Yes
No
First C19 shot today. Astra Zeneca, the clotting killer...........
Now 5 hours elapsed and I still have no 5G effect............
But seriously, I've been eligible (Australia) for 8 weeks and it took 7 weeks of scouring the net and phoning three different places daily to finally get a booking.
First world problem BUT a delay for the first shot I can live with but I'll be fairly pissed off if I can't make a booking for the scheduled booster in 12 weeks time.
I wish the vaccine magnetized me. I would love to go on a date with someone who appreciates my clearly non-magnetic personality.
La Cheeserie!
"Do you want ants? Because that's how you get ants."
I'm getting my second dose of Pfizer/BioNTech 5 weeks after the first.
Over here, they are administering AZ vax only to those 65 years and older. We asked the older but impossibly stylish couple who live two doors down from us whether they got their jabs already, and they replied, "Yes, but we got the cheap one!", meaning AZ. We cracked up.
Chikashi Miyamoto
Yes, Astra Zeneca administered in Australia requires a 12 week split between initial shot and the booster shot.
Today feeling a bit off colour, might be the vax. or it might be the fact I pushed hard yesterday to get a day's work done before lunchtime in order to get the vaccine after lunch. Nothing major, just below par.
I had a girlfriend who claimed she had magnetic powers on account of her propensity to scramble laptop hard drives. This was before everything came with a SSD. Then one day I saw her stuffing the macbook into her purse. The purse with a heavy magnetic catch. I didn't have the heart to tell her she didn't have a superpower.
I had the J&J one shot in early May. Not because of the single dose but 'cause it was a late comer and tested on the variants in Europe and South Africa. Nothing other than some itching at the injection site.
Earlier this month a co-worker went to a wedding in Chicago. Flew instead of driving. I told him flying was a bad idea. He replied "I'm vaccinated" and went anyways. Came back and exposed the entire shop to Covid-19. Sat next to me at lunch too. I'm fine no symptoms. Guess it works for me.
This morning I got a sticker on my security badge saying I was fully vaccinated. Off went the mask, it was very liberating.
Retired Sailor, Marine dad, semi-professional cyclist, fly fisherman, and Indian School STEM teacher.
Assistant Operating Officer at Farm Soap homemade soaps. www.farmsoap.com
I've now had both Pfizer shots. Given the ramshackle way the vaccine roll out has happened in Australia I feel fortunate to have been vaccinated at all. In terms of side effects (and I had both shots on Sunday evenings) I felt fine the morning after the first shot, but gradually became tired and lethargic over the course of the day. This was cured by some sleep. The morning after the second shot, my arm was sore and that was it. But gradually over the course of the day my body started to hurt and I had the chills. Some Nurofen and a sleep helped.
FINALLY the 99-year-old mother-in-law got her first Pfizer vaccine dose, on the heals of discharge from a eight day hospital stay. She's in rehab at our house for the next month. It's taken all of her sons insisting she was going from discharge directly to dose #1 . She'll get dose #2 while with us and a real hair cut after that. She had no noticeable ill effects from it other than she finally had a full night of sleep (but then who wouldn't after a run of days at the hospital).
Good thing you got the Pfizer-BioNTech ones. I'm having my second dose of Comirnaty at the start of next month.
My buddy in Sydney had his first AZ dose a few weeks ago, but the with the Delta variant having arrived on your shores and AZ's median efficacy against the Delta variant at only about 60%, he's not exactly pleased.
Chikashi Miyamoto
No comment on this particular situation, but case reports are published quite regularly of so-called "breakthrough cases" (I'm not an obsessive, I do this kind of research/reading for work). Remember, 90% efficacy is a) not universal re: age, condition, viral strain etc. and b) still 10% not-effective. If you're part of that unlucky 10% and have a significant exposure episode (e.g. viral dosage) you can still get sick and transmit. Also, those % values most often published are "XX% effective at preventing severe disease" which is not the same efficacy against carrying the virus, suffering from mild symptoms, or transmitting the virus. Those efficacy values are different.
"Do you want ants? Because that's how you get ants."
J and I chatted about the article below. He may have summarized the convo in the other Covid thread.
What Really Happened With that Weird Yankees COVID Outbreak
By David Wallace-Wells
Last week, in very short order, eight members of the New York Yankees, all of whom were apparently “fully” vaccinated, tested positive for COVID-19, confusing and alarming many Americans — not to mention Yankee fans — who had assumed that vaccination would close the book on the pandemic, at least for the vaccinated. Michael Mina, however, was not confused or alarmed. A Harvard epidemiologist who has spent the pandemic advocating for the widespread use of home-pregnancy-style rapid antigen tests, Mina has become, over the past year, one of the most clear-eyed critics of the public-health establishment and the COVID messaging that has emerged from it.
https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2021...-outbreak.html
IIRC, Dr. Michael Mina argues that asymptomatic infections in the vaccinated (and unvaccinated) shouldn't be considered contagious. High cycle thresholds and all that. CDC seems to be following this logic as they no longer track non-hospitalized "breakthrough" cases. Question is how are mild (formerly) breakthrough cases different than any mild Covid-19 case, ie, if you're a non-vaccinated person infected by a vaccinated individual who shows mild symptoms (or none at all) will you have a better outcome than being infected by a non-vaccinated "healthy" individual?
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