COVID 5 years later: Were the vaccines worth it? | Morning in America

Tuesday will mark five years since the COVID-19 pandemic upended society. As vaccines are increasingly under the microscope and questioned by some, Dr. Amesh Adalja, an infectious disease specialist, calls the COVID vaccine the “greatest scientific achievement in modern history” on “Morning in America with Hena Doba.”

#Pandemic #Health #Vaccines

Start your day with “Morning in America,” NewsNation’s live three-hour national weekend morning newscast hosted by Hena Doba. Saturday and Sunday starting at 7a/6C. #MorningInAmerica

NewsNation is your source for fact-based, unbiased news for all America.

More from NewsNation: https://www.newsnationnow.com/
Get our app: https://trib.al/TBXgYpp
Find us on cable: https://trib.al/YDOpGyG
How to watch on TV or streaming: https://trib.al/Vu0Ikij

25 Comments

  1. As a cancer patient I was forced to get the "Jab" or go untreated. That was the Cancer Hospitals policy. I got Covid 4 times.

  2. This is a great idea.Study all the vaccines and find all the links before we're forced to take something that gives us side effects like the Pfizer covid shot gave me hypertension!

  3. The way Covid was managed was not a medical plan. It was a test to determine how easily people would surrender their freedom. Unfortunately, we failed the test. They now know that they can do what they want, people will follow.

  4. If Sars-Cov-2 infection was so highly capable of presenting asymptomatically that ALL perfectly healthy people had to lockdown / mask / test / distance, etc… then how can there be any credible way of establishing that the jabs were effective in lessening symptoms ???

  5. All these little “smart cookies” in this comment section are exactly why it needed to be soft mandated and why it honestly should have been outright mandated.

  6. I've been vaccinated 4 times or so. I got mild covid 1 time. Weirdly, the vaccine neither killed me, nor gave me negative side effects. How can this be??!