First time I had a Covid shot was summertime at a village hall and the men mostly wore t-shirts, so the short sleeve could be held up for the needle. The next shot was in a city clinic and wintertime, and us men were long-sleeved, meaning many of the men stood in line shirtless waiting for the nurse.
Onesimus (late 1600s–1700s[1]) was an African man who was instrumental in the mitigation of the impact of a smallpox outbreak in Boston, Massachusetts. His birth name is unknown. He was enslaved and, in 1706, was given to the New England Puritan minister Cotton Mather, who renamed him. Onesimus introduced Mather to the principle and procedure of inoculation to prevent the disease, which laid the foundation for the development of vaccines.[2] After a smallpox outbreak began in Boston in 1721, Mather used this knowledge to advocate for inoculation in the population, a practice that eventually spread to other colonies. In a 2016 Boston magazine survey, Onesimus was declared one of the "Best Bostonians of All Time".[1]
Imagine you have a crippling fear of needles but at the end of your Avenger training are being forced to get a bunch in case you need to go on missions to various countries. Loki is living at the tower too and the two of you have gotten fairly close during your time there, and he is very understanding of your fear, not quite “getting” the idea of inoculations as a Midgardian method of preventative healthcare. However, he worries when other team members tell him you won’t be able to join if you don’t receive them. Loki knows no amount of persuading will get you to agree to do it, so he recruits some of the others to take part in a mischievous scheme tin order o make sure you get the vaccinations, one aspect of which involves him numbing your arm with his cold hands (enhanced with some magic).
Elvis sets an example by getting the new Salk polio vaccine, October 1956. The shot was controversial and there were many misconceptions about it. NYC Assistant Commissioner of Health Dr. Harold Fuerst administers the shot as Commissioner Leona Baumgartner holds Elvis’s arm.
एक जगह बीमारी देवी से बात करती है, एक जगह सिस्टम से, और एक जगह सिर्फ़ माँ से।
मैं दलित बस्ती के समीप रहता हूं। वहां कई बच्चों को माता निकली हैं। माता अर्थात खसरा या मीजल्स। वहां जिंदगी फिर भी चल रही है।
खसरा कोई नई बीमारी नहीं है पर समाज के लिए खसरा आज भी वही है—डर, अनिश्चितता, जुकाम, बुखार, न्यूमोनिया, पलई चलना और माँ की नींद छीन लेने वाली बीमारी। अलग अलग जगह लोग अलग तरीके से इसे डील करते…
Download high-quality 'Growth in Nature' stock photo featuring growth, nature, plant. A young plant thriving in sunlight, symbolizing new be
Neurotoxins and Psychedelics, and in general substances which are toxic to your body, including allergies, and certain viruses.
Have you ever asked yourself, what is a vaccine?
It is taking an old less strong version of the virus, and just injecting it right into your damn body. Just go ahead. They innoculate it in the lab and make a bunch of the virus (basically they take some germs from a sick person, and leave them in a hot humid place, and more germs grow), then they sell it or distribute it to people as fast as possible.
And then it doesn't hit as hard right?
Well, this is true of all things, which hurt you. Exposure therapy is a certain way to rid yourself of all pain. Including lactose intolerance, or fish allergy. Of course, you must not read this and kill yourself by doing something you shouldn't, but you can do small things, with an epi pen and friend or a doctor near by ideally.
Well... it turns out I am now immune to psychedelic substances completely. Ketamine, psilocybin xyz, thc-a, thc-b.
I suppose I must try the one from the Earth.
So America, you choose to once again force me to do illegal things, to get the substances I need to continue living. So I shall (unless we're in court, this is all hypothetical)
To connect with the earth and trees and feel the wind. I shall do what I must
"Résultats encourageants de la dernière campagne contre la diphtérie," Montreal-Matin. April 21, 1943. Page 12.
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La semaine de prévention contre la diphtérie, qui s'est déroulée du 11 au 18 avril, a donné d'excellents résultats, puisque plus de 1,700 enfants ont été immunisés à Montréal seulement, a révélé hier le Dr Adélard Groulx, directeur du service municipal de la Santé. Depuis le début de l'année, avant l'ouverture de la dernière campagne, 4.000 autres enfants avaient été immunisés contre cette terrible maladie, ce qui porte le total à date à 5.700.
Bien que ces résultats soient encourageants, le Dr Groulx a souligné le fait qu'un trop grand nombre d'enfants ne sont pas encore immunisés contre la diphtérie. "St tous recouraient à l'immunisation, a-t-il ajouté, Montréal enrayerait complètement cette maladie, tout comme l'ont fait plusieurs autres villes canadiennes et américaines."