Coronavirus prep

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Replies

  • SModa61
    SModa61 Posts: 3,098 Member
    kimny72 wrote: »
    @SModa61 ! After posting I decided to listen to TWIV while I worked and Mondays epi was a Q&A with Dr Daniel Griffith and he talked about this :smiley:

    He said there is an age based development process for the immune system which leads to the dosing differences. A woman said her son is 4 and 1/2 and big for his age so can he get the 5-11 shot early, and he said no, she should wait.

    @kimny72 Thank you so much for the effort and getting me that explanation. There was a reason I asked my question here. <3 I knew I would get a helpful answer!
  • paperpudding
    paperpudding Posts: 9,281 Member
    I am not aware of any vaccines that give different amounts based on the size of the recipient (as oppossed to the age of the recipient)

    However differences in dosing requirements according to age are not a new thing - several vaccines have an adult and a paediatric version - eg Hep A, Hep B
    Flu vaccine also has an over 65's version

    and several others have differences in spacing or number of doses required although each dose is not different - eg Gardisil, flu vaccine

    of course like all such things there has to be a cut off point - although in reality, obviously it isnt a single point but a gradient.

    Meaning, for example, I would never give a 20 year old the over 65's flu vaccine - but if it was all that was available I might give it somebody of 64.
  • ReenieHJ
    ReenieHJ Posts: 9,724 Member
    Just curious, regarding the vaccines for 5-11 yo, has anyone heard what kinds of possible side effects it may have??

    I'd google but as I've said before, I trust most of you much more than I'd trust random sites. :)
  • SuzySunshine99
    SuzySunshine99 Posts: 2,989 Member
    edited November 2021
    ReenieHJ wrote: »
    Just curious, regarding the vaccines for 5-11 yo, has anyone heard what kinds of possible side effects it may have??

    I'd google but as I've said before, I trust most of you much more than I'd trust random sites. :)

    In the trials, they said the kids had similar side effects to many adults...sore arms, headache, fever, but the symptoms were short-lived. As with adults, some had no effects.
  • GaleHawkins
    GaleHawkins Posts: 8,159 Member
    https://www.france24.com/en/live-news/20211104-grave-concern-over-covid-in-europe-as-german-cases-soar

    I never thought I would be reading this kind of headlines as we rush upon 2023.

    Thankfully here in Kentucky USA currently there's no limits on gas and other fossil fuel purchases. Grocery stores are well stocked with no purchase limits. Death and hospitalizations had been on a steady decline but that may be about to change.
  • oocdc2
    oocdc2 Posts: 1,361 Member
    https://www.france24.com/en/live-news/20211104-grave-concern-over-covid-in-europe-as-german-cases-soar

    I never thought I would be reading this kind of headlines as we rush upon 2023.

    Thankfully here in Kentucky USA currently there's no limits on gas and other fossil fuel purchases. Grocery stores are well stocked with no purchase limits. Death and hospitalizations had been on a steady decline but that may be about to change.

    Huh...I didn't realize that vaccine resistance continues to be such a problem worldwide.
  • GaleHawkins
    GaleHawkins Posts: 8,159 Member
    edited November 2021
    https://www.france24.com/en/live-news/20211104-grave-concern-over-covid-in-europe-as-german-cases-soar

    I never thought I would be reading this kind of headlines as we rush upon 2023.

    Thankfully here in Kentucky USA currently there's no limits on gas and other fossil fuel purchases. Grocery stores are well stocked with no purchase limits. Death and hospitalizations had been on a steady decline but that may be about to change.

    Wait, what? Did I fall asleep and miss a year again? :o

    Now that you realize you're a year behind you can move twice as fast to catch up. :-)
  • GaleHawkins
    GaleHawkins Posts: 8,159 Member
    kimny72 wrote: »
    The vaccine is out of your system within a couple of weeks. There is absolutely no reason to think that there will be some kind of long term sinister effects. The rNA vaccines have to be kept so cold because they are fragile and break down quickly.

    It's viruses that can hide in your body (like the chicken pox) and reemerge in a couple of decades to do more damage.

    My father said if you are looking for a bugger bear you are sure to find one. :)
  • lynn_glenmont
    lynn_glenmont Posts: 10,092 Member
    ythannah wrote: »
    https://www.france24.com/en/live-news/20211104-grave-concern-over-covid-in-europe-as-german-cases-soar

    I never thought I would be reading this kind of headlines as we rush upon 2023.

    Thankfully here in Kentucky USA currently there's no limits on gas and other fossil fuel purchases. Grocery stores are well stocked with no purchase limits. Death and hospitalizations had been on a steady decline but that may be about to change.

    Wait, what? Did I fall asleep and miss a year again? :o

    Yes, yes you did, Rumpelstiltskin.

    Or maybe it's the Freudian way of letting us know we probably want to skip right past 2022 also.

    I'm so afraid you're right.
  • Theo166
    Theo166 Posts: 2,564 Member
    oocdc2 wrote: »
    https://www.france24.com/en/live-news/20211104-grave-concern-over-covid-in-europe-as-german-cases-soar

    I never thought I would be reading this kind of headlines as we rush upon 2023.

    Thankfully here in Kentucky USA currently there's no limits on gas and other fossil fuel purchases. Grocery stores are welstocked with no purchase limits. Death and hospitalizations had been on a steady decline but that may be about to change.

    Huh...I didn't realize that vaccine resistance continues to be such a problem worldwide.

    Yes and the reason among health care workers is in part due to the lack scientific data where the net value of COVID-19 vaccines will positive or negative for our health over the next 50-75 years.

    In my case before my first Moderna vaccine shot the Covid-19 blood clots side effects almost ended my life.

    If I am bitten by a deadly poisonous snake I hope someone breaks the speed limit trying to get me to a place where I can get a shot. I realize that would put me and the others at risk of dying in a car accident but a potential death is easier deal with mentally than a certain death.

    Medically I understand long term Covid-19 vaccinations may harm me and shorten my life expectancy. Yet just getting COVID-19 may cause the same risk.

    Being 70 and the kids being 24 I wouldn't want to be tying up a ventilator that might save a young person's life.

    COVID-19 vaccines I know help manage this Pandemic in the short run so to hades with the long term What Ifs!

    https://youtu.be/-SYL-iU0E9Q

    This is some new research to me.

    This Dr is spreading misinformation.

    Are you trying to say the study is bad, or his commentary on the research?

    You can do better than just throwing out an ad hominem
  • SModa61
    SModa61 Posts: 3,098 Member
    ythannah wrote: »
    kimny72 wrote: »
    It's viruses that can hide in your body (like the chicken pox) and reemerge in a couple of decades to do more damage.

    Or just hang out in your body forever, like the herpes simplex virus, and reappear periodically to be annoying. Says the woman who currently has a cold sore.

    My imagined concern is another comparative. In cats, there is a feline coronavirus that is commonly caught. It manifests in the cat like a cold or the like. The cat recovers, but the virus lays dormant in the cat for life. What I recall is that stressors to the animal (aging, rehoming, other illnesses, etc) promote mutations in the virus. Certain mutations do not impact the animal a go undetected, but other mutations manifest as FIP which is essentially a fatal condition for the animal. I am sure there are much better explanations out there, but you can get the general idea. I am hoping that this COVID-19 virus does not share this trait.