The people who are going to be prioritized
to receive the vaccines
are healthcare workers
who are on the front lines,
as well as anybody
who works in a hospital,
Skilled nursing facilities
account for about 6% of the population,
but almost 40% of the deaths due to COVID.
So these are very high-risk individuals
for bad outcomes from COVID.
It looks like it's the same
kind of side effects
that you would get from influenza
or a tetanus shot.
You get a sore arm for a day or two,
maybe a headache or fatigue,
and then that goes away.
There's no way that you can get COVID
from the coronavirus vaccine.
There's absolutely no way.
It's just a small fragment of the RNA
that encodes for a small portion
of the spike protein.
So it doesn't replicate,
it can't replicate,
and it can't cause COVID.
We're going to have to be masking
and social distancing
for the foreseeable future.
When we'll be able to stop masking
and social distancing
is when we achieve
some level of herd immunity
within our communities.
That's going to take 60 to 70%
of the population to be immune.
Right now, through infection,
if people are immune after infection,
which we're still not sure,
there's been less than 10% of people
in the US who have been infected.
And then when the vaccine comes out,
it's going to come out
in limited quantities,
and so we're not going to be able
to vaccinate everybody all at once.
So we anticipate that we will be able
to achieve that 60 to 70% immunity
either through infection plus immunization
in maybe the middle of 2021,
maybe the end of 2021.
We'll just have to see.
There are three main vaccines,
and two of them
are messenger RNA vaccines,
mRNA,
and those are the ones
produced by Pfizer as well as Moderna.
Those vaccines, what they are,
is a fragment of the messenger RNA
that encodes for a certain portion
of the spike protein of the coronavirus.
That's the vaccine.
So when that is given to us,
then our own cells make that protein,
just a fragment of that protein,
and then we have an immune
response to that protein.
That's how they work to develop immunity.
The other vaccine is similar,
the Oxford AstraZeneca vaccine.
it's a non replicating adenovirus vector
that again has a fragment
of the spike protein,
and so then we get
an immune response to that.