worldkey.io is one of the many independent Mastodon servers you can use to participate in the fediverse.
Discussion of Disney history, theme parks, music, movies, and related topics.

Administered by:

Server stats:

102
active users

#covid

93 posts64 participants0 posts today

The mRNA technology behind coronavirus vaccines is now being used to create bespoke vaccines for cancer patients.

"Cancer vaccines weren’t a proper field of research before the pandemic. There was nothing. Apart from one exception, pretty much every clinical trial had failed. With the pandemic, however, we proved that mRNA vaccines were possible.

mRNA cancer vaccines work by giving the body instructions to make a harmless piece of a cancer-related protein. This trains the immune system to recognize and attack cancer cells carrying that protein. Think of it like a training manual for security guards. The vaccine gives the immune system a guide on what cancer looks like, so it knows exactly who to watch for and remove.

Going from mRNA Covid vaccines to mRNA cancer vaccines is straightforward: same fridges, same protocol, same drug, just a different patient.

In the current trials, we do a biopsy of the patient, sequence the tissue, send it to the pharmaceutical company, and they design a personalized vaccine that’s bespoke to that patient’s cancer. That vaccine is not suitable for anyone else. It’s like science fiction.

The UK was ready. We had fridges and we had world-class manufacturing and research facilities. During the pandemic, we had proven we could open and deliver clinical trials fast. Also, the UK had established a genomic global lead with Genomics England and the 100,000 Genome Project. All doctors and nurses in this country are trained in genomics.

So the UK government signed two partnerships: one with BioNTech to provide 10,000 patients with access to personalized cancer treatments by 2030, and a 10-year investment with Moderna in an innovation and technology center with capacity to produce up to 250 million vaccines. The stars were aligned.

For many years, we believed that research is inherently slow. It used to take 20 years to get a drug to market. Most cancer patients, unfortunately, will succumb by the time a drug gets to market. We showed the world that it could be done in a year if you modernize your process, run parts of the process in parallel, and use digital tools.

We have a trial to stop skin cancer coming back after you cut it out. It’s now completed. We over-recruited again, just like every single one of the trials that we ran, and the trial finished one year ahead of schedule. That’s completely unheard of in cancer trials because they normally run over-long.

What will happen now is that, over the next six to 12 months, we will monitor the people in the trial and work out if there’s a difference between the people who took the cancer vaccine and the ones who didn’t. We’re hoping to have results by the end of the year or beginning of 2026. If it’s successful, we will have invented the first approved personalized mRNA vaccine, within only five years of the first licensed mRNA vaccine for Covid. That’s pretty impressive."

- Dr. Lennard Lee, UK National Health Service oncologist and medical director at the Ellison Institute of Technology in Oxford

wired.com/story/wired-health-l

WIRED · Covid Vaccines Have Paved the Way for Cancer VaccinesBy João Medeiros

How about some promising Covid-vaccine-related news? It's all early on, but it's still nice to see — and maybe buried amidst all the other news.

Nasal COVID-19 vaccine based on WashU technology to enter U.S. clinical trials
medicine.washu.edu/news/nasal-

Newly Discovered Antibody Protects Against All COVID-19 Variants
news.utexas.edu/2024/09/03/new

(Of course, who knows what will happen with any vaccine work and/or availability given this administration.)

WashU Medicine · Nasal COVID-19 vaccine based on WashU technology to enter U.S. clinical trials | WashU MedicineTrial will assess safety, efficacy of next-generation vaccine given via nasal spray, inhalation
Replied in thread

"The act of forgetting has always been a tool of oppression. We cannot adequately resist that which has been revised, erased, or forgotten by our community members. But few will acknowledge that this is happening with COVID. Just as one may utter that “slavery was back then, get over it”, when we use verbiage like “post-pandemic” we are rendering oppression as a static past event rather than an ever-evolving present that shapes our shared future. This tactic has always been useful to those who wish to profit off of our suffering and the cycle will continue to repeat if we do not acknowledge and act on the truth of our current reality. If we do not reckon with our failures to each other around COVID and do the work to remedy it, are we better than those who try to ban our people’s histories’ from the schools? We aid in the crusade to forget every day when we do not consider the pandemic as both current and deadly."

~V. Copeland

forgeorganizing.org/article/re

The ForgeReflecting on COVID, Year 5 - The ForgeVee Copeland, a disabled organizer and former policy analyst details their experience facing the lack of care in movement strategy around surviving the current administration It has been a treacherous five years since the COVID pandemic began.  According to the World Health Organization, more than seven million people across the globe have died from COVID-19, […]

“If we were to see immune damage manifesting at a population level, it would look like what we’re seeing today: big waves of common illnesses. Unusual spikes of uncommon illnesses. Course reversal for previously declining and eliminated illnesses. An unexplained, global wave of sickness.”

thegauntlet.news/p/kids-keep-g

The Gauntlet · Kids keep getting sicker as evidence for COVID immune damage buildsBy Julia Doubleday

We're In This Together!

Renegade Research is on a mission to help people manage and recover from #MECFS and #longCOVID. It is a non-profit 501c3 decentralized organization pioneering #patient and #caregiver-led #research with a focus on ME/CFS, longCOVID and other infection associated chronic illnesses.

Remission Biome is a project of Renegade Research.

✅️ Learn more: renegade-research.org and remissionbiome.org

Replied in thread

@Sidherian #AltText4You screenshot of a post by JustVadersDad: "Some of y'all are out here talking down on people who are anti-vax or otherwise don't believe in science, but you yourself don't wear a mask...
And I just want you to know I look at you the same way you look at anti-vax people.
You're literally ignoring all of the science on Covid that shows how harmful it is to you and the ppl around you. Ignoring how a large % of transmission happens when ppl are pre or asymptomatic.
Get off your moral high horse.
Put a fucking mask on."

Hey did anybody hear anything yesterday to "remember" or "never forget" the day that we entered the global pandemic called #Covid?

It's been 23 years and we still get bombarded with insistence that we never forget 9/11!!

But not one rememberance of Covid.

DEATHS:

7,090,776 - Covid
2,996 - 9/11

ILLNESSES RELATED TO:

65,000,000 - #LongCovid
45,200 - 9/11

If we had a 9/11 every day since March 11, 2020, the total deaths would still not be as many as the deaths from Covid.

Replied in thread

Far-right sister is now ranting about how mom probably got super-COVID from an immigrant that Joe Biden let through the borders. It is impossible to talk about anything without far-right pro-ivermectin sister bringing these views into it.

I included her in the call just so that she knew of mom's condition. Next time, Im just recording the call and sending her the audio.

Replied in thread

Mom is now blaming some other unknown people for not wearing a mask and saying that they probably infected her. No, the irony is not lost on me that she has probably infected many other people.

Mom is somewhere in her 70s. I've noticed that she appears to be developing a decline in making inferences and logical associations. I think this is part of cognitive decline(?).

My sister, who was a pro-ivermectin person, is asking me to get a laundry list of things to cure her.

Replied in thread

Right now, mom is talking about getting a ride to get something else, despite presenting symptoms. My sister is strongly discouraging her from going anywhere and explaining how she can order online and it will be at her door in the morning.

New angle is being tried. She is telling mom that she is more vulnerable and that if she goes out and picks up another infection, she could be worst off. I've volunteered to get the items and leave them at the door.

Sigh, this is too hard.

Continued thread

Today,

Mom: The Dr confirmed that I have full blown COVID

Me: How did you get to the Dr?

Mom: An Uber took me

Internal dialog: Uber will be giving select customers COVID.

Mom: I got some cough medication.

Me: How did you get cough medicine?

Mom: I got someone at the church to take me after service

Internal dialog: Mom shared her infection with the congregation and with a person nice enough to give her a ride. She probably got to church with Uber.

COVID is getting around.

Mom: I have a really bad cold. I've never had a cold like this!

Me: It's probably COVID. Please self isolate.

Mom: I need to go to church to get back a book I lent out!

Me: No, you don't. You might infect someone else. You need to stay home.

Mom: Maybe I will get my neighbor to drive me to Walmart to get some cough medication.

Me: No, you will infect your neighbor and people at Walmart. Stay home.

This story continues a few days later.

I facilitated an online workshop for @freetechproject tonight and it's the first time we tackled technology to fight #Covid (Co2 monitors, air purifiers, #HEPA, #CorsiRosenthal boxes, #NukitTempest, etc) as well as why this is important (what Covid is, how it spreads, etc) and the small (predominantly older) group was very open to the ideas, sincerely inquisitive about the topic, interested in reducing risk, aware of inclusion issues, and sensitive to my own experiences as carer for a partner disabled by Covid. I'm also realising that people genuinely refer to "Covid" in the past tense sometimes because they wrongly associate it with government policy, while at the same time they very clearly understand that #CovidIsNotOver. My point is, keep tackling the topic, and keep giving folks the benefit of the doubt -- humans are of course good at heart and state policies, and obviously the establishment media, may very well indeed not, in fact, reflect people's actual concerns about Covid.

Continued thread

A lot of you may not realize that there are STILL people being affected by #COVID as well as other infection related conditions. My wife is one of them. I still follow many precautions due to her illness. It is not a political statement.