Covid-19 vaccines and vaccinations

Discussion in 'Epidemics (including Covid-19, not Long Covid)' started by hinterland, Dec 3, 2020.

  1. hibiscuswahine

    hibiscuswahine Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    I was wondering what was that doctor’s take on it? And what is their specialty?

    Problem is they haven’t worked out a consistent mechanism for all people with ME/CFS, or the subtypes, eg.MCAS etc or other genetic vulnerabilities or illnesses within each individual that alter the immune system. Just one big catch 22 of unknown unknowns.
     
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  2. Snow Leopard

    Snow Leopard Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    What does that even mean? I find it noteworthy that you mentioned people being given such advice by *neurologists*, rather than immunologists. The former tend to have a very superficial understanding of the immune system.
     
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  3. Leila

    Leila Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    Merged thread

    Hope this is the right place to ask..

    We're being recommended to get a Covid Booster shot 6 months after the 2nd jab.

    Do you guys have any data or opinions on how this help reduce risk of infection or disease (symptoms) in young people?

    I know antibodies drop but from what I understand boosters mainly protect older people from sickness as well as reduce transmissability alltogether.

    Other than mitigating the epidemic, is it increasing my own protection in any way at age 35?

    Ive heard experts saying different things.
     
    Last edited by a moderator: Dec 2, 2021
  4. Simbindi

    Simbindi Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    I don't know, but my eldest is a teacher in a secondary school (ages 11-16) and a lot of the staff were getting Covid in the autumn despite having had 2 shots earlier in the year. So my daughter (who is in her early 30s) took the offer of a booster when it came up about a month ago. So far she doesn't appear to have had Covid (as a teacher she gets regular lateral flow tests) despite getting other transmissible infections, such as colds and tonsillitis.
     
  5. CRG

    CRG Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    Simple answer is Yes. There have been trials for all the booster vaccines being used in the UK - link here is for the BNT162b2 https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMc2113468
     
  6. Dom

    Dom Established Member (Voting Rights)

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    I think it's dead on that the immune system is the problem. I'm high as a kite for days after my covid vaccines. Probably 4 or 5 days. That's not normal. Then I gradually go downhill assuming I don't crash over 2 weeks.

    By that point I get the distinct sense lots of things have reactivated and it takes me 2 months to fix that. The other issue being what it does to the patient's blood. Dr Yaeger has seen this but she's not the only one. I think it takes 4 weeks just to get the blood back to normal and stop the red blood cells clotting to one another.

    So in my case that process seems to take 2 to 3 months. But I take £260 worth of supplements every month and I do use all of them and they all do slightly different things. Plus I've improved massively on them.

    I do still think a smaller dose might confer a lower immune response. However they made it quite clear that the moderna half dose boosts the immune system the same as the full dose. So that's probably wrong.

    Guess there's no way round it. Just gotta get on. Totally understand those severe patients who don't go there there.
     
  7. TigerLilea

    TigerLilea Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    The people seeing the neurologists have developed neuropathy since having the covid vaccine(s). As to what my comment meant, some doctors believe that the vaccine has revved up our immune systems causing the adverse reactions that are being seen.
     
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  8. Jonathan Edwards

    Jonathan Edwards Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    We were talking to a young couple who are local friends this weekend. They are around 35. They got Covid despite to vaccinations and they said it was truly awful. OK they are alive, but not something they would want again.
     
    Last edited: Dec 1, 2021
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  9. Barry

    Barry Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    Same with a chap at my work, similar age. Was OK within a week, but pretty awful while he had it, and like nothing else he'd ever experienced. Two jabs.
     
    Last edited: Dec 1, 2021
  10. Leila

    Leila Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    Could you dumb that down for me? I understand a third jab gives people my age group higher neutralization titers. But does that equal less symptoms in case of breakthrough infections? Less likelihood of LongCovid?

    @Jonathan Edwards indeed does not sound good. Do you think further boosters will be necessary?
     
  11. Ariel

    Ariel Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    My understanding is that it boots your protection from infection (and symptomatic covid) significantly. This may, in turn, wane again, but the answer is yes. This wasn't just a finding in older people.
     
  12. Kitty

    Kitty Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    I'm not convinced anyone really knows, especially given the new variants that are going to keep popping up.

    My decision, given that I've never had a really bad vaccine reaction, would always be to hedge my bets by accepting any top-ups that are offered, plus taking as many reasonable precautions as I can. I think that's basically the calculation that most people will have to make. It must be genuinely difficult if you've been bed-bound for weeks or months after a jab, though, specially if on most criteria you appear to be at fairly low risk of infection in the first place, or of having serious complications if you did pick it up. :confused:
     
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  13. 5vforest

    5vforest Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    This is it. I don't think anyone really knows. There are too many changing factors like new variants, vaccine updates, etc.

    The other problem is that it's become very hard to even discuss the science without being accused of being "anti-vax". Apparently there is a risk to researchers who publish anything even remotely critical of the official party line.

    Also, you may wish to consider that boosters will likely continue, maybe even indefinitely at a regular interval.
     
  14. Jonathan Edwards

    Jonathan Edwards Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    Nobody knows for sure but if you go on the basis of what is much most likely a booster is very likely to stop you getting a nasty illness. I would take the data on antibodies and stuff with a pinch of salt. We know the vaccines provide immunity in the sense of reducing the likelihood of being ill. A top up almost certainly boosts that.

    My friends had had their first doses several months back and a child came home from school full of Covid. Maybe no amount of vaccine would have protected them but if you come into contact with a small dose in the street or a shop immunity may make all the difference.
     
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  15. FMMM1

    FMMM1 Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    Sorry hadn't read down to Jonathan's reply - ignore.

    "Boosters give over 90% protection against symptomatic COVID-19 in adults over 50---"*. So that's why they're running the booster program. However, this is population based i.e. you, as per Jonathan's friends, could be the unlucky (>10% who have symptomatic illness).

    My impression is that Long covid is poorly understood; therefore, it cannot be tested for/predicted.

    I'm guessing boosters are a fact of life but I wonder if they're going to have to develop a new vaccine (few months) and deliver it (6 months?) i.e. to address the new variant. Think I recall Fergus Walsh said that we'd know more in a few weeks i.e. if the new variant will infect people who are vaccinated.

    You might be interested in Independent Sage - Friday (YouTube 1.30 pm)



    *[https://www.gov.uk/government/news/boosters-give-over-90-protection-against-symptomatic-covid-19-in-adults-over-50#:~:text=Universal Credit account-,Boosters give over 90% protection against symptomatic COVID,19 in adults over 50]
     
  16. Binkie4

    Binkie4 Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    Thank you to thread participants for this discussion here.

    It is an awful mess for those of us with adverse reactions who need to decide whether to get more vaccinations. It has become more pressured in a way now that booster2 can be given after 3 months.

    For me that is January 2nd although I heard the tail end of a news item which seemed to be saying " do not book yourself in but wait to be approached ". I am not yet fully over booster 1 so at the moment, I would refuse booster 2, and I haven't sorted out how I want to go forward. I flip flop. I want the protection of the vaccine without severe adverse effects.

    Since I have had 2 types of vaccine (3 doses in total) and have reacted badly to both, my experience would support the theory that if you are sensitive to vs, you will have an adverse reaction but this is just a personal story.

    There is also the issue of how you react: are your reactions similar to each other or do they differ dependant on the vaccine type?

    My AZ reactions were totally different from the Pf.

    AZ produced " almost anaphylaxis" (GP diagnosis), ie angioedema of the throat, but also nausea, dizziness, extreme fatigue, severe tinnitus, weakness and I was bedbound for many weeks. Both AZ vs were in a community setting and I managed the reactions myself- I had rescue antihistamines, and epipens, not needed.

    I am grateful not to have had the neurological reactions suffered by many which seem to have persisted.

    I was referred to hospital for a booster on advice of my immunologist. Very glad to be there because the Pf produced such severe vertigo, dizziness, nausea and then vomiting ( high B P and hr)that I was terrified. I was moved to A and E where doctor wanted to admit me to hospital but as soon as I was feeling a bit better I preferred to go home. Vomiting continued for several days and nausea is still around along with an unusual drowsiness but shorter length of symptoms overall than for AZ.


    Neither dose gave me a sore arm, nor a headache nor flulike symptoms.

    So at the moment I will wait, collect what information I can especially about fractional doses, ask for advice from an immunologist. I am interested too in novavax which should be approved very soon and which is reported to have fewer side effects.

    edit: paragraphing
     
    Last edited: Dec 2, 2021
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  17. Snow Leopard

    Snow Leopard Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    But "revved up" is mostly meaningless. Autoimmune illnesses are triggered by specific things going wrong, not a generalized increased activity.
     
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  18. Samuel

    Samuel Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    what is the relation of m.e. severity level to reactions reported or observed?

    [and to decisions that have been made or dr. recommendaions.]

    how soon will any of these studies on fractionated dosing etc. be done? the rumored klimas study? etc.?

    i likely have a note someplace on "klimas supplements" for prevenging reactions. and steroids have been mentioned. what is the general oinion esp. of those who hvave had unfortunate reactions? or other precautions do people think were helpful for them or were not? don't want to make those with bad reactions sicker by making them asnwering too many questions though.
     
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  19. Midnattsol

    Midnattsol Moderator Staff Member

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    The thread "Booster shots in young people for self protection?" have been merged with this thread.
     
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  20. John Mac

    John Mac Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-59418123
     
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