New evidence confirms COVID-19 vaccines are overwhelmingly safe::More than 38 million COVID-19 vaccine doses have been administered in Ontario as of Oct. 8, with 23,002 reports of adverse reactions, an incidence of 0.06 per cent, Public Health Ontario says

    • Altima NEO
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      611 year ago

      I guess whatever it takes to convince the skeptics. Though I figure nothing will convince them once they’ve made up their mind.

      • @[email protected]
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        1021 year ago

        I don’t like calling them “skeptics,” because what they really are is super-gullible with regards to conspiracy theories.

          • @[email protected]
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            191 year ago

            Step 1. Ask what someone thinks about vaccinations Step 2. Ask them what they think about evolution Step 3. Ask about climate change Step 4. Ask about what church they go to

            You will learn so much of this overlaps. So much.

            • LillyPip
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              51 year ago

              Flat earth. Crystals. Cupping.

              Anything to avoid the reality that we’re fucking up society and the planet in favour of ‘we can fix it with woo’ or ‘it’s preordained that we’re all gonna die in god’s wrath-fire’. Neither will lift a finger to fix things.

              Nobody wants to live in reality because it’s scary.

        • @[email protected]
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          111 year ago

          There was real reason to be skeptical at first. mRNA vaccines have been in the works for decades and they had just gotten some that work well, then rushed it through. Drug companies aren’t known for being conservative with claims when there’s money to be made.

        • @[email protected]
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          41 year ago

          “I don’t know… those first fifty studies of vaccine safety didn’t sway me. Maybe 51 will”

        • @[email protected]
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          171 year ago

          I’ve always preferred it phrased as “You can’t reason someone out of a position they didn’t reason themselves into,” but same energy.

          • @[email protected]
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            111 year ago

            I always preferred the Mark Twain quote, “Never argue with an idiot. They will drag you down to their level and beat you with experience.” Because I’ve been beaten bloody with that experience on more than one occasion.

              • LillyPip
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                41 year ago

                Or ‘Never wrestle with a pig because you’ll both get dirty and the pig likes it.’ – George Bernard Shaw

  • Flying Squid
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    1661 year ago

    Okay, if you say so, because I died six months after getting the first one like they said I would. Now I’m a magnetic 5G zombie.

    • TragicNotCute
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      361 year ago

      What brand of vaccine did you get? I definitely get the 5G orders from George Soros and such (pretty standard stuff), and I was already dead inside before the jab, but I didn’t get any magnetism.

      • Flying Squid
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        251 year ago

        I got whichever one is most convenient to me winning the discussion about how vaccines are bad and give you 100 autisms.

      • LillyPip
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        51 year ago

        That 99% lived in Canada and went to a different school. They were supermodels. You didn’t know them.

        • @[email protected]
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          41 year ago

          Ok, so I’m living in the last safe place on earth. Everywhere else the vaccine killed just about everyone but in my area nothing happened.

  • @[email protected]
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    931 year ago

    Amazing what all the efficacy and safety studies said before is still true. It was true before, but now it’s also true.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      They’re not safe. They’re 0.06% harmful. That number is probably a lie too, in reality with all the cover ups and bad incentives the number could be as high as 0.1% harmful, that means 40% of cases were covered up or hidden by nurses and doctors who actively went against their hippocratic oath and did something malicious and counter effective to their job. And they don’t even clearly define what harmful is. How many of those 0.1% had mild head aches or nausea? Everyone is stupid but me.

      /s

      But in all seriousness I’m not sure if it’s better to admit that it’s not 100% safe because a lot of people think they will be the unlucky one out of 1000 to get a headache or a mild rash or the 1 out of 100000 that has something more severe. People who are generally anti vax have a hard time grasping these numbers and also seem to be completely wilfully blind to the increased danger from getting actual Covid. They think they’ll be fine and either won’t get it or it won’t be bad yet at the same time think they’ll be the unlucky one to get sick from the vaccine

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        I usually tell people that it’s safer than birth control. 1 in 1000 women experience severe complications from birth control, and we hand that stuff out like candy.

        • @[email protected]
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          21 year ago

          So true. Sadly it’s often those same types of people against vaccines who are against birth control as well.

          • @[email protected]
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            21 year ago

            Depends on if people are willing to listen to facts of incidence of actual adverse effects from the vaccine or not, something like 1 in 2.6 million people will see adverse side effects (depending on source of statistic). Also depends on what health issue you’re looking for issues with. But the overwhelming concensus is that the vaccine is safe. 1 in 1000 is orders of magnitude larger than the covid vaccine adverse effects.

  • @[email protected]
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    931 year ago

    There was a 50/50 split in the US Senate when the vaccine came out. Every member of that group was vaccinated. They were the first members of the population to be vaccinated. If any of the ancient senators had died, the balance of power would have shifted in a huge way.

    • @[email protected]
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      171 year ago

      Sometimes the goalposts are moved and merged with goalposts from other conspiracy theories.

      When 5g wasn’t the end of humanity it became the trigger for a zombie virus…hidden in the vaccine!

      Wonder what third thing will become the new first domino to knock over the 5g and vaccine dominoes.

      • @[email protected]
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        81 year ago

        Conspiracism is not truth-tracking. It’s rooted in an emotional response to feelings of lack of control. By saying false things and getting away with it, the conspiracist feels greater control over their life. “You can’t stop me from lying, therefore I have power.”

        Hence why authoritarians love conspiracism: authoritarianism promises that if you repeat the doctrine and smash the Leader’s designated enemies (the “conspiracy”), you will regain the control that was taken from you. This also illustrates why “left” authoritarianism (e.g. Stalinism, Maoism) is really rightist: it does not actually offer freedom or equality, but rather rigid hierarchy and escalating falsehood and cruelty.

        If you follow Nazism, Stalin, Hamas, Trump, or Netanyahu and smash the designated enemies who the Leader tells you have been conspiring against your nation … you do not get freedom, you just eventually become the next enemy to be smashed. Of course really your Leader has built up the enemy to threaten you: authoritarians never seek peace, because peace removes the need to fear and hate.

        (None of this is new. Orwell and Sartre both described it in the 1940s.)

        • @[email protected]
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          21 year ago

          This kind of inappropriately equates conspiracy theories and conservatism but I assure you that the anti-GMO, 9/11 Truther, and even the original vaccine pushback were not from the right

          There’s even crossover. The New Age/NESARA movement has a pipeline directly into Qanon, a movement at opposite views to NA stuff.

      • @[email protected]
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        61 year ago

        It’s almost like those people are happily waiting for this type of panopticonic apocalyptic event to happen just to be proven right the only time in their entire miserable lives

        • DVNGY
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          51 year ago

          Fundy Christians and the rapture in a nutshell

  • @[email protected]
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    551 year ago

    Guys the reason this study is important is because covid vaccines used revolutionary technology, they were the first to use mRNA based protein. If you remember we sequenced its genome within 40 days the making the vaccine was considerably easy. This is the main reason it took only 2 years for the vaccine to be made compared to years of development for other vaccines.

    • Match!!
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      221 year ago

      It also means that, with this new vaccine technology, we can develop vaccines faster and faster

        • nickwitha_k (he/him)
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          91 year ago

          Pretty sure that mRNA printers are indeed a thing. But, you’ll probably have better efficiency if you only use it for the template and use RNA-copying enzymes for the bulk of the work.

            • nickwitha_k (he/him)
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              31 year ago

              I studied this stuff back in uni, is really fascinating, though, I’m more familiar with DNA amplification via Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR).

              If you’re interested, I’ll give some details here and a link to a neat video. Effectively, there is an enzyme in our cells called DNA Polymerase. It literally scans a strand of DNA and copies it. In PCR, they use a solution of nucleotides (building blocks of DNA) and the DNA Polymerase extracted from a heat-loving microbe. The DNA to be copied (amplified) is added, and then the temperature maintained at the enzyme’s optimal temperature (higher than usual for other organisms). The solution is allowed to “stew” for a set amount of time, then, filtered to separate the DNA (lots of copies of the original) from everything else.

              A similar process can be done using an RNA polymerase (possibly modified) in order to amplify mRNA. So, once the template is printed, it gets put in the solution and RNA polymerases go brrrrrr.

              https://youtu.be/wJyUtbn0O5Y?si=Gkz8B87iY-35GvuZ

  • @[email protected]
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    431 year ago

    We always knew/suspected this. But the ones that do the fearmongering around vaccines will not be interested in facts…

    • r3df0x ✡️✝☪️
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      121 year ago

      Not just that, but a lot of them see it as resistance to authority, even if they don’t think there’s a serious risk. This is inevitably what happens when things get forced and mandates get imposed. It naturally causes people to push back against it.

      • BreakDecks
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        1 year ago

        No, this is what happens in a rigidly individualistic western countries like the USA, UK, and Australia where people act like children screaming “you can’t tell me what to do!”, even when it’s just the health department asking you to stay safe.

        There were no forced vaccine mandates in the USA, so I don’t really know what you’re talking about when you say that this was inevitable. Right-wingers just pretended that there was a mandate so that they could do performative resistance, but you might have noticed, there was no government-imposed punishment for refusing, just the natural consequence of drowning in your own sputum in the ICU.

        • r3df0x ✡️✝☪️
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          41 year ago

          Various employers imposed mandates, so there were mandates.

          When neo-fascists try to impose things, that naturally creates resentment. All the people calling for mandates are the reason the reason why there was resistance.

            • r3df0x ✡️✝☪️
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              11 year ago

              Not if there are multiple people in the car. As soon as there’s another person in the car, it’s not victimless.

              • @[email protected]
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                31 year ago

                Vaccines work when everyone uses them. There are a small number of people who cannot be vaccinated due to medical reasons. They rely on others being vaccinated. So when a lot of people who can take the vaccine refuse to do so, they put these people in danger.

          • @[email protected]
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            151 year ago

            Funny that of all things that US employers demand and impose, it’s vaccinations where you draw the line.

          • BreakDecks
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            141 year ago

            “Fascism is when employers tell their employees what to do.”

          • @[email protected]
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            111 year ago

            You’ve got yourself very turned around: the only reason there were talk of mandates is because we knew that, without them, people wouldn’t get the vaccine. Fear of vaccines long predates any mandates. It basically started the minute the first vaccine was developed.

            I’m not saying no one refused it because of talk of mandates, but the overall trend would be that without a strong incentive, some people would not get it, whether it just because of laziness, procrastination, or simply being on the fence about it.

              • BreakDecks
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                91 year ago

                I wouldn’t normally be the guy to jump straight to the conclusion that you are a Russian propagandist, but look at that instance name. Not even subtle.

      • @[email protected]
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        61 year ago

        Yeah, so much of it is just contrarianism. These people think that if they blindly reject everything that comes from an official source that they are substantially different than the people who blindly accept everything that comes from an official source.

        • r3df0x ✡️✝☪️
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          31 year ago

          Experts have lied repeatedly and trust in them is at an all time low. If it wasn’t for the talk of mandates, more people would have got the vaccine. Pushback is a natural consequence of trying to force things.

          • @[email protected]
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            151 year ago

            Experts have lied repeatedly

            A completely vague statement - which is almost certainly untrue or a gross misrepresentation of reality - that basically justifies believing whatever you want. I’ve seen this plenty throughout my life, but it’s become especially popular since the start of the pandemic.

  • @[email protected]
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    411 year ago

    What’s the point of this? The people who already believe the vaccine is safe already know it. Those that don’t believe it’s safe aren’t gonna read this OR the report. They’ll claim it’s some sort of propaganda.

    • @[email protected]
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      501 year ago

      It’s important simply to do just for the benefit of science going forward. We need to look at the long term effects of medicines. Usually we do that prior to release. It also protects you from the propoganda. Someone may throw out crazy statistics at you but you’ll have this study in your back pocket so you can be like “yeah it’s crazy” and dismiss don’t debate.

      And try not to get too downtrodden with humanity. Not everyone is a too far gone. Some are just a little lost.

      • TWeaK
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        151 year ago

        Exactly this. What’s annoying is how people twist the process along the way.

        For example, with the AstraZeneca vaccine there was this overblown controversy over blood clots. Every time you stick someone with a needle, their blood will clot, and there’s a chance that a chunk of this clot will break off into the blood stream. Sometimes, the thing you’re injecting makes it more likely to happen, and as such we closely monitor new injections to determine whether or not the issue is significant. AstraZeneca (or any other covid vaccine) has been shown to not significantly increase the risk of blood clots over any other injection - but that didn’t stop politicians (eg Boris Johnson in the UK) to parrot on about the handful of people who did develop blood clots as if it were a real issue. Of course, this led to AstraZeneca no longer being offered as a vaccine for many people; instead, Pfizer and Moderna vaccines were used. Wouldn’t you know it, Boris is personally invested in these companies. He shooed away the non-profit vaccine in favour of the for profit pharmaceutical mega-corporations that pay him dividends. And, of course, his statements actually reduced the uptake of vaccines in general.

      • @[email protected]
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        51 year ago

        Yeah, given how quickly alot of these were rushed out, due to the emergency we were in, there really should be follow-up research to prove their safety and efficacy. If only to provide additional evidence to anti-vaxxers who will argue against it. Even if the threat of Covid is seemingly behind us, who’s to say we’re not right back here in the next 5/10/20 years with the next pandemic that comes?

        • @[email protected]
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          11 year ago

          Some people have proposed that covid could become an endemic, meaning that there are always pockets of covid brewing somewhere. Annual flu vaccines could be accompanied with annual covid vaccines. If that really happens, we need to know more about the safety of the vaccine. Instead of being an exceptional emergency, it’s just “business as usual”, so proper studies are needed.

          Convincing anti-vaxxers is impossible, because that conversation doesn’t follow the rules of a debate. Instead, the resulting monologue is a symptom of mental instability, and there isn’t much you can do about it.

    • @[email protected]
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      231 year ago

      The fact that “believe” is the operating word here is why medical science should be spread.

    • @[email protected]
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      161 year ago

      Misinformation works though. Antivaxer are rentlenless and they are always releasing studies to prove their lies. Combine that with social media algorithms that love controversy and this shit gets deadly.

      To put it in perspective, the USA could easily have more people die of covid this year than fentanyl ODs but everyone is acting like the battle is over.

    • @[email protected]
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      61 year ago

      It’s about noise. There needs to be more noise made that the vaccines are safe to protect future generations from falling down the same misinformation rabbit holes.

    • GreenM
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      31 year ago

      There are people who will state internet article’s titles as facts. so it’s good to fight misinformation by information.

    • @[email protected]
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      21 year ago

      I like to be optimistic and believe every article erodes their confidence in “alternative medicine”.

  • IninewCrow
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    1 year ago

    What about their effectiveness?

    I get that the first few versions might have stemmed the tide of the pandemic early on … but how effective are the new doses now?

    I’m not an antivacer but I do question the way the pandemic was handled and continues to be handled. I trust scientists, I trust the medical community, I trust our current level of knowledge and expertise … I even trust our government to do the best they can with what they have … I just don’t trust seeing big corporate interests quietly influencing everything in the background.

    I certainly don’t trust anyone or anything that reprimands me or is threatened by my questions or concerns.

    I would feel a whole lot better about all this if corporate and financial interests were completely disconnected from all our health care and pharmaceutical systems. Basically, anything that has to do with human bodily health should not be controlled or deeply influenced by monied interests.

    • NaibofTabr
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      411 year ago

      Their efficacy has been heavily studied and proven.

      versions might have stemmed the tide of the pandemic

      This is straight-up weasel language. There is no (rational) question as to whether the vaccines reduced hospitalizations due to COVID-19, or contraction of COVID-19 in general.

      corporate and financial interests were completely disconnected from all our health care and pharmaceutical systems

      This is not realistic in the slightest. Reasearch requires resources and the time and effort of highly qualified people.

      • Cyborganism
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        151 year ago

        You don’t need to be so agressive.

        OP didn’t say that the vaccine didn’t work at first. It’s just that now development has a hard time to keep up with new mutations.

        Also, we don’t need multi billion dollar medical corporations to study and create vaccines. This could be done entirely through a government agency or ministry.

        I agree with OP about how much we should trust corporations. Their bottom line is to make a profit and they’ll do whatever they can to get there. They cut corners and hide facts to avoid losses.

        One such fact that was denied and for which you could get ridiculed was that a certain percentage of the population that received the COVID vaccine had symptoms afterwards that never went away. Like constant headaches and swelling of the brain. Now they explain these to you before you take new doses so that you know the risks. They’re small, but they can happen.

        In fact, ever since my last dose in August I’ve had constant headaches myself and I always feel hungover. It’s permanent. There’s nothing anyone can do about it. At this point I wonder if I should have taken it at all considering the I’ve had so the previous shots before. I only took it because I was traveling for a couple weeks and wanted to increase my chances of not getting sick.

      • IninewCrow
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        51 year ago

        I can agree and accept most debates about this and I probably agree with most of what you present. And I am vaxxed with six COVID vaccines at this point and chances are I’ll continue taking them with a lot of skepticism.

        The biggest issue I have is corporate control.

        I agree that research and development requires money … but that can be achieved through public funds and government programs. What do think is cheaper? Privately owned research that has to be paid for at a premium … or publically developed research that is made open and accessible for other researchers across the globe (who can then collaborate with each other instead of compete behind closed source patents and information)

        I trust the scientists and researchers that develop these medical break throughs … I just don’t trust the private CEOs that hire them or the corporations they work for.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        corporate and financial interests were completely disconnected from all our health care and pharmaceutical systems

        This is not realistic in the slightest. Reasearch requires resources and the time and effort of highly qualified people.

        It’s extremely realistic, humanity makes the most progress when research does not need to create a monetary benefit. It allows us to explore ideas unabated. While these systems need funding we could take a 1% from military spending and invest with government resources. Hence why the mrna vaccines actually progressed so quickly, they were already being researched by the army for quick and rapid treatment of diseases during combat, i.e. just to solve the problem not just to profit from the tech, they lent that research out and gave grants to the corporations who developed and manufactured the covid vaccines. Internet, developed for combat communications not for profit. Most computer innovations came out of the space race, research without a profit motive. The ideas funded by corporate interests revolve around optimizing profit, not progress, which is why we get planned obsolescence, lack of rights to repair, massive healthcare costs needing insurance offsets, etc. I guarantee you can’t name an actual positive innovation that was spurred purely for profit and not bastardized in the name of profit from a century old idea people forgot about so the company could attribute genius to its wealthy founders crud copy and paste job.

    • @[email protected]
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      111 year ago

      It’s as effective as the flu vaccine. Get the version that addresses the latest varients, as previous ones may not be as effective against it.

      • @[email protected]
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        41 year ago

        Exactly. Some people get a flu shot every year. Now it’s going to be a flu shot and a covid shot.

        Virus evolves, scientists do their best to predict which particular variants are or will become most prevalent. Vaccinations are made and administered based on that data. Rinse and repeat.

        There are times when the models are wrong or variants progress in unexpected ways. In those cases you might see a mid-year booster.

        Vaccines don’t guarantee you won’t get sick, but they reduce the severity and time to recover if you do get sick with one of the relevant variants. They may even prevent the occurrence of most symptoms depending on the person. .

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    I need to preface this by saying that I am in no way anti-vaccine, and this has nothing to do with politics.

    But…

    I got my last booster about 3 weeks ago, and I have been messed up ever since. Apparently there is something called Long Vax Syndrome that is currently being studied. Fortunately I don’t have some of the worst symptoms, but the fatigue is so real. Normally when I would get a covid booster I would be exhausted for about 24 hours, but this is unrelenting. I’ve never been this tired in my life, and it’s honestly a struggle. I am really hoping something comes of the research and they figure something out because I don’t know how long I can sustain this.

    • Echo Dot
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      121 year ago

      If it is anything like long covid my symptoms went away after about 2 months. Hopefully the vaccine variant is not as long.

      But by week three I was starting to feel somewhat better.

      • @[email protected]
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        221 year ago

        My “long COVID” symptoms are on month 16 and counting… they’ve gone way down, but still there.

    • @[email protected]
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      71 year ago

      Same here. Also not ant-vax in general, very much pro-vax for the big three and whatnot. I got 2 vax and a booster willingly, but got sick as a dog all 3 times and missed work each time. The fatigue was crippling. I also got covid twice anyway so thats a bummer, but it wasnt any worse than the post-vax sickness. Maybe the vax reduced the severity of covid, but either way I think Ill pass on getting any more boosters for tbe time being. Ive had plenty of flu vaxes and never had an issue with them.

      • @[email protected]
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        21 year ago

        I have no idea why you’re getting downvotes on this. You’re relating your personal experience, and it’s clearly not an anti-vax type answer. Here’s an upvote to help offset that.

    • @[email protected]
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      51 year ago

      Bless you, how many boosters have you had and do you have any other underlying health issues?

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        So I got my first 2 shots way back when. And I think this is my 3rd booster?

        No underlying health issues but it might be worth noting that I got covid way at the beginning of the pandemic and I was hospitalized for a week. It was the sickest I have ever been in my life. I was sick for 2 weeks before I went to the hospital because back then it was next to impossible to get a test, and it took forever to get results back.

        I don’t know if I’m one of the few that is just voulerable to covid or whatever, and maybe because of that the vaccine has a chance to hite differently? I don’t know. There’s still so much unknown about covid, but I’m really hoping this fatigue clears up because quality of life is way down right now. It’s been very difficult to work and take care of my daughter etc. Driving isn’t safe… It’s not great.

          • @[email protected]
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            61 year ago

            Well I never had this after I got covid 3 years ago. So maybe I had some kind of resting long covid that got triggered by the vaccine? But not the other times I got the booster?

            I don’t know. I’m not a doctor or scientist. I’m just really really really tired all the time now.

    • @[email protected]
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      31 year ago

      But studies largely shown that the risk of post-vaccine events do not exceed background rates

      sorry mate, guess you were the unlucky one. thanks for your sacrifice o7

  • @[email protected]
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    281 year ago

    Are Republicans still waiting for people who got the initial vaccine to drop dead overnight? lol.

    • @[email protected]
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      111 year ago

      As of my last count we’ve all died 7 or 8 times now, and if we didn’t, next time for sure!

    • Match!!
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      91 year ago

      We were supposed to all die in the emergency national text message test a few weeks ago