Vaccine breakthrough means no more chasing strains
Vaccine breakthrough means no more chasing strains

Vaccine breakthrough means no more chasing strains

Vaccine breakthrough means no more chasing strains
Vaccine breakthrough means no more chasing strains
UC Riverside has now been issued a US patent on this RNAi vaccine technology
Naturally, you'll want to patent it so you can profit off it instead of just releasing it to benefit all of humanity. Fucking greedy ass people sometimes...
I do t know UC Riverside’s history for how they manage their patents, but I’m on the side of giving them the benefit of the doubt until proven otherwise. It’s okay to have a patent. It’s ok to profit off an invention you spent a lot of money producing. But what’s not ok would be upping the price so high that people have to choose dying over getting the product because they simply can’t afford it. Let’s hope UC does the former and not the latter.
Let's be more clear: IF THEY DONT PATENT IT SOMEONE ELSE WILL.
UCR is fairly innocuous compared to some alternatives.
Generally these "patented" products from universities are funded via tax payer money. I am not cool with them profiting off something that is intended to save lives and was also funded by the very people who's lives will be affected.
Putting things behind a patent wall only hinders progress.
Just because it’s patented doesn’t mean it can’t still be released for the benefit of humanity. It does mean it will be harder for some for-profit entity to claim the process for themselves. This may be naive, but I feel like a public (state-owned) nonprofit research university will be a better steward for the patent than a private entity that’s seeking to maximize shareholder value. I would expect that they would either license the patent freely for humanitarian benefit or at a reasonable cost to support the university’s ongoing research efforts.
That's not how patents work. They have to guard it or else someone else will. You don't know the university's goals yet, but you would know the goal of a for profit pharma company.
You expect too much. They couldn’t see anything beyond their outrage.
It’s a public institution. They aren’t making a profit on this. They do have a right to control their intellectual property, however.
It will be awesome if this can make it to human trials and be successful. Lots of immunocompromised people could benefit from this.
Website says
"Scientists at UC Riverside have demonstrated a new, RNA-based vaccine strategy that is effective against any strain of a virus and can be used safely even by babies or the immunocompromised. "
Paper says
"Live-attenuated virus vaccine defective in RNAi suppression induces rapid protection in neonatal and adult mice lacking mature B and T cells"
I love how they probably used chatgpt to summarize the article for their website. And jumping from here to saying "this vaccine is effective against everything ever" seems a bit! over reaching. Even universal vaccines within a given subtype are finicky. There seems to be a trade off between universality (of recognition) and of effectiveness. Nevertheless this seems like a different mechanism than previous RNA/protein vaccines in that it seems to work by inducing innate immunity. Even though they say that mice remain immune 90d post vaccination, that is another area where mice and men can be substantially different, so I think we are still at the wait and see stage unfortunately.
And this joke of a sentence here
"With one vaccine injection, they found the mice were protected from a lethal dose of the unmodified virus for at least 90 days. Note that some studies show nine mouse days are roughly equivalent to one human year. "
Wohooo we are immune for 10 years!!!
Get fucked viruses!
Shiiit. That mean the common cold will finally be on the chopping block?
Yes!
But only for mice 😞
Man; mice get all the best cures. It's no fair.
I can't seem to find the paper, either. Hmmm... where 'tis? I emailed the article author, Jules Bernstein, to request a link fix. fingers crossed.
Ya, like nature works that way...
Well it doesn't. People made it. With science.
I'm not anti vac. But, this article is pretty smug while still using the word "should". Hubris is thinking that we've beat nature.
I'm absolutely thrilled if this actually gets us to the next level of protecting people. But I'm beating down by these "savior" articles.
This sure sounds like an amazing breakthrough, RNA based vaccine that works on "all strains" of a virus and can be administered with a nasal spray...
Would be pretty amazing to not have to go get a shot annually, just a quick nose spray once and be done.
Most promises in medical news, much like energy news, never pan out.
Here's to hoping though.
In medicine, finding out what doesn't work is nearly as valuable as finding what does. Because finding out why it doesn't work can lead to you the solution and perhaps even solutions for things you weren't even looking for.
Ya. Until the kooks decide Bill Gates is resting to install AI in our heads through our noses. …or some such bullshit.
"yah, mom, look I heard right here on Lemmy, Bill Gates is making a nose spray to turn us into robots"
I used windows once, and if you checked inside my head you'd find a neural network.
Apparently people can’t read and for some reason decided that you’re anti vax.
I wonder if the lack of a needle suddenly makes some anti-vaxxers less...whatever they are.
Probably not. At least anecdotally, my anti-vax mom is just as opposed to regular shots as nasal sprays, if not more.