Feel free to share your reasons if you like.
I am fully vaccinated, but have not gotten the booster. I'm still debating it in my head.
I'm starting to worry that experts like Drs. Malone and McCullough may be correct, that we will have problems down the road. And my wife and I are NOT vaccinating our kids, aged 14 and 13. The data, despite what our fear mongering media and the Great Fauchino and other "experts" say, just do not support it.
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Not time for the booster, but I don’t plan on getting it.
infection...check it out.
Also, hopefully the trend continues that each new variant going forward will cause less severe cases. Because the vaccines are not "true vaccines" in that they prevent you from getting Covid, this will never go away... only evolve into new variants.
them to take the risk.
the video is a UCSF 'Grand Rounds' Zoom call among doctors who are Infectious Disease Specialists, hosted by the head of UCSF's Medical Department...if you have some time, the entire video contains great information about Omicron.
Link: https://youtu.be/IGspuLnRBB4
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Because that was the only question I asked.
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I'll watch it, but I have access to substantial medical guidance on the topic. And still I am debating it.
the researchers who generated the data, so you're not going to get any better info that what he's providing regarding COVID-19 and Omicron in particular...btw, he's also slated to become the head of our U.S. Infectious Disease Society...so there's that as well. In any event, form your own opinion from what you see...and let us know what that is.
Also, feel free to share the info you are getting from your sources...it helps all of us.
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I am a fit and active 40 y/o but I have type 1 diabetes so I dont mind injecting shit into my body
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She had fever chills and soreness for about 24 hours. We both got ours on the weekends to make sure we get back to work on Mondays. But she just started a new job last week running clinical trials for major pharma companies, her company was involved in a lot of the Covid stuff. We both work remote from home now but the kids are in school and I have no doubt we will all get it at some point. My kids are vaxed also but I have not thought about getting them the booster
At least not as of now.
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Will be once it becomes mandatory for the military.
I just spent two weeks in isolation with someone who had it, and I did not have any symptoms, I've tested negative, so right now I see no reason to get boosted, that was my booster.
I had COVID in December of 2020. I felt no societal obligation to get vaccinated for a year, so I received my 2 doses in November/December. I won't be due for a booster (if deemed necessary) until mid-summer.
I have no co-morbidities, so I have no pressing need for another vacc. Finally, the sudden increase in men in myocarditis and pericarditis after vacc is concerning and I want to see the data play out.
I'm going to ask him about that and am curious as to what he will say.
Yes, that seems to be a side effect of the vaccine in some people.
and
Yes, that seems to be a side effect of the disease in even more people.
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I got really sick after my second dose, not really wanting to experience that again, so holding off on a booster.
Sore in my shoulder girdle several hours later, then spent the next day between the couch and bed with aches and fever. Ironically, it was far worse than when I'd actually had COVID.
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I have read that some people had weeks of issues after their vaccine, but you're the first person I "know" who described that.
And this wasn't a typical upper respiratory gunk, it was coming from my lungs, I could feel the congestion in my lungs and the stuff coming out was stringy and gross. I've never experienced anything like it.
It all started around a week after my 2nd dose, tested negative for CoVID.
I consider myself extremely lucky. Most people I know had some issues. I'm not anxious to press my luck if it's not necessary.
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Increase in deaths per million
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