Doug B
Footballguy
The U.S.'s case-per-capita rate is roughly triple the UAE's. The U.S.'s COVID death-per-capita rate is over 12 times the UAE's.The most vaccinated country in the world, United Arab Emirates at 94.1%, still peaked with Omicron.
The U.S.'s case-per-capita rate is roughly triple the UAE's. The U.S.'s COVID death-per-capita rate is over 12 times the UAE's.The most vaccinated country in the world, United Arab Emirates at 94.1%, still peaked with Omicron.
So, what is the present thought that Covid is just a different form of the Flu? I know when it just about vanished in 20-21 that was the mindset of some....this is just the Flu on steroids packaged up into a different name.Can't dive into this deep right now, but here's CDC estimated numbers from the most recent two flu seasons in the U.S.
2020-2021 Flu Season Summary
2021-2022 U.S. Flu Season: Preliminary In-Season Burden Estimates
My understanding is that 20-21 was famously an unusually low flu season where flu in the U.S. just about vanished. While the ongoing 21-22 flu season is in line with typical flu seasons from the recent past.
You MONSTERYes, both my wife and daughter have had their menstruel cycle messed up after receiving the Pfizer vaccine and booster going multiple months missing. We won't know the long term effects of these vaccines until much later. I totally understand kids under 30 refusing to get vaccinated as the risk of harm from COVID is practically nothing and we don't really know the risks of the vaccine.
The viruses can be observed under a microscope and confirmed different.So, what is the present thought that Covid is just a different form of the Flu?
Whatever floats your boat, imagine any scenario you want to. Facts are facts.I'll riff off of stbugs' statement:
If more people got vaccinated and boosted pre-Omicron, the Omicron peak would have mattered a lot less and would have largely spared the U.S. healthcare system of sustained surges. Not completely in all places at all times, but largely.
Yes, both my wife and daughter have had their menstruel cycle messed up after receiving the Pfizer vaccine and booster going multiple months missing. We won't know the long term effects of these vaccines until much later. I totally understand kids under 30 refusing to get vaccinated as the risk of harm from COVID is practically nothing and we don't really know the risks of the vaccine.
Feel free to look at the facts he posted right after. The anti-vax crew played their part in making the US worse even though access to vaccines couldn’t have been better here.Whatever floats your boat, imagine any scenario you want to. Facts are facts.
What side effects?Thanks. Both my wife and myself have had different side effects and both of our doctors believe they were brought on by the vaccine which is why I was asking. Without being high risk I'd just say it's put both of us in position were I don't see either of us getting vaccinated again anytime soon and it's made me a little more sympathetic to those who don't want to get vaccinated for legitimate reasons.
Pretty sure he was an anti-vax conspiracy theorist pre-CovidI literally work for a hospital system and 80% of the hospitalizations from Omicron were unvaxxed. And 95% of the deaths were. We were holding patients in hallways for goodness sakes. Every single hospital official across the country reported the same thing. What do you think would have been the result if even more of the country were vaxx-deniers?
And how is that partisan? Geez
But but they're skinnier!!The U.S.'s case-per-capita rate is roughly triple the UAE's. The U.S.'s COVID death-per-capita rate is over 12 times the UAE's.
What side effects?
Hmm I have worse eczema this winter than I ever have beforeFor me onset of severe psoriasis in multiple areas.
Wife has it much worse. Diagnosed with Parsonage-Turner syndrome: https://pubs.rsna.org/doi/10.1148/radiol.2021211374
My bad. I need to stay out of here. Too many people jump in with questions like this to bring up an anti-vaccine front. I don’t want to say your doctor is wrong but there’s a lot more factors. That menstrual email blaming vaccines is possible but knowing that my wife also went through stretches of issues like that many times (pre COVID) and most often it’s been job stress related. The last couple years have been crazy stressful. Anyway, I read too much into your post as yet another attempt to bad mouth vaccines for that agenda.Whoa
Hmm I have worse eczema this winter than I ever have before
Interesting.....I have both PA and psoriasis, no increased plaques or arthritic pain post vaccine but definitely have had a significant increase in plaques post Omicron.I never had psoriais before but fwiw my dermatologist told me he's had heavy increase of patients who have recently got vaxxed reporting outbreaks of psoriasis, ezcema and hair loss.
Of course no one can tell you for sure if any of these things are related to the vaccine. For me I'd read about case studies of it before my derm suggested that was the cause and what I never told the derm was my outbreaks started days after the initial vaccine and got worse with every shot thereafter(which is why I had looked up case studies). So I feel pretty good knowing how this started for me.
Lol.... I literally had this conversation with my wife about how i felt like I had less this year.Hmm I have worse eczema this winter than I ever have before
My bad. I need to stay out of here. Too many people jump in with questions like this to bring up an anti-vaccine front.
Because of the small sample size, the study is not conclusive; currently, there are no evidence-based treatments for long COVID patients. Yet the findings align with the results of a separate study published in The Journal of Investigative Medicine, on October 5, 2021, which included 49 long COVID patients. Twenty-six of these patients were given antihistamines for treatment; of these, 19 reported to either a complete or partial end to their symptoms. Only six out of the 23 in the cohort who weren't given antihistamines reported that their symptoms improved within the same time period.
This isn't all that unusual, but it's also probably not a "side effect" in the traditional sense. Herpes zoster flares up when the immune system is under stress, so exposing your body to a new virus can easily reactivate the varicella-zoster virus. They're related events, but it isn't necessarily a causal relationship.My wife's menstrual cycle also got whacky after her first regimen of the Pfizer shots, not sure if it had an impact when she was boosted.
2 of my sisters had shingles outbreaks not long after getting their Moderna shots.
I dont really understand your post. I thought baymen said that this happened after pfizer vaccine.This isn't all that unusual, but it's also probably not a "side effect" in the traditional sense. Herpes zoster flares up when the immune system is under stress, so exposing your body to a new virus can easily reactivate the varicella-zoster virus. They're related events, but it isn't necessarily a causal relationship.
Yea, when you’re administering billions of doses of the vaccine it stands to reason that negative health events are going to randomly coincide with some vaccinations.This is not to say that the experience some people posting here have had isn't legitimate. It's certainly possible.
However, there's a reason why anecdotal stories aren't evidence, even when we hear about a few of them.
An example is the original attempts to link autism with the MMR vaccine. There have been countless studies and countless hours devoted to searching for any link between the two and there simply isn't. Yet, some parents still swear that it did happen to them.
The issue is when looking at small scale incidents compared to large populations. Autism typically is seen and diagnosed around 12 months of life, with the common range between 12-18 months. The MMR vaccine is given between 12-15 months of life. With that overlap, when 1 in 44 kids is diagnosed with autism, there is going to be a significant number of new diagnoses of autism that happen shortly after getting that MMR vaccine.
To make up some numbers that might illustrate this better, let's say 100,000 kids get diagnosed with autism this year. If most of these kids are being diagnosed in the 12-18 month range, then it's over 500 kids/day in that age range. A decent number of those days will happen within a few days to a few weeks of getting their MMR vaccine. So, for those parents, it will absolutely look like the vaccine could have caused the onset of autism symptoms. How could it not? Junior was fine, got the vaccine, then started with symptoms shortly afterwards. You get parents talking about it, seeing and hearing the same thing happen to so many others, and it has to be some link. And it gets difficult to convince some parents otherwise.
Well, the same is bound to happen with the Covid vaccine. There are going to be lots of new illnesses and diagnoses that were going to happen regardless of Covid or the vaccines. Now you take millions of people, you give them all a vaccine over the course of a year, literally 100s of millions of doses, and there are going to be people that develop a new illness shortly after getting the vaccine. It doesn't mean it was caused by the vaccine even if it seems to have happened to a significant number of people.
It becomes significant when we start seeing a lot more of a certain disease or onset of symptoms than would otherwise be expected. And that takes epidemiological studies to help figure out, especially at such a large scale.
These things are looked for. It's how the increased incidence of myocarditis in teenage boys was found after getting the vaccine. But I caution anyone that either personally or has someone they know have a new illness or new symptoms or worsening of an existing illness to blame it on the vaccine simply because the timing for things that were going to happen anyway will make it look like a LOT of people had a side effect from the vaccine when there's really no relationship whatsoever.
They're the same in the same way Jeep Wrangler is the same as a Lamborghini. They both have four wheels, but are completely different types of vehicles.So, what is the present thought that Covid is just a different form of the Flu? I know when it just about vanished in 20-21 that was the mindset of some....this is just the Flu on steroids packaged up into a different name.
No thanks.
I developed dermatographia 3 weeks after my Moderna booster. Shots 1 and 2 were also Moderna. Now 3 months later, it's still there but less severe. It was never itchy, but the ability to draw art on my arm made me consider selling photos of it as a NFT. The dermatologist said unlikely that it's related, but I'm not convinced.Almost everything mentioned in recent posts as vaccine side effects -- psoriasis, eczema, Parsonage-Turner syndrome, etc. -- are often follow-on effects from generalized immune system stimulation.
IOW, it's likely not anything specific to the mRNA vaccines causing the side effects. Any heavy immune response can and sometimes do trigger the same effects. Other types of vaccinations. Major viral infections. Wound sepsis. And so on.
Our immune systems can at once be our best friend and our worst enemy.
So? I dont understand the need to clarify whether it was the mRNA causing the side effects or the bodies immune response.Almost everything mentioned in recent posts as vaccine side effects -- psoriasis, eczema, Parsonage-Turner syndrome, etc. -- are often follow-on effects from generalized immune system stimulation.
IOW, it's likely not anything specific to the mRNA vaccines causing the side effects. Any heavy immune response can and sometimes do trigger the same effects. Other types of vaccinations. Major viral infections. Wound sepsis. And so on.
Our immune systems can at once be our best friend and our worst enemy.
So? I dont understand the need to clarify whether it was the mRNA causing the side effects or the bodies immune response.
Semantic nitpick: Just because it happened to you doesn't mean it's not still anecdotal. I'm guessing the term you were looking for was something like "not second-hand". The only thing that would make it non-anecdotal is if researchers are able to demonstrate that psoriasis occurs as a side effect in a statistically significant manner.I understand as I've been pro-vax, fighting the fight and anecdotal anti-vax stories are the worst.
If someone told me I know this guy whose got psoriais and his wife got this really painful thing in her arm that would no go away and it's all because of the vaccine I'd say get that crap out of here. Then it happens to you and it's not anecdotal anymore.
That's not the point of the article. No one is saying to go out and get it on purpose.No thanks.
With the dramatically higher rates of long term issues in natural infection, I'll stick with not getting it until all that's understood and sorted out.![]()
So? I dont understand the need to clarify whether it was the mRNA causing the side effects or the bodies immune response.
Primarily because the body has no way of knowing (or caring really) how the antigen is introduced to the body. The bodily reaction is what it is to the antigen regardless of how the antigen is introduced. Saying, "I got a severe case of psoriasis because of the vaccine" is inaccurate. You got a severe case of psoriasis because your immune system reacted to the antigen and your psoriasis is a side effect of that reaction.So? I dont understand the need to clarify whether it was the mRNA causing the side effects or the bodies immune response.
Exactly. Unfortunately, in this TikTok world, people don’t understand this and that one case becomes the rallying cry.Yea, when you’re administering billions of doses of the vaccine it stands to reason that negative health events are going to randomly coincide with some vaccinations.
Fascinating. Love this board so much, sometimes.Pandemic of 1889 ("Russian Flu") may have been a coronavirus and not a flu. One of the symptoms was loss of smell and taste. If true, we may be able to learn more about the multiple peaks and the way the pandemic ended.
I had read about this in the past and wondered if there any human artifacts of the time from which evidence of coronavirus infection could be potentially sampled. Corpses could maybe be exhumed and sampled, but I'm not sure what all goes into the approvals for that.Pandemic of 1889 ("Russian Flu") may have been a coronavirus and not a flu. One of the symptoms was loss of smell and taste. If true, we may be able to learn more about the multiple peaks and the way the pandemic ended.
Exhibit A why I was waiting to get my son vaccinated.CDC now recommending young males wait 8 weeks between shots 1 & 2 of Pfizer or Moderna to reduce myocarditis risk.
https://www.cnbc.com/2022/02/23/cdc-says-waiting-longer-between-pfizer-moderna-doses-may-reduce-myocarditis-risk.html
Careful, ICON will call you stupid soon with this line of thoughtExhibit A why I was waiting to get my son vaccinated.
Nothing wrong with fine-tuning this stuff.CDC now recommending young males wait 8 weeks between shots 1 & 2 of Pfizer or Moderna to reduce myocarditis risk.
https://www.cnbc.com/2022/02/23/cdc-says-waiting-longer-between-pfizer-moderna-doses-may-reduce-myocarditis-risk.html
If I cared about what one of the most arrogant people on this entire board thought about me Id have left a LOOOOOONG time ago.Careful, ICON will call you stupid soon with this line of thought
Even though this is still one of the key points right there on top?Exhibit A why I was waiting to get my son vaccinated.
The risk of myocarditis is low after vaccination. U.S. health authorities have said Covid infection poses a higher risk of heart inflammation.
Yep, in either case the risk is still comparable to getting struck by lightening.Even though this is still one of the key points right there on top?
To me, it seems news like this one should give people more confidence in the vaccines. They noticed a genuine risk, realized they can tweak the recommendation for the time period between shots, but still stress that there's greater risk in not getting vaccinated in the first place.
Yet of course people will use it as evidence instead to be less confident in the whole process.
So you're saying we still don't know a lot about the vaccines?Nothing wrong with fine-tuning this stuff.
The COVID vaccination protocols of 2021-22 will likely not be the vaccination protocols of 2031-32. Dosages will be different. The specifics of the RNA inside of mRNA vaccines will be different. Frequency of dose will be different. Etc.
Not hardly. Can't make improvements if nothing has been learned. Refining knowledge today doesn't mean that yesterday was a state of ignorance.So you're saying we still don't know a lot about the vaccines?Nothing wrong with fine-tuning this stuff.
The COVID vaccination protocols of 2021-22 will likely not be the vaccination protocols of 2031-32. Dosages will be different. The specifics of the RNA inside of mRNA vaccines will be different. Frequency of dose will be different. Etc.
"Tell me you don't understand statistics without telling me you don't understand statistics".Even though this is still one of the key points right there on top?
To me, it seems news like this one should give people more confidence in the vaccines. They noticed a genuine risk, realized they can tweak the recommendation for the time period between shots, but still stress that there's greater risk in not getting vaccinated in the first place.
Yet of course people will use it as evidence instead to be less confident in the whole process.
Yep, in either case the risk is still comparable to getting struck by lightening.