• Bitrot@lemmy.sdf.org
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      1 year ago

      Truth: I clicked that expecting to read about a Cuban vaccine for liberalism (mostly wondering how that worked)

    • macrocephalic@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      I really admire what Cuba has done in the last half century. They’re a fairly resource poor island nation who were cut off suddenly from the trading partner who accounted for 85% of their trade. While they’re constantly struggling financially, they have a huge rate of tertiary education, better female participation in the professional workforce than almost all nations, a decent happiness score and a now a better life expectancy than the richest nation in the world.

      However, the creation of COVID vaccines was not difficult. COVID is not that dissimilar to a number of existing viruses which we already have vaccines for. The production of a simple vaccine is easy, but rounds of testing and approval take a long time. This is how come Cuba could create vaccines based on existing techniques with slight tweeks.

      • PolandIsAStateOfMind@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        However, the creation of COVID vaccines was not difficult.

        Looking at the shitfest around the vaccines in the west i would say otherwise, including how they refuse to release the patents.

        • macrocephalic@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          The ones you had to wait for in the west were mRNA vaccines. They are newer, more complicated, and in theory customisable to a wider range of infections. While I’d love to see these opened up and used for their full potential I can see why the pharma corps don’t want that.

          While I haven’t looked, I’ll bet that the Cuban ones were"simply" using a deactivated virus - which is less effective and especially less effective against mutated strains.