@DiverDoc @cadenza @mathew1927 @ZeroCovidColin @gemelliz
Actual infection doesn't give lasting immunity either, and mucosal antibodies are shorter-lived than IgG. Not sure there's a biomedical solution other than _well-matched_ vaccines every few months. Nasal vaccine advantage might simply be that it's not a needle so people more willing to get it.

@mindstalk @DiverDoc @cadenza @mathew1927 @ZeroCovidColin @gemelliz

The "cholera vaccines" section here is interesting.

nature.com/articles/nm1213

I'm in the camp of nasal vaccines. Even if they're not super long lived, and the data seems to suggest in that article and elsewhere seems to indicate that 6 months wouldn't be out of the ordinary, you're hitting the key point with no needles. A nasal vaccine could, conceivably, be distributed for self-administration semi-regularly.

Is there political or public health will for this? I kind of doubt it, but, it's the best, realistic, biomedical solution I see out there.

@BE @DiverDoc @cadenza @mathew1927 @ZeroCovidColin @gemelliz Flip side, the one nasal vaccine I know of is FluMist, attenuated-live, and the idea of taking (even weakened) live covid-19 virus every 6 months makes me twitchy.

@mindstalk @BE @DiverDoc @mathew1927 @ZeroCovidColin @gemelliz there will never be an attenuated live vaccine for COVID because it’s too dangerous. I think the nasal vaccine is a version of the mRNA vaccine, which uses spike proteins only. I took the Novovax booster (which uses the same technology as Flucelvax) and only experienced minor dizziness. As long as I can schedule a long weekend, I think I can stick to the schedule.

@cadenza @BE @DiverDoc @mathew1927 @ZeroCovidColin @gemelliz That would be better. I just wondered if there was some reason nasal vaccines need to use live virus to function. Regular flu shot is killed-virus.

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@mindstalk @cadenza @DiverDoc @mathew1927 @ZeroCovidColin @gemelliz

Last I knew there were 11 nasal vaccines left in various phases of clinical trials, but the link I had that kept track of them quit working. I believe just 2 of them were based on live, attenuated virus. The rest were not.

This one tracks all COVID-19 vaccines in development and is updated regularly:

who.int/publications/m/item/dr

It's showing 14 nasal, 1 aerosol and 2 inhaled candidates right now. You can check the tabs across the top to see which is which. It doesn't have all of the data that I used to be able to see elsewhere, so if anyone knows a better tracker please share.

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