Red Herring
middle-class woman of a certain age
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- Jun 9, 2010
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I don't think it will be quick, but at this point, there's no real vaccinating a cold. So I don't think, at this point, if it is truly a cold as stated, that there will EVER be a vaccine. It is more about managing the hospital numbers till we reach a level of immunity where everyone has it once, so the body recognizes it.
Well, SARS-CoV-2 is a coronavirus and the common cold is caused by several hundreds of different viridae, mostly different forms of rhinovirus. They are unrelated and belong to different virus families.
The reason there is no vaccine against the common cold is because a) there are so many different causes for a "cold" and b) the rhinovirus uses its surface to dock onto the nasal mucous while your immune system attacks its core, i. e. the wrong part of the virus. There are several research projects on the way though trying to work around this problem though.
The good news is that this has nothing to do with how likely or unlikely a vaccine against SARS-COV-2 is. The trials might take their time but right now things are actually looking good.