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Pfizer for teens?

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  • janejellyroll
    janejellyroll Posts: 25,763 Member
    edited July 2021
    nooshi713 wrote: »
    kshama2001 wrote: »
    tmanfive wrote: »
    I was just saying, I wouldn’t take it until it was approved. I’m not using that as an excuse not to get it. I just won’t.

    If a couple few rounds of e-coil, meningitis, and the many extremely unsafe things I’ve done in my lifetime hasn’t done me in this won’t.

    A brown recluse spider bite, scorpion bites, and a tick bite that resulted in Anaplasmosis didn't do me in. Why? I received medical treatment.

    And I got the Covid vaccine.

    Oooh how did you do with the brown recluse bite??

    You sound like me. I’m always in nature and have been bit by a fish, stung by a school of jellyfish, and got my hand impaled by a sea urchin. Lol.

    Haha, after the first two I think I'd stay out of the water forever so I admire your bravery!
  • naomi8888
    naomi8888 Posts: 519 Member
    As always, risk vs benifit

    Side effects of vaccine vs likelihood of disease outcomes for yourself and others.

    No brainer.

    This exactly. I'm in Australia as well and we're in the middle of big protests over mandatory vaccines. I think it should be up to the individual to decide if they want to be vaccinated or not. I decided to get the vaccination but it's not my place to force someone else to (I can just look after myself). However, if you choose not to get vaccinated then you need to face the consequences.

    We have had very few cases compared to the rest of the world so I wonder if opinions will change when people begin to witness deaths and serious illness firsthand.
  • madaboutblu
    madaboutblu Posts: 24 Member
    I am late to this conversation but it's good to see a balanced and open discussion on this topic. I see it from both sides, I get people being fearful of Covid and wanting desperately to get their lives back - absolutely, but I also see others who are genuinely scared of the vaccine being berated by those who are vaccinated. If you have witnessed negative affects first hand and you decide you dont want to have it yet, I get that, because if we force people to be vaccinated there is no recompense for those suffering ill affects, in many cases they are not even being acknowledged. In the UK the narrative is changing and there is more investigation into the side affects, and the efficacy of the vaccine. They are rolling out 3rd doses as they think it wears off, they are also suggesting it doesn't reduce transmission or chances of catching covid, but minimizes the symptoms only and those who catch it have a similar viral load to those who don't. I think its a really complicated situation, and I just think we need to be kind and support each other best we can because nobody really knows the answers.
  • mph323
    mph323 Posts: 3,565 Member
    naomi8888 wrote: »
    As always, risk vs benifit

    Side effects of vaccine vs likelihood of disease outcomes for yourself and others.

    No brainer.

    This exactly. I'm in Australia as well and we're in the middle of big protests over mandatory vaccines. I think it should be up to the individual to decide if they want to be vaccinated or not. I decided to get the vaccination but it's not my place to force someone else to I can just look after myself. However, if you choose not to get vaccinated then you need to face the consequences.

    We have had very few cases compared to the rest of the world so I wonder if opinions will change when people begin to witness deaths and serious illness firsthand.

    Can you clarify something here? Vaccine mandates are being interpreted as forcing people to get vaccinated or lose access to jobs/indoor venues/transportation etc., hence the protests. If I'm reading you right, you are anti-mandate, but pro-consequences? Do you mean just that the consequences of being unvaccinated leaves one many times more likely to become seriously ill and die, or does that include the social consequences as well?

    As far as the bolded, the answer is a clear no, judging by what's going on in the US in many hard-hit areas.
  • naomi8888
    naomi8888 Posts: 519 Member
    edited September 2021
    mph323 wrote: »
    naomi8888 wrote: »
    As always, risk vs benifit

    Side effects of vaccine vs likelihood of disease outcomes for yourself and others.

    No brainer.

    This exactly. I'm in Australia as well and we're in the middle of big protests over mandatory vaccines. I think it should be up to the individual to decide if they want to be vaccinated or not. I decided to get the vaccination but it's not my place to force someone else to I can just look after myself. However, if you choose not to get vaccinated then you need to face the consequences.

    We have had very few cases compared to the rest of the world so I wonder if opinions will change when people begin to witness deaths and serious illness firsthand.

    Can you clarify something here? Vaccine mandates are being interpreted as forcing people to get vaccinated or lose access to jobs/indoor venues/transportation etc., hence the protests. If I'm reading you right, you are anti-mandate, but pro-consequences? Do you mean just that the consequences of being unvaccinated leaves one many times more likely to become seriously ill and die, or does that include the social consequences as well?

    As far as the bolded, the answer is a clear no, judging by what's going on in the US in many hard-hit areas.

    Hi mph, yes the government has made it clear over the last few weeks that unvaccinated people will not be allowed into many venues, can not gather with as many friends, etc.

    The consequences I was talking about though were illness and death. We have low rates of Covid here (we go into lockdown over single digit cases) but after 230+ days in lockdown people are sick of it and rates are climbing. As more and more people witness firsthand the impact I would assume they will opt to get vaccinated but as you pointed out - maybe not, time will tell.

    The protests started when the government announced last Friday that vaccines will be mandatory in the construction industry and only gave people a week's notice or they wouldn't be allowed to work. When the workers took to the streets to protest, the state government shut down the whole industry for two weeks. So... they're still protesting. Next they're focusing on mandates for teachers and childcare workers.

  • paperpudding
    paperpudding Posts: 9,260 Member
    Yes, sheahughes - SA public health employees must have flu vaccine, mmr, hepatitis b, varicella, whooping cough ( or immunity proven by serology where relevant) people in relevant industries need Q fever vaccine, yellow fever vaccine is mandatory for travellers to relevant countries, childhood vaccines to schedule required for family tax benifit and child care rebate and child care admission, employees and visitors to Aged Care facilities must have flu vaccine, employees of Aged Care facilities must have had at least 1covid dose by Sept 17th

    Vaccine requirements are nothing new - not sure why construction workers think it shouldn't apply to them :*
  • naomi8888
    naomi8888 Posts: 519 Member
    Apparently National Cabinet agreed that vaccination is voluntary except in high risk cases (according to my local MP) but Vic state government is obviously deviating from this.

    I agree that the vaccine is probably safer than getting Covid (I've had both doses) but I just don't feel it's my right to demand a construction worker be vaccinated if they're uncomfortable with it. If I'm vaccinated and healthy then it's not my business what they do. It's the tolerance paradox I suppose.
  • sheahughes
    sheahughes Posts: 133 Member
    naomi8888 wrote: »
    Apparently National Cabinet agreed that vaccination is voluntary except in high risk cases (according to my local MP) but Vic state government is obviously deviating from this.

    I agree that the vaccine is probably safer than getting Covid (I've had both doses) but I just don't feel it's my right to demand a construction worker be vaccinated if they're uncomfortable with it. If I'm vaccinated and healthy then it's not my business what they do. It's the tolerance paradox I suppose.

    I heard on ABC News and have seen stats on twitter that the construction workers are required by VIC to be vaxxed because there are more cases in the VIC construction industry than currently in the whole of Australia's aged care sector, so that would imply that it is a high risk case?

    I know I wouldn't be paying a tradie to work on my property if they weren't insured and I guess vaccinations are like insurance? The vaccine is minimising the risk to the tradie and those around them? Maybe insurers will start requiring their policy holders to be insured- all it would take is one person who gets sick from an unvaccinated tradie to sue them and I imagine vaccinations would become policy.

    I would be interested to see stats on construction workers who have had vaccinations for overseas travel, work in other industries - do tradies who work on health construction sites/building maintenance need to be vaccinated as health workers do? How many construction workers have their kids vaccinated to continue receiving FTB A & B, child care subsidy etc?

    Basically, they are making the situation worse. Protesting with violence like they are is only turning people against them. Their own union (CFMEU) seems to support the vaccination requirements. I am not surprised to witness they way the media spoke about the BLM protests compared to the construction workers protests. Shameful.
  • naomi8888
    naomi8888 Posts: 519 Member
    sheahughes wrote: »
    naomi8888 wrote: »
    Apparently National Cabinet agreed that vaccination is voluntary except in high risk cases (according to my local MP) but Vic state government is obviously deviating from this.

    I agree that the vaccine is probably safer than getting Covid (I've had both doses) but I just don't feel it's my right to demand a construction worker be vaccinated if they're uncomfortable with it. If I'm vaccinated and healthy then it's not my business what they do. It's the tolerance paradox I suppose.

    I heard on ABC News and have seen stats on twitter that the construction workers are required by VIC to be vaxxed because there are more cases in the VIC construction industry than currently in the whole of Australia's aged care sector, so that would imply that it is a high risk case?

    I know I wouldn't be paying a tradie to work on my property if they weren't insured and I guess vaccinations are like insurance? The vaccine is minimising the risk to the tradie and those around them? Maybe insurers will start requiring their policy holders to be insured- all it would take is one person who gets sick from an unvaccinated tradie to sue them and I imagine vaccinations would become policy.

    I would be interested to see stats on construction workers who have had vaccinations for overseas travel, work in other industries - do tradies who work on health construction sites/building maintenance need to be vaccinated as health workers do? How many construction workers have their kids vaccinated to continue receiving FTB A & B, child care subsidy etc?

    Basically, they are making the situation worse. Protesting with violence like they are is only turning people against them. Their own union (CFMEU) seems to support the vaccination requirements. I am not surprised to witness they way the media spoke about the BLM protests compared to the construction workers protests. Shameful.

    No, actually there were only 300-500 cases connected to construction and this is in a workforce of 300,000 so it's a very low rate. As for healthcare building sites I don't think it would be an issue because they wouldn't be interacting with any healthcare workers. No one is condoning the violence at protests but I don't think we should be so quick to take away freedom of choice.

    Overall, I think the feeling in Victoria is overwhelmingly one of frustration. We've now been named the world's most locked down city and I feel like the Premier has actually lost his mind. He's so quick to punish anyone that dares defy him. Parents were gathering at outdoor playgrounds to chat while the kids played (the only places open) and he swiftly shut them down. Then construction workers protested at the Union headquarters - that night he announced a two week immediate shutdown of the entire industry. A lot of those original protesters were ACTUALLY protesting against the mandatory vaccine although they had themselves been vaccinated. I guess everyone is just running out of patience here and now the demonstrations have kind of been hijacked. It's a shame that hundreds of thousands of construction workers are off for two weeks because of this knee jerk government reaction.

    *sorry, you can probably sense my frustration after such a long lockdown...
  • naomi8888
    naomi8888 Posts: 519 Member
    Hi Ann, yep it's complicated and as you say some people can't get vaccinated but there are a lot of people that can also do things to improve their health and free up ICU beds (for as you pointed out pancreatitis, gallstones, heart attack) too and they don't.

    I'm unfortunately in the most locked down city in the world so after 236 days in lockdown I am just past worrying about these things. We're getting close to our 80% fully vaccinated rate which means an end to lockdown (apparently) and at that point I don't care what other people are doing, that's their problem - let's just start living again.
  • paperpudding
    paperpudding Posts: 9,260 Member
    Yes sheahughes - you have possibly heard the saying ' vaccination is a victim of its own success' which basically means what you are saying - because vaccines work so well, people don't see the diseases they are protecting against , or at least don't see them at full potency, so wrongly think the vaccine is more of a risk than the disease
  • paperpudding
    paperpudding Posts: 9,260 Member
    cwolfman13 wrote: »
    naomi8888 wrote: »
    Hi Ann, yep it's complicated and as you say some people can't get vaccinated but there are a lot of people that can also do things to improve their health and free up ICU beds (for as you pointed out pancreatitis, gallstones, heart attack) too and they don't.

    I'm unfortunately in the most locked down city in the world so after 236 days in lockdown I am just past worrying about these things. We're getting close to our 80% fully vaccinated rate which means an end to lockdown (apparently) and at that point I don't care what other people are doing, that's their problem - let's just start living again.

    A lot of people, including myself have genetic issues we were born with for which "doing something about our health" doesn't do anything and we could easily require intensive care. I'm fit and exercise regularly and eat nutritiously, but my issues are genetic and I could require intensive care if anything goes wonky. Also, car accidents and a myriad of other things could land you in intensive care beyond it just being people not taking care of themselves.

    Many ICU units across the USA have no beds available because they are filled with unvaccinated COVID patients. We aren't at that point in my state as we have a high vaccination rate and have pockets around the state with a lot of unvaxed population...but we are more full than normal and around 96% of COVID patients are unvaxed and they're the one's taking up the beds.


    And the biggest risk factor is age.
    Obviously why countries prioritised older people first for vaccination.

    What does poster suggest those people do about that, to help themselves?
    I don't think they can make themselves be younger.
  • Theo166
    Theo166 Posts: 2,564 Member
    edited November 2021
    AnnPT77 wrote: »
    If someone is unvaccinated, yup, they're putting others at risk. And not just obese women in mobility scooters eating at McDonald's, whose complete medical history you're somehow imagining, I guess? Because even the obese scooter ladies deserve to get really sick, maybe die?

    OK.

    While maybe not your intent, this sounds to me like we should treat the unvaxxed as lepers. In fact, getting vaxxed is more about reducing their risk of hospitalization and death, not the spread.

    Even the vaccine makers don't claim it reduces spread, they claim it reduces symptomatic illness (less hospitalization and death)
  • KeithBarrows
    KeithBarrows Posts: 34 Member
    I, my wife and our (adult) son are NOT vaxxed. All of us got Covid early (before tests, before vaxs). All of us live in a densely populated area. All of us have been subjected to dozens of people who tested positive. All of us have NOT gotten sick again. There is something to say about a Natural Immunity! 13x better than the vax according to latest, and largest, review of infection done to date.

    Just remember, there are about 37 million people in the USA alone who have tested positive, were never hospitalized and are now carrying a Natural Immunity to Covid.

    I am NOT advocating skipping the vax. If you at all feel you need it - GO GET IT! Just be aware that there are 37 million of us that no longer feel we need something that nature already gave us.
  • cmriverside
    cmriverside Posts: 34,392 Member
    edited November 2021
    I, my wife and our (adult) son are NOT vaxxed. All of us got Covid early (before tests, before vaxs). All of us live in a densely populated area. All of us have been subjected to dozens of people who tested positive. All of us have NOT gotten sick again. There is something to say about a Natural Immunity! 13x better than the vax according to latest, and largest, review of infection done to date.

    Just remember, there are about 37 million people in the USA alone who have tested positive, were never hospitalized and are now carrying a Natural Immunity to Covid.

    I am NOT advocating skipping the vax. If you at all feel you need it - GO GET IT! Just be aware that there are 37 million of us that no longer feel we need something that nature already gave us.

    Give us your "study".


    This recent story with CDC numbers published last week disagrees:

    https://www.cnn.com/2021/10/29/health/covid-vaccine-protects-better-previous-infection/index.html