I can guess without a doubt all the people advocating for natural immunity over a vaccine rollout, over boosters, over whatever, haven't. Because it's ideological. There's no data provided on the longevity of natural immunity. There's no demographical analysis of the natural immunity group vs. others (and the logistical impact on therefore prioritising boosters for different at-risk demographics). There's no science. It's purely ideological. Until such a time as I see these posters actually providing some kind of actual science, that judgement stands.
But you'll notice the burden of proof, here? You're insisting that someone prove that they're safe rather than we prove that they're dangerous. With proper goalposts, the science is fundamentally the same, but the
incentive to conduct the science shifts. And the zeitgeist controls the funding and the narrative. Given that bodily integrity is on the line AND given that public danger is on the line, you'd think that researching this stuff would be obvious to both sets of stakeholders. The hypothesis that natural infection (or types of natural infection) would be
as good as the vaccine in preventing re-infection is sound. We would have to do real science to post-hoc explain why one was better than the other, I don't think either being a winner would be a surprise.
Honestly, at this stage, we should be running challenge trials on the two cohorts. There are some simple and obvious cohorts. Time-since-infection (plus severity of infection), time-since-vaccination (plus severity of side-effects),
Now, my goalposts would be "just show that you're statistically less dangerous than the least-effective (accepted) vaccine", although that's merely a practical application. If a variant comes out that overcomes the most effective vaccine, I'd expect lockdowns based on danger not on what was previously "good enough".
I've never had to dress-down anyone here about
seeking natural immunity, that's conversations elsewhere.
I have some perspective on the nurses who are hesitant. When you're a nurse, you are
constantly exposed to the faults in the system, where someone in authority forces you to shut up or even help hide some mistake further up the ladder. You have seen people misdiagnosed, mistreated, underserved, etc. your whole career. And, because we don't have a proper safety net, they actually do have to choose about whether to shut up or not. It's literally the same reason why good cops cannot really stand their ground against bad cops, they cannot afford to (or think they can't).
I have zero problem with mandates (I've likened it to conscription earlier, where just sometimes it's necessary), but any region that doesn't factor in natural immunity (and failing to research it is the same thing) is going to have a huge problem with appearing to be 'anti-science'. Top that off with bad incentives to get tested and the fact that some people want to mandate vaccinations of financially vulnerable people or minorities, and there's a huge landmine.
mmhh.... I thought that the current pandemic situation down there is quite terrible right now, and they still have a big wave going on.
"Big" will be relative, but they definitely got an explosion of cases that surprised a lot of people. I like to compare Sweden to Israel, because the population sizes are similar and both did something 'unusual' in the covid-19 response.
I think it's pretty obvious looking at the numbers that their cases are coming down, but they'd passed Sweden for at least a bit recently (in total cases). They're pretty good evidence for the booster being useful.
https://ourworldindata.org/coronavirus/country/israel?country=ISR~SWE