Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
If they can get it down to annual a la the flu, it would be more palatable. I get enough jabs in a year as it is with the bloodwork required for my monitoring plus flu shot plus other occasional vaccines (e.g. I am finally getting my Shingrix done).I hope vaccines won't continue to be every six months.
If they can get it down to annual a la the flu, it would be more palatable. I get enough jabs in a year as it is with the bloodwork required for my monitoring plus flu shot plus other occasional vaccines (e.g. I am finally getting my Shingrix done).
What's the schedule there for everyone else?My fifth is six months after my fourth. I'm on this schedule because I'm in the Clinically Extremely Vulnerable group. I hope vaccines won't continue to be every six months.
Gets confusing doesn't it? And then we add Into the mix the provinces with their different policies and interpretations of the science.I'm not sure what Evushield is. Anyone can get a booster after six months. Since I started the process earlier, I'm ahead of the game. My sister and her husband got their 4th this week. My husband got his 4th almost two weeks ago.
Gets confusing doesn't it? And then we add Into the mix the provinces with their different policies and interpretations of the science.
Crazy making and not helpful
It's an antibody used for prevention for those who are vulnerable (not just having risk factors). Since it's the antibodies themselves, people who get it don't need to rely on their own immune system responding to the injection for the protective effect.I'm not sure what Evushield is. Anyone can get a booster after six months. Since I started the process earlier, I'm ahead of the game. My sister and her husband got their 4th this week. My husband got his 4th almost two weeks ago.
Since my sweetie moved on, there has been no reason for me to be in central Cascadia, so I am in Adrian Dix's bailiwick :3You're in the US, correct? They jumped to the BA4/5 ones right away so there Moderna and Pfizer bivalents are really similar. There is no BA.1 being used there that I'm aware of. If you like to stick with one brand as long as it's available that's not a problem.
Since my sweetie moved on, there has been no reason for me to be in central Cascadia, so I am in Adrian Dix's bailiwick :3
It seems I have just three choices, one of which seems to be the Moderna gene therapy jab which I "know" and love (with bivalent on the top lol). The other two are both non mRNA.
This time it wont be in a MASH unit setting but rather at a chemists
Yeah the kid issue is a whole other thing.Yes, I am all for giving information and then leaving it up to them if they want a blood transfusing.
However, I don’t see why they can’t come up with their own donor. Giving blood is not a complicated process and marking that and directing it to someone you know ( unless it has to be transported across the country), shouldn’t be either.
I remember that in Germany, one could have one’s own blood taken well before a planned operation, so that in case you need blood as result of your operation, you actually get your own, reducing any risk that can come with other people’s blood. Not sure if they are still doing this or if technology is now so advanced that the risks are minimal.
The problem arises if this is not their own health but their child’s. In this case, there might need to be legal matters involved to make sure the child is getting the care it needs.