The only difference being that in the entire history of vaccines, no vaccine has been found to have side effects that show symptons that start two weeks from the vaccination date.
Not exactly true, dengvaxia being one, as you mentioned H1N1 also. The main reason the numbers are very low is because up to now we have had a very robust longterm structure around vaccine approval. There have been hundreds of vaccines that have never made it to market because of this.
It doesn't matter how much research you cram into a few months it doesn't allow to to manipulate time.
I'm also not sure how we can further collect useful data seeing as there is no longer a control group.
Not exactly true, dengvaxia being one, as you mentioned H1N1 also.
Not exactly true because I meant to type months and not weeks.
I'm not familiar with Dengvaxia, but I understand that the H1N1 vaccine encephalitis incident had onset of symptons of less than one week from the jab.
The only difference being that in the entire history of vaccines, no vaccine has been found to have side effects that show symptons that start two weeks from the vaccination date.
Not exactly true, dengvaxia being one, as you mentioned H1N1 also. The main reason the numbers are very low is because up to now we have had a very robust longterm structure around vaccine approval. There have been hundreds of vaccines that have never made it to market because of this.
It doesn't matter how much research you cram into a few months it doesn't allow to to manipulate time.
I'm also not sure how we can further collect useful data seeing as there is no longer a control group.