Whaaaaaat???!?! This is dangerously wrong!
In almost all cases, the issue with booster shots is that they are taken too close together, not too far apart. eg: In this meta-study, the authors looked at a study of patients taking the HPV vaccine as a 3 dose, 2 doses 6 months apart, 2 doses 2 months apart and 1 dose. The incidence of HPV were 0.4%, 0.8%, 1.3% and 1.1%. In other words, taking 2 doses 2 months apart was worse than even 1 dose!
The originally recommended schedule of the HPV vaccines was to administer 2 priming doses (at one or 2 months interval) and a single booster dose at 6 months. A single priming dose is likely to be adequate for such a vigorously immunogenic vaccine, especially in adolescent populations with high immune-competence. The memory B-cells require at least 4–6 months to mature and differentiate into high-affinity B-cells. The booster dose at 6 months can efficiently reactivate the memory B-cells to give a long lasting protection. It is therefore important to maintain the spacing between the doses of the vaccine to at least 6 months, if 2 doses are administered. Studies have documented optimal B-cell induction after 2 doses of HPV vaccine administered at an interval of 6 months in adolescent girls (9–13 years)
With the MMR vaccine, this study shows that the timing of the booster shot does not matter at all within a range of 6 months to 5 years. The current 5 year recommendation is purely to ease administrative burden. The only recommendation is that the second shot not be taken within 28 days of the first.
Current practice calls for the administration of 2 doses of MMR, the first after the first birthday (12 to 15 months) and the second at school entry (4 to 6 years). The recommendation for the second dose at this age range is based on administrative considerations. MMR can be administered at an earlier age as long as the interval between the doses is 28 days or longer.
If you take a look at the WHO Recommendations for Interrupted or Delayed Routine Immunization, the default recommendation is for a delayed booster shot is to resume without repeating the previous dose. The only two vaccines that they recommend starting over are one type of Cholera and Typhoid vaccine and even then, only if the delay is more than 21 days. The minimum intervals between doses of any vaccine on that list are at least 4 weeks , with many in the months to years range.
The reason why the COVID booster shot was set at 3 weeks was purely to make the trials go faster. Based on everything we know about immunology, extending the span between shots is extremely unlikely to make it less effective and highly likely to make it more effective. As we gather more data, if COVID is like every other vaccine, the optimal spacing between shots is likely to be in the months range, not the weeks range.
There’s a slight asterisk in this model in that you are slightly less protected in the duration between your first and second shot and since COVID is currently an ongoing pandemic, there’s a slight chance you may catch it during this period which might justify shortening the time window in the short term. However, the reason is because your chances of catching COVID are several thousand times greater than any of the other diseases we currently vaccinate for, not some absurd theory that your immune system “assumes” it was a harmless protein.
I cannot believe I had to spend an hour debunking this dangerous nonsense and you should be ashamed of yourself for pretending to have expertise you absolutely do not have.