For sure, although the author of the blog does acknowledge that.However, this is illustrative of the problems generalising from just one case.
Strohm said:Did the JEV vaccine really help me to recover from Long COVID, or was it just a quirk of timing in a recovery that I might have made anyway? I can’t make any causal claims about this from a single case study.
I can understand someone who experienced an improvement around the time of being vaccinated would want to write about it, and who knows, perhaps it is a clue. I'm happy for people to write about most things they think have helped so long as they acknowledge the uncertainty.
I note that this woman's vaccination schedule was pretty full on. It's possible to make a few other hypotheses from this experience, including that the earlier broad immunological challenge was what did the trick, rather than the followup JEV dose. I can imagine some change processes taking a couple of weeks rather than a couple of hours.
Separately from the Long COVID issue, I also needed to update some of my travel vaccines. In April 2022, I got boosters for meningitis; typhoid; tetanus, diphtheria, and pertussis (Tdap). I also got a new-to-me vaccine against the Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV), the first of a two-dose series. Despite the name, JEV is found across Asia, and I’d been planning a trip to India before I got sick. I decided to get the vaccine as long as I was at the travel clinic, just in case I ever recovered enough to travel.
The days after that first travel clinic appointment passed in the usual haze of fatigue and brain fog. Then I went back for my second dose of the JEV vaccine the following week. Within hours of the second dose, I felt my energy levels starting to improve. That was the first day in months that I hadn’t needed an afternoon nap.
Similar to Peter and his hesitancy to rush out for a JEV vaccine, I won't be rushing out to have a smorgasbord of vaccines either.
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