shak8
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
I get to have my booster jab earlier or at all on medical grounds weakened but not the immunocompromised category.
So I get a letter telling me that I ‘may be eligible’ but upon trying to book it becomes clear that what that means is I can book an appointment because maybe I qualify for a vaccine. But they don’t actually decide whether or not I do until I am in the appointment at the chemist.
I’ve never actually been stopped at this point but I do get grilled on whether I really need one sometimes.
I don’t react well to the vaccines about two weeks feeling like I have flu maybe a couple of months feeling generally bad. But I often can’t have a vaccine until way late because I can’t leave the house for one. Always leaving me tempted to just not have one.
But I have asthma and I have had severe breathlessness each time I’ve had suspected Covid last time I thought I might have to call an ambulance. The first time it’s been that bad since my first infection pre vaccinations so I think I’ll have to have one. I really don’t wanna go like that.
I was thinking of trying to get a Novavax one privately in hopes of fewer side effects or faster recovery.
But I don’t know how recently updated the current batches will be compared with say Pfizer and Moderna vaccines. I to find out but got too confused and gave up.
If anyone knows give me a shout?!
They don't make it easy do they.
I regularly watch, every Saturday, Clinical Update with Dr. Daniel Griffin on TWIV Microbe TV a podcast made by virologist Dr. Vincent Rancaniello (He has a website where Dave Tuller writes his posts).
They said recently that there won't be data on the protection from serious illness (defined as hospitalization and /or death) until the season plays out, between the various vaccines. They said that even though Novovax is based on a prior variant, less current than the ones by Moderna and Pfizer, they're all in the same family (clade) so they expect that in real life (clinically) there won't be a clinically relevant difference. Past comparisons measured RNA copy numbers between vaccines, which doesn't tell you much. Novavax and Moderna did the best with those (original 2021 versions).
Currently Novovax they say seems to have few side effects. That's my pick this year. I'll get my flu jab and my Novavax at the same time and plan to be flattened and miserable for a week. I have a minimal social life but if I get invited for the holidays...I might have to remove my mask to eat indoors!
Only serious vaccine side effects are investigated. (I had tingling and numbness on one side of my face with visual changes from my first Pfizer, it lasted 30 minutes and scared me and I reported it to VARS, our US agency for that.
A serious side effect is one that doesn't go away, or causes organ damage (myocarditis, stroke). The VARS uses the background level of diseases in the region and compares it to the incidence in the reported vaccine adverse events, I assume. It can be hard to establish cause and effect because life is random.
VARS did ask me whether what I experienced went away. they followed up.
The increased protection from covid vaccines lasts only 3 months. The antibodies generated by your body in response to the vaccine are largely gone after that. Your prior vaccination series (3 -4 shots) or some vaccines plus case(s) of covid induce memory T-cells which activate in response to the virus and give you at least 60% protection from serious illness (hospitalization and/or death).
Hope this helps.