this post was submitted on 05 Dec 2023
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Vaccines can be delivered through the skin using ultrasound. This method doesn’t damage the skin and eliminates the need for painful needles. To create a needle-free vaccine, Darcy Dunn-Lawless at the University of Oxford and his colleagues mixed vaccine molecules with tiny, cup-shaped proteins. They then applied liquid mixture to the skin of mice and exposed it to ultrasound – like that used for sonograms – for about a minute and a half.

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[–] Lemminary@lemmy.world 6 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

You're talking in such broad strokes that it'd take an entire essay to dissect what you're saying.

In short, there are areas of government and industry where corruption is a problem and others where it's not, and yet regulation is still the norm. You frame it like it's not that way at all and structure your argument around that. The reality is more complex with many other actors:

we're supposed to believe they have our best interest in mind?

Yes. Neither big pharma nor the government are calling the shots all on their own. It's not just business at play but public health along with the entire field of medicine and the research body. You're completely ignoring the history of medicine and how it has shaped our global health sector.

Epidemiologists around the world have been warning us about pandemics for decades, especially about coronaviruses since SARS hit Asia. These viruses are ancient and their potential is well studied. Only their mechanisms of infection are new.

Like, why now?

Because evolution happened right in front of our eyes and we happened to have a technology ready for it. mRNA vaccines have been 30 years in the making. Shit happened and we were the lucky winners. This is how history goes.

Why am I supposed to trust that what they say is safe and effective is actually that?

Because of science. Big effort is put into this by independent bodies by microbiologist, pharmacists, geneticists/molecular biologists, chemists, immunologists, etc. advancing their individual careers. Countless hours of labor has gone into making the technology possible and also painstakingly understanding the microbiology that makes it all possible. I think this arguably and easily goes back to the 70s. It's not new and it's not just one group behind this, even if only three people got the Nobel Prize for it within the last year.

drugs that have been used and studied for decades have been pulled of the shelf because it turns out it does more harm than good

Yes, and also many hundreds of others have endured and will continue to be safe within reason. The list of essential medications is incredibly long.

As the saying goes, "if it can't harm you, it can't cure you," because it means it doesn't interact with your body in any way.

The reasons for pulling drugs out of stores are incredibly varied and you can't just dump them all into one bucket.

One of those reasons is human error, another is uncertainty and yet another is lack of knowledge, among so many others. Not everything is a conspiracy.

Instead, be grateful that our pharmacovigillance is working and that safer drugs are being made with new tech, like the mRNA vaccines.

the covid vaccine isn't nearly as effective

Because of evolution. It's an evolutionary arms race against a virus with a short mutation cycle that branches off into variants quicker than we can adjust our drugs. If the virus didn't change, it'd have been exterminated the first year of the vaccines.

Please let me know if I need to clarify, correct or expand on anything above. I'm happy to provide credible sources where needed.