It's pretty impressive that y'all are wrong about literally everything literally all the time.
(media.omegacanada.win)
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Smallpox and Chickenpox, Measles and Polio
Yes, they do. Chickenpox is a mutation of a herpes virus.
No, they don't. They get shingles which can look like like chicken pox. It's the same virus (varicella zoster) which causes both and shingles is what someone gets after they have a stressor or immune-response to something else or an acute immuno-suppression and have a flare-up of varicella zoster production.
No, it doesn't. Chickenpox does not become shingles. Chickenpox does not cause Chickenpox. lol
See above.
And it doesn't work. Why? You can develop shingles multiple times and therefor surviving the disease offers no resistance, thus a vaccine derived from the varicella zoster virus will not provide resistance or immunity.
STOP READING THINGS WRITTEN BY PEOPLE WHO THINK ADULT TYPE 2 DIABETES CAN ONLY BE MANAGED WITH INSULIN; THESE ARE THE SAME PEOPLE WHO BELIEVED FOR 100 YEARS THAT STEROIDS AND REMOVAL OF PARTS OF THE DIGESTIVE TRACT WOULD RESOLVE PEPTIC ULCERS THEY DID NOT KNOW WERE CAUSED BY Helicobacter pylori AND DEMONIZED, STRIPPED OF HIS MEDICAL LICENSE AND SOUGHT TO IMPRISON THE MAN WHO PROVED IT. Why? Hospitals and surgeons and drug companies earned way too much money by treating ulcers for 5 - 8 years (before a patient died) to risk losing it over a $40 antibiotic prescription.
Most pharmaceutical companies don't care about developing new drugs anymore; vaccines are made and sold without liability or mandatory small group testing or government oversight into results.
Pardon the pun, but I can't stomach reading anymore of your reply than is written above in my reply because you people are so f'n stupid that I need to wonder how you have not run yourselves over with your own cars (assuming you are allowed to drive).
Nope. It's a member of the same family of viruses, not a mutation: "Of the more than 100 known herpesviruses, 8 routinely infect only humans: herpes simplex virus types 1 and 2, varicella-zoster virus, cytomegalovirus, Epstein-Barr virus, human herpesvirus 6 (variants A and B), human herpesvirus 7, and Kaposi's sarcoma virus or human herpesvirus 8."
Yes they do. Johns Hopkins: "Very rarely, a second case of chickenpox does happen.".
Yes it does. "Shingles (also known as herpes zoster) is a viral infection caused by a reactivation of the varicella-zoster virus (VZV) that causes chickenpox (varicella). It presents as a painful, blistering rash. After someone has had chickenpox, the virus will stay dormant in the dorsal root ganglia."
Fixed that for you.
Rarely. "Usually, people have shingles only once in their lives."
So if you want to carry this discussion on you'd better bring some science. Further production of your unsupported opinions will simply be labelled as such.
Chickenpox is a mutation of a herpes virus
Nope. It's a member of the same family of viruses, not a mutation:
**They are the same family of viruses because they are all mutations of the original, whatever that was, and we may never know, as it may have died-out 100,000 years or more ago.
No, they don't.
I knew where you got your answer the first time.
They make a lot of mistakes.
What part of "Shingles looks like Chickenpox" did you not understand?
This is how and why Shingles is misdiagnosed as Chicken pox.
But many other things are also misdiagnosed as Chicken pox
and most Chicken pox diagnosis is not done by a qualified physician
(THE LAST PLACE WE WANT A KID WITH POX IS AT THE HOSPITAL OR CLINIC
WHERE THEY CAN SPREAD IT TO US AND OTHER PATIENTS[unless high fever, vomiting)
but rather a parent who may instead see
... and assume the child has Chicken pox, especially if another kid
they know was recently diagnosed with pox (probably by a parent).
The only time it would even be conceivable that Chickepox "could"
occur twice would be if a child's first contaction of the disease
was when the child was under 2 years old and did not yet have an
adaptive immune system and rather only its innate immune system
(so it could not produce antibodies of its own, the reason why
Covid shots in infants is absolutely negligent and malpractice)
AND the mother never and grandmother never had Chicken pox,
but Chickenpox would probably result in death for that baby.
(The dead child will not grow up to get Chickenpox again. You get it?)
In an average year, Johns Hopkins hospital ears over $7 Billion and is named as a defendant in about 20 medical malpractice cases in Maryland. The most common types of medical malpractice claims against Johns Hopkins are misdiagnosis and surgical error.
https://www.millerandzois.com/medical-malpractice/maryland-hospital-malpractice-lawyer/johns-hopkins-hospital-malpractice-claims/
No, it doesn't.
No, it doesn't!
Chickenpox and Shingles are two different diseases derived from the same virus.
What part of that did you not undertand the first time I wrote it?
(eg. Though a bacteria, Mycobacterium avium paratuberculosis can cause either inflammatory Rheumatoid arthritis OR the inflammatory digestive tract disease "Crohns" depending on genetics and immune system. That is often determined by genetics, so we see CLUSTERS of one or the other in rural areas where there are family ties.)
You can get Chickenpox and never get Shingles.
You can get Shingles, never having developed Chickenpox.
Shingles will be prima facie misdiagnosed as Chickenpox if:
Generaly, definitive testing is not done because there is
NO TREATMENT for the disease anyway, only treatment for the symptoms
such as itching (calomine or petroleum jelly) fever and sometimes pain
can be managed with Acetaminophen.
There's a different vaccine for shingles (than for Chickenpox) And I claim it doesn't work without proof. Fixed that for you.
Did you? I've seen 3 kids with Chickenpox "vaccinated against Chickenpox at age 1 and 5 (school mandatory)." I've seen two senior adults with Shingles "vaccinated against Shingles".
The common trends were development of the disease within about 2 weeks of vaccination and that clearly neiter vaccine worked and at prima facie it would seem they caused the disease.
And let's not forget about this:
https://medicine-matters.blogs.hopkinsmedicine.org/2016/06/johns-hopkins-universitys-collaboration-with-pfizers-centers-for-therapeutic-innovation-cti/
Like I said: given your lack of expertise your unsupported opinions carry little weight. You're welcome to them, but no one is obligated to carry on a conversation with the voices in your head. You should verify them with data from the real world before you start spreading them around.
Moving on to the ones you do support...
The US is a litigious society. Medical malpractice suits are common as rainwater. So it's not unusual for Johns Hopkins to be sued. It's still a great institution and your own link says so: "If you are a Maryland resident, you should consider yourself lucky to have access to this unbelievable institution. Calling Hopkins a big and great hospital is like saying LeBron James is good at basketball. This is a great hospital. No one disagrees with this.
It's from 2016 and says "Johns Hopkins University has been invited to join the group of over 25 institutions who are collaborating with Pfizer’s Centers for Therapeutic Innovation (CTI) network, which is designed to help bridge the gap between early scientific discovery and its translation into new medicines through public-private resource sharing."
If this seems to you like proof that Johns Hopkins research findings are to be dismissed then it's just more proof that you have an uninformed amateur's view of science.
I have not taken a Covid vaccine.
I have not had Covid.
Nearly everyone I know who has been "fully vaccinated and is up to date with all boosters as of this month" has had Covid, one of them three times.
You?