Reece Sargent
Member
- Relationship to Diabetes
- Type 1
Just curious to see how many type 1 diabetics will go through with the vaccine, I’m not anti vax, just nervous. Anyone been contacted yet??
Have a look at this thread, there are a fair few Type 1s that have had theirs, mainly older, of course, since we haven’t got to Group 6 yet, but some younger front line health workers.Just curious to see how many type 1 diabetics will go through with the vaccine, I’m not anti vax, just nervous. Anyone been contacted yet??
I just had the usual vaccination things: a sore arm for a couple of days (starting the next day, so a reaction to the vaccine rather than just the injection). People mostly report the same sorts of thing (maybe mild fever).that’s what I was worried about and wanted to see if anyone had side effects, many thanks again!
Just curious to see how many type 1 diabetics will go through with the vaccine, I’m not anti vax, just nervous. Anyone been contacted yet??
However, these new mRNA "vaccines" had never been allowed to be tested on humans until now (for a good reason i'd suppose).
I've been hearing this "anyone can catch it" and "anyone can pass it on" almost every day (including today) since the very beginning of the campaign, but if it that is true, it doesn't say much for the vaccines does it?
Must admit I'm still not clear what the numbers are. Obviously the severity (and duration) of the effects also varies a lot (plenty of people have at least mild symptoms months after influenza). Since the numbers of infected people has been so large even a small percentage of chronic long term problems will be horrible.the large numbers of people suffering with ‘long Covid’
That is not true, mRNA vaccines have been tested on humans before. But as a "new" technology of only around thirty years old they were still difficult to produce until very recently which is why they had never been used in a marketable vaccine until now.
I don't think we know that. I think the trials for the mRNA vaccines (in particular the Pfizer one) were looking for symptomatic infection (perhaps even more serious infection). (I think everyone thinks it's likely that all these vaccines will significantly reduce transmission. It's just that there's not a whole lot of evidence yet, and the efficacy trials weren't designed to produce even the evidence that they might have produced: that the vaccines reduced the likelihood of becoming infected. Again, they probably do reduce that, but I think we don't know yet.)and now, with the vaccine rollout, you can't get it if you've been vaccinated either.
A lengthy response, but no answers?
e.g you can't get it if you've had it (aquired immunity)
Amity, my usual comment, very few things are either black or white. Replace your "can't" with a probability statement and things make more sense. If we talked about risk, and the data expressed in risk terms, then we would be further forward in my view.Hi Inka,
I know.... but how long are they going to keep this "anyone can get it/pass it on" slogan going? I never agreed with that statement from the very beginning, because I always felt it wasn't accurate.
e.g you can't get it if you've had it (aquired immunity), you can't get it if you're isolating, you can't get it if you already have it, you can't pass it on if you don't have it, you can't pass it on if you are isolating, you can't pass it on if someone else is isolating, you can't pass it on to someone who already has it, you can't pass it on to someone who has immunity..... and now, with the vaccine rollout, you can't get it if you've been vaccinated either.
That's an awful lot of situations where "anyone can't".
Hi Inka,
I know.... but how long are they going to keep this "anyone can get it/pass it on" slogan going? I never agreed with that statement from the very beginning, because I always felt it wasn't accurate.
e.g you can't get it if you've had it (aquired immunity), you can't get it if you're isolating, you can't get it if you already have it, you can't pass it on if you don't have it, you can't pass it on if you are isolating, you can't pass it on if someone else is isolating, you can't pass it on to someone who already has it, you can't pass it on to someone who has immunity..... and now, with the vaccine rollout, you can't get it if you've been vaccinated either.
That's an awful lot of situations where "anyone can't".