sethnintendo said:
Well I could have someone infected cough on surface and then wait hour or so then touch surface and do some face touching. My exposure would be less than direct. They say it is more of amount your body is exposed rather than just being exposed. So someone who gets it from surface the body is exposed to far less viral load than someone breathing in tons of particles so they are more likely to be able to fight off virus more quickly. The CDC even backpedaled about risk of exposure due to surfaces. I wash my hands a decent amount even before all this shit but now they've turned almost everyone into hypochondriacs/OCD. |
The problems with this are that even if you got a mild case, you'd still be at far greater risk of complications and death than from a vaccine, and you could infect others.
Before vaccination became available and widespread, a similar method to what you describe was used for smallpox; a tiny amount of infectious pus would be applied to a cut to induce the disease as this generally led to a milder case than breathing in airborne particles. Again though, it could still result in a deadly case and the inoculated person could still spread smallpox.
I highly recommend you do not attempt to inoculate yourself against COVID-19. There's a reason the practice was discontinued. It's not worth the risk.








