Germany has issued what appears to be the strongest recommendation anywhere for the mixing of Covid-19 vaccines on efficacy grounds. https://t.co/iGPZwkeUID
— CNN International (@cnni) July 2, 2021
CNN: Germany issues world's strongest recommendation for mixing COVID vaccines
— Sputnik V (@sputnikvaccine) July 2, 2021
Vaccines mix&match is becoming a hot topic in global media as more vaccine makers & regulators realize advantages of this approach, pioneered by #SputnikV over 1 year ago
?https://t.co/2v3S7fFObu
Germany has issued what appears to be the strongest recommendation anywhere for the mixing of Covid-19 vaccines on efficacy grounds. https://t.co/Ysh3fzzTca
— CNN International (@cnni) July 2, 2021
Mixing the poison to make poison itself more poisonous.https://t.co/y5srllmsAF
— Daniel Ananda Pradipta (@AnandaPradip) July 2, 2021
Germany issues world's strongest recommendation for mixing Covid-19 vaccines
— Amit Paranjape (@aparanjape) July 2, 2021
Chancellor Merkel helped pave the way for mixed vaccine use when she received the Moderna shot in June as her second dose following a first dose of the AstraZeneca vaccine.https://t.co/Eo0qncv7SZ
A common part of the stories we heard Monday involved the reluctance of doctors to acknowledge that their symptoms may be related to their vaccines.
— Senator Ron Johnson (@SenRonJohnson) July 2, 2021
That's why I've written letters to #Pfizer & #Moderna to ask these health issues be thoroughly researched. https://t.co/jGBzD0CaPl
Unvaccinated teenagers risk turning schools into viral reservoirs, writes Anjana Ahuja.
— Financial Times (@FinancialTimes) July 2, 2021
The UK cannot achieve herd immunity against Covid-19 without vaccinating its over-12s https://t.co/liVc1LNa54
Unjabbed teenagers risk turning schools into viral reservoirs https://t.co/KGZdI5hhfL via @financialtimes
— SonaliRanade (@sonaliranade) July 2, 2021
Teenagers should get vaccinated to avoid spreading Covid-19 or cause mutations of the virus, writes science commentator Anjana Ahujahttps://t.co/9YuwWfw1HN
— Financial Times (@FinancialTimes) July 2, 2021
'Herd immunity requires about 85 per cent of the population to be immune, and children make up 21 per cent of the UK population. In short, the UK’s “vaccine wall” has a large, teen-shaped hole in it.' @anjahuja here: https://t.co/TsxkqDL39d via @financialtimes
— Anne-Sylvaine Chassany (@ChassNews) July 2, 2021
Unjabbed teenagers risk turning schools into viral reservoirs https://t.co/b00YACFTiW | opinion
— Financial Times (@FT) July 2, 2021