pretty sure we're in the same province.
Or there's 2 wanna be carrot premiers
that's both funny and scary
I've had some really bad reactions in the past on vaccines
I have too. The H1N1 vaccine in 2010 made me sick for months, finally sent me to hospital, and then I needed emergency surgery (fun times). Since then, the annual flu vaccine, which contains a bit of H1N1, makes me varying degrees of sick. It sucks, because I never know how much of an adverse reaction I'm going to have, but I need that vaccine in order to do my job.
It's the minimal study behind this one
The speed of this scares me
It's accelerated research, but not minimal research, a common misconception that's not really being corrected by public education or through the media. Normally the drug companies take multiple years to create a vaccine because that's not the only project they're working on, so time, funds, staff, and resources are split between multiple research projects which limits any individual project. Also each company doesn't usually share their developments, but holds all of the information as proprietary, only sharing after the drug has been created, distributed, and some money has been made to recoup what was spent on R&D (I think drug patents here are 10 years, before info is shared to create generics). With covid being pandemic, the companies have been focusing almost exclusively on creating a vaccine, so time and money have been narrowly focused on this one project. There has also been global exchange of research info, which is speeding things up because each company doesn't have to start from scratch by reinventing the wheel (it's much faster if you can start with someone else's proven successful wheel and start on inventing the wagon). Also, this is a coronavirus, so years of research into SARS and MERS is helping with this (again not reinventing the wheel, it's just a different looking wheel but of the same brand name - coronavirus). Hope that helps
The companies that have developed the vaccines, have announced that they are effective, safe with minimal adverse effects, and have no serious adverse effects... and that's the info that has me questioning a bit whether I want to be in the first round of vaccinations, because there were serious adverse effects with at least 2 vaccines, but not sure if they were due to preexisting conditions or if they were caused by the vaccine trial (companies say preexisting conditions, but...

). When a company certifies/verifies/regulates (or similar) its own products, there's always a risk of them overstating the good while downplaying or outright hiding the bad because they need to start making a profit from that product, so there's incentive to get it to market ASAP. This is mitigated to a certain extent with these vaccines, because the companies have agreed that they won't be making huge profits from the vaccines, so the monetary incentive has been removed, and they're incentivized by getting an effective product to market first/ASAP (and saving the world


). But still...