ChatterBank0 min ago
Anybody Want £3,500?
22 Answers
Answers
If someone offers me all that dough To catch a virus, I'll say 'no'. I'm fond of living, so there's no doubt That those nice folks should count me out.
17:40 Mon 09th Mar 2020
Am I the only person here who would happily volunteer for the trial (if my age, my pre-existing medial problems and my medication for such conditions didn't prevent it)?
If you're given a 'weakened' version of a virus then, even if the vaccine that's being trialled doesn't work, your body will develop its own antibodies which will leave you immune to the 'full' version of the virus. (That's the way that the MMR vaccine works. It's the way that the chickenpox vaccine works and it's the way that several 'foreign travel' vaccines, such as that for yellow fever, work).
So, while everyone else in the country might be at risk of getting hit by 'full blown' COVID-19 symptoms, those volunteering for the trial can only develop very minor symptoms or, if the vaccine works, none at all.
Therefore, even without any payment at all, volunteering for the trial would seem to be an excellent idea. The three-and-a-half grand is just a nice little bonus ;-)
If you're given a 'weakened' version of a virus then, even if the vaccine that's being trialled doesn't work, your body will develop its own antibodies which will leave you immune to the 'full' version of the virus. (That's the way that the MMR vaccine works. It's the way that the chickenpox vaccine works and it's the way that several 'foreign travel' vaccines, such as that for yellow fever, work).
So, while everyone else in the country might be at risk of getting hit by 'full blown' COVID-19 symptoms, those volunteering for the trial can only develop very minor symptoms or, if the vaccine works, none at all.
Therefore, even without any payment at all, volunteering for the trial would seem to be an excellent idea. The three-and-a-half grand is just a nice little bonus ;-)