This Hysterical TikTok Explains How the COVID Vaccine Works, and Oh My God, the Beatboxing

Fitness
@shellydidit

Immune system response #tiktok style😂💙 @realnicoleparis Love her beatboxing!! #nutchell #chellshocked #postcovidvaccine

♬ original sound – Shelly

If a doctor ever explained to you a super complex concept but made it seem even more confusing, you are not alone (“you’re telling me, what now?!”). So, when a healthcare professional uses their platform to break things down in a way that we can actually understand and digest without turning to Google for the umpteenth time, we’re all for it. Get ready to laugh and learn — a lot. In a viral video, Shelly, a healthcare professional on TikTok with more than 112,000 followers, hilariously (but accurately!) explains how the body’s immune response forms after receiving either of the COVID-19 vaccines currently available in the US. And she uses beatboxing and costumes to do the trick.

Vaccines approved for emergency use authorization are Pfizer and Moderna — and both are two-dose messenger RNA vaccines (also called mRNA). These types of vaccines, according to the CDC, instruct our cells to make “harmless” copies of the spike protein found on the surface of the COVID-19 virus. “After the protein piece is made, the cell breaks down the instructions and gets rid of them,” the CDC states.

“Next, the cell displays the protein piece on its surface,” the CDC says. “Our immune systems recognize that the protein doesn’t belong there and begin building an immune response and making antibodies, like what happens in natural infection against COVID-19.”

More specifically, the body is left with “memory” T-lymphocytes and B-lymphocytes (T and B cells shown beating up the spike protein from the vaccine in this video) that remember how to fight off the virus. B cells are white blood cells that create antibodies, and T cells are another type of white blood cell that help attack infection.

It can take up to a few weeks for your body to develop immunity, and it’s still unclear how long someone is immune after getting the vaccine. Two doses are needed for the most protection against COVID-19.

Though there’s nothing funny about COVID-19, this little piece of humor is exactly what we wanted to see to get us educated about mRNA coronavirus vaccines — beatboxing, punches, and all!

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