The Pfizer vaccine for example is stored super cold at a facility (-80°C).
Then a vaccination site can choose the amount if vials they need for the day. There they are thawed to 2°C and can be stored in a refrigerator at the vaccination site for 5 days.
When someone comes in for the vaccination the vial gets out of the refrigerator, is warmed up to room temperature and then diluted. Now they have six hours to use the diluted vial.
All things you can read up. So, you claimed that they throw them out, when they can be stored for either 5 days or six hours at the vaccination site? Which one is it?
You really think that a vaccine site can't find enough people in Canada within 5 days, before the vial goes bad? A vial has enough for six doses. Remember in what country we currently are.
And the Astrazeneca vaccine has a shelf life of six months in a regular refrigerator. No super cold storage, nothing.
There are two steps.
The Pfizer vaccine for example is stored super cold at a facility (-80°C).
Then a vaccination site can choose the amount if vials they need for the day. There they are thawed to 2°C and can be stored in a refrigerator at the vaccination site for 5 days.
When someone comes in for the vaccination the vial gets out of the refrigerator, is warmed up to room temperature and then diluted. Now they have six hours to use the diluted vial.
All things you can read up. So, you claimed that they throw them out, when they can be stored for either 5 days or six hours at the vaccination site? Which one is it?
You really think that a vaccine site can't find enough people in Canada within 5 days, before the vial goes bad? A vial has enough for six doses. Remember in what country we currently are.
And the Astrazeneca vaccine has a shelf life of six months in a regular refrigerator. No super cold storage, nothing.