I’m confused… In his data set the deaths are 1.5-3x higher in the control group? As for the adverse reactions of grade 3 or grade 4, they are defined as items like head aches and rashes at the injection site that might be of certain length or size (he uses the word severe does not equal serious-serious requires hospitalization, severe is a blanket term-the difference is explained in link below from 2018). That would make logical sense as 1 is injecting an active compound into the body which illicit an immune response while the other is a sterile solution that is specifically used to NOT illicit any response (control). All of those reactions are detailed in the data released by the NEJM.
https://case.edu/cancer/sites/case.edu.cancer/files/2018-06/Adverse-Effects.pdf
I’m confused… In his data set the deaths are 1.5-3x higher in the control group? As for the severe reactions of grade 3 or grade 4, they are defined as items like head aches and rashes at the injection site that might be of certain length or size (severe does not equal serious, the difference is explained in link below from 2018). That would make logical sense as 1 is injecting an active compound into the body which illicit an immune response while the other is a sterile solution that is specifically used to NOT illicit any response (control). All of those reactions are detailed in the data released by the NEJM.
https://case.edu/cancer/sites/case.edu.cancer/files/2018-06/Adverse-Effects.pdf
I’m confused… In his data set the deaths are 1.5-3x higher in the control group? As for the severe reactions of grade 3 or grade 4 are also defined as items like head aches and rashes at the injection site that might be of certain length or size (severe does not equal serious, the difference is explained in link below from 2018). That would make logical sense as 1 is injecting an active compound into the body which illicit an immune response while the other is a sterile solution that is specifically used to NOT illicit any response (control). All of those reactions are detailed in the data released by the NEJM.
https://case.edu/cancer/sites/case.edu.cancer/files/2018-06/Adverse-Effects.pdf
I’m confused… In his data set the deaths are 1.5-3x higher in the control group? As for the severe reactions of grade 3 or grade 4 are also defined as items like head aches and rashes at the injection site that might be of certain length or size (severe does not equal serious, the difference is explained in link below from 2018). That would make logical sense as 1 is injecting an active compound into the body which illicit an immune response while the other is a sterile solution that is specifically used to NKT illicit any response (control). All of those reactions are detailed in the data released by the NEJM.
https://case.edu/cancer/sites/case.edu.cancer/files/2018-06/Adverse-Effects.pdf