeping Beauty wakiwa morgue? Ngoja uone....................................
Hao walikunywa satanizer
 
How a 100-year-old vaccine for tuberculosis could help fight the novel coronavirus
By Gina Yu, CNN
Updated 5:55 AM EDT, Fri April 10, 2020

(CNN)As researchers scramble to find new drugs and vaccines for Covid-19, a vaccine that is more than a century old has piqued researchers' interests. The Bacillus Calmette-Guerin vaccine -- which was first developed to fight off tuberculosis -- is being studied in clinical trials around the world as a way to fight the novel coronavirus.

The timetable for a coronavirus vaccine is 18 months. Experts say that's risky
The timetable for a coronavirus vaccine is 18 months. Experts say that's risky
Tuberculosis and Covid-19 infection are two very different diseases -- TB is caused by a type of bacteria while Covid-19 is caused by a virus, for starters. But the BCG vaccine might help people build immune responses to things other than TB, causing "off-target effects," according to Dr. Denise Faustman, director of immunobiology at Massachusetts General Hospital and associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School.

"In other words, in clinical trial format, people started picking up positive benefit from getting the vaccine that had nothing to do with tuberculosis," she said. Faustman has studied how the BCG vaccine affects people with Type 1 diabetes for many years. She is interested in how its off-target effects change the immune system in beneficial ways for people with autoimmune diseases such as Type 1 diabetes.


Though the exact mechanism for these off-target effects of the BCG vaccine isn't clear, it's believed that the vaccine can cause a nonspecific boost of the immune response.

CDC removes guidance on drugs touted by Trump to treat coronavirus
CDC removes guidance on drugs touted by Trump to treat coronavirus
There is currently no vaccine or treatments approved by the US Food and Drug Administration for the novel coronavirus. While hopeful that the BCG vaccine will prove to be effective against Covid-19 -- as with any of the treatments and vaccines under development -- Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease specialist at the Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, admits the concept is a bit unconventional.

"I think BCG vaccine is a bit of the equivalent of a Hail Mary pass," said Schaffner. "it's such an outside-the-box concept that one would like to be optimistic, but we'll have to wait and see."

Several countries around the world are beginning human clinical trials to evaluate the BCG vaccine's efficacy, such as Australia and the Netherlands.

Faustman and her colleagues are preparing for trials in Boston, which are currently under a multistep review process. Once approved, she and her team members hope to enroll about 4,000 health care workers into the trial.

The vaccine has been available for more than 100 years and has proved to be relatively safe, Faustman said.

French doctors' proposal to test Covid-19 treatment in Africa slammed as 'colonial mentality'
French doctors' proposal to test Covid-19 treatment in Africa slammed as 'colonial mentality'
"BCG is heralded by the World Health Organization as the safest vaccine ever developed in the world," she said. "Greater than 3 billion people have gotten it."

While several countries, including the United States, do not regularly administer the BCG vaccine, it is still used widely in developing countries.

Researchers have attempted to look at whether these countries with regular BCG vaccine administration have lower rates of Covid-19-related mortality. One study by researchers in New York found an association between universal BCG vaccination policies in countries and reduced morbidity and mortality for Covid-19. The study has not been peer-reviewed or published in a medical journal.

But why has China had high morbidity and mortality with Covid-19 despite a universal BCG policy since the 1950s? The study said China had a weakened policy during the Cultural Revolution in the 1960s and '70s, which might have created "a pool of potential hosts that would be affected by and spread COVID-19."

Also, China has not had as steep of a rise in its curve compared to some other countries without universal policies, such as Italy, Spain and the US, said Faustman. She also added that different strains of the BCG vaccine might have different rates of efficacy.

One of the main limitations of the study is that it compares data from different countries, which have different timelines for Covid-19 and different abilities to test.


"It was a 30,000 foot comparison of the occurrence of Covid-19 infections in countries that were intensely using BCG vaccine, and those that were not," Vanderbilt's Schaffner said. "We shouldn't draw any conclusions from that because ... the countries are very different. And so there may be many other reasons that determine how frequently Covid has occurred in those countries.

"The study provides further encouragement for more specific investigations, such as the clinical trials that are going to take place."
 
I'd like to put my money on this after seeing several reports. Catholic Italy, Spain and Portugal...and to an extent France may not have been very keen on mass vaxes for under fives.....my info is not conclusive as I am still trying to connect the dots.

View attachment 9270
Another key country is Japan, who despite heavy trade and travel with China and delayed lockdown measures, has low numbers.

For us, my bet is that it's a combo of BCG and exposure to the sun. Same case as India.

Allow the self haters to learn. The only images they've consumed are negative towards blacks, and have a culture of 'wewe ni mweuuusiiii' as being a negative thing. Kila mtu huamka time yake.
 
Are they Catholic?
Iran had political turbulence in the years from 1951 to the Islamic Revolution in 1979, a period in which programs like immunization were neglected or nonexistent. A technical working group on immunizations was formed in 1982 and vaccination started as part of its health programs in 1984. cf to Kenya and other countries that mass vaccinations in 1969 to around 1972 and vaccinations as part of regular MCH up to today.
 
Another key country is Japan, who despite heavy trade and travel with China and delayed lockdown measures, has low numbers.

For us, my bet is that it's a combo of BCG and exposure to the sun. Same case as India.

Allow the self haters to learn. The only images they've consumed are negative towards blacks, and have a culture of 'wewe ni mweuuusiiii' as being a negative thing. Kila mtu huamka time yake.
altho kiboko ya india seems as if its still loading
 
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