I just discovered, essentially by chance, that the journal Nature is a veritable
cornucopia of non-specialist but also in-depth information about the Covid vaccines--not only the Covid vaccines that are already available in the U.S., chiefly Pfizer, Moderna and J&J, but also the Covid vaccines that could be available soon, such as the "protein" Covid vaccine from Novavax.
You can easily "chain-read" about Covid and Covid vaccines, because if you bring up one of these articles, there's a sidebar that provides easy access to other Covid and Covid vaccine-related articles from the journal Nature.
These are "chunk" articles--longer than a "blurb." Think "magazine article length." The (first?) two that I am posting here are also chock full of visual aids, like charts and diagrams, kind of like the X's, O's and Arrows of those old fashioned NFL play diagrams. A "jet sweep" or a "smoke route."
I don't post every new Covid-related article that I see, but these are
impressive.
"How protein-based COVID vaccines could change the pandemic" | quote | Jabs from Novavax and other biotech firms are coming. Scientists say they have a lot to offer. |
|
Elie Dolgin for Nature; November 8, 2021.
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-021-03025-0"The tangled history of mRNA vaccines" | quote | Hundreds of scientists had worked on mRNA vaccines for decades before the coronavirus pandemic brought a breakthrough. |
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Elie Dolgin for Nature; September 14, 2021.
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-021-02483-wAnyone can "talk" a good Covid or Covid vaccine, but it's articles like these, online and freely available from Nature, that can transform your Covid "game" from just
talking the talk to
walking the walk."It's easy when you know how." Or in this case, not "how", but "where."
[This message has been edited by rinselberg (edited 11-10-2021).]