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There are 8 comments on Pausing J&J Vaccine Rollout Is a Move to Keep Public Trust

  1. What are the benefits of the covid vaccines? Most everyone has already been exposed to the old variants, and the new variants will escape the vaccine just like they do for the flu.

    What are the risks? Well, J&J was absolutely safe (although experimental) just a few days ago… What we will find out 10, 20 years from now? Autoimmune diseases, higher rates of cancer due to increase in inflammation, more deadly course of the subsequent covid infections, who knows?

  2. Well, it’s not like a government/governmental entity has ever lied to The People before .. nothing to fear here .. just stay hidden under your bed until Super Joe gives a thumbs up while wearing his aviator glasses and flashing the million dollar smile

  3. In my view, the decision to “pause” the use of J&J vaccine is an error, given the very facts that Dr. Douam provides. Public health people constantly use the term “safe” to describe the acceptability of an intervention. The statutory standard for drug approval in the U.S. is that the therapy is “safe and effective.” These are, sadly, misleading terms as they are perceived by the public. There are literally no “safe and effective” drugs if one takes these terms literally. The real standard, as those terms are actually applied , is that a substance is safe and effective ENOUGH for its proposed purpose. As a stark example, cancer chemotherapies are poisons when administered to a healthy person, but are medicines when administered to people with cancer. Chemotherapy can, and does, cause deaths. And, they are far from 100% effective. But they do meet the real standard of “safe and effective enough.”

    It is no surprise that Covid vaccines will cause serious side effects to some people. Similarly they are not 100% effective. it should not be news (although it sadly makes headlines) that some vaccinated people will become infected with Covid- that’s what 95% effectiveness means.

    The fact that fewer than 1 in a million J&J recipients had serious side effects and that a small number of people become infected should be used as “teaching moments” to explain to the public what these numbers mean. If there’s ia any argument for “pausing” the use of J&J vaccine, it would be to pause its use for women between the ages of 18 and 46, which is the only population that manifested these extremely rare, serious side effects. There is no science that justifies “pausing” its use for 65yo+ men or women, for example.

    Th

    I fully understand It is hard to explain risks and benefits to the public. Public health must accept its responsibility for that the public’s ignorance and misunderstanding about these concepts.This was a real opportunity to explain how to rationally apply these concepts to making public. If we fail to continue to try to improve public literacy of these concepts, and start to treat the public like adults, public misunderstandings of these concepts will only get worse.

    We must hope there will be no discovery of one-in-a million side effects for the other vaccines currently being administered. Should that occur, we now have a precedent for “pausing” the use of those vaccines, too. At the very least, continuing use of those vaccines will be very difficult to justify to the public who will be no better informed about how “safe and effective” vaccines can have serious side effects and fail to protect a small percentage of recipients from infection.

  4. Pausing is absolutely the correct approach until scientists identify which groups can safely receive the vaccination, especially given that less worrying alternatives exist. It also is key to look past the headline “6 cases in 7 million.” Which less deadly but extremely undesirable vaccine effects are not being aired? I reported to VAERS after my J&J last week produced the worst headache of my healthy 63 years of life, with my brain feeling “damaged” and foggy for another two days. This is certainly the worst reaction I’ve experienced to any vaccine and nothing is known about the potential long-term fallout, including future reactions to “booster” COVID vaccines.

    1. I also had the J&J vaccine. Other than the usual temporary sore arm, I had no reactions. The fact you had a bad reaction and I had no reaction, tells us absolutely nothing about what policy makers should do. Those are simply our stories and nothing more. It is true, and unfortunate, that personal anecdotes often influence others more than actual data, but that is not something we should encourage.

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