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Scientist claims Covid might lead to higher cancer rates

Here’s another interesting study on COVID and potential increased risk of pancreatic cancer:

Sounds like another reason to get vaccinated.
 
That’s not true.

You really know little about vaccination, don’t you?
It is true. Vaccination only trains the immune system to better fight a disease after you’ve been infected so that you’re less likely to die. It does not prevent you from becoming infected.
 
It is true. Vaccination only trains the immune system to better fight a disease after you’ve been infected so that you’re less likely to die. It does not prevent you from becoming infected.
Again, no.

I could provide references, educational materials, or studies, but I’m guessing your ignorance runs deep to the point where you couldn’t even understand them if you wanted to try.
 
Again, no.
Again, yes.

“In general, most vaccines do not completely prevent infection but do prevent the infection from spreading within the body and from causing disease.”


The COVID vaccines do not prevent infection. They make infection less severe and reduce hospitalization and mortality. That was the goal.
 
Again, yes.

“In general, most vaccines do not completely prevent infection but do prevent the infection from spreading within the body and from causing disease.”


The COVID vaccines do not prevent infection. They make infection less severe and reduce hospitalization and mortality. That was the goal.
I'll take it a step further, your body HAS TO GET INFECTED FIRST with covid, for the vaccine to work
 
One thing is for sure, colon cancer cases went up drastically right after Covid started.
Now the question becomes, is it just the virus, is it the vaccine, or is it the virus + the vaccine thats causing it.
Or is it just a statistical outlier which will correct itself within a few years


cancer.jpg
 
Again, yes.

“In general, most vaccines do not completely prevent infection but do prevent the infection from spreading within the body and from causing disease.”


The COVID vaccines do not prevent infection. They make infection less severe and reduce hospitalization and mortality. That was the goal.
I think you don’t know the word ‘completely’?

Just because something doesn’t work 100% of the time doesn’t mean it doesn’t work at all.
 
I'll take it a step further, your body HAS TO GET INFECTED FIRST with covid, for the vaccine to work
You seem to be confused by the word ‘infected’. Exposure does not equate to infection. Expression of disease is infection. And the vaccines prevent expression of disease- I.e. infection.
 
You seem to be confused by the word ‘infected’. Exposure does not equate to infection. Expression of disease is infection. And the vaccines prevent expression of disease- I.e. infection
Right, but I'm saying the virus has to enter the body at some point so the antibodies (T-cells, white blood cells) can do their work
 
So a guy who has made billions from inventing cancer drugs says, without any actual clinical research, that Covid is increasing cancer rates and we're suppose to take that at face value?
I don't think so.
 
Right, but I'm saying the virus has to enter the body at some point so the antibodies (T-cells, white blood cells) can do their work
Which *doesn’t* mean infected.

The vaccine prevents you from getting the disease. Getting infected.

in your interpretation, it’s like saying you are infected with hundreds of different things all the time because your immune system continually is combating bacteria that live inside and on you from indiscriminately replicating. It’s a really absurd way to frame infectious disease.
 
Which *doesn’t* mean infected.

The vaccine prevents you from getting the disease. Getting infected.

in your interpretation, it’s like saying you are infected with hundreds of different things all the time because your immune system continually is combating bacteria that live inside and on you from indiscriminately replicating. It’s a really absurd way to frame infectious disease.
But it then becomes a question of whether the covid virus entering the body is enough to increase cancer rates, or does a person need to get infected to increase their risk of contracting cancer later in life.

Thats the point I was getting to
 
Here’s another interesting study on COVID and potential increased risk of pancreatic cancer:

Covid 19 seems to be one nasty virus. I suspect we will find more about the long term effects of covid 19 on the human body as time goes on.
 
But it then becomes a question of whether the covid virus entering the body is enough to increase cancer rates, or does a person need to get infected to increase their risk of contracting cancer later in life.

Thats the point I was getting to
Seems like you’d want to hear about the theoretical mechanism.

Yet no one has bothered to reference the study the OP was supposedly talking about.
 
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