Early in the scamdemic, I tried to contact medical doctors to ask if the following procedure could be a way to immunize against covid: Withdraw some blood from a person, inoculate it with a few covid "cells", let the person's immune system (at least what is in blood) develop antibodies to it, kill off the virus in the blood sample, then inject it back into the person, where they would have antibodies ready if needed in the future. I got no response from about 3 or 4 attempts (contacting medical research facilities). Now, I'm thinking, what would happen if just 2 or 3 covid "cells" were injected into a person? Since it is a respiratory virus, wouldn't it easily be taken care of when in the blood, resulting in antibodies that could fight it if it ever was introduced into the respiratory system? I hope someone here has some expertise/insight on this idea.
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I’m not a doctor, but I know enough to know this doesn’t work. There isn’t an “immune system” in the blood. Yes, I know there are white blood cells, but once you’ve withdrawn the blood from the body, it won’t react the same way to the virus as it would if the blood were still in the body. It’s a much more complicated system.
Agreed. Bone marrow is an necessary part of the short and long term immune response.
Correct, Covid19 would have to be introduced directly into the person's body so the body would initiate an immune response. We don't need this agent disguised as a vaccine to treat this.
Covid is the disease state.
SARS-COV 2 is the name of the never isolated virus
you are correct, I was simplifying the semantics of said virus.
Gotcha!