Since April 2024, some duck farms in France have been vaccinated with Ceva Respons AI H5, a new veterinary vaccine based on self-amplifying mRNA technology. This vaccine, presented as a major breakthrough in the fight against avian influenza, is raising increasing concerns: what happens to these molecules after the animals are slaughtered? And could their presence on our plates have any effect on our bodies, or even unknowingly vaccinate us?
This vaccine is based on a technology still relatively unknown to the general public: the injected messenger RNA is not static; it replicates in the animal's cells. The goal is clear: to produce more viral proteins at a lower dose, thus optimizing the immune response. However, this self-amplifying capacity raises numerous questions, particularly regarding the traceability and degradation of these molecules.
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