Got Covid for the first time last October and ran a 103 degree fever for days and struggled to feel completely normal for almost two weeks. I was already planning to keep getting the shots prior to catching it but definitely keeping up with them now. I hope to never catch that one again.
If you just had it, you get some immunity for awhile. Then get the vax as soon as allowed. That will help you ride out the later end of the winter surge, while others' immunity is waning.
I guess I got lucky. Got Covid for the first time (as far as I know) last month. Was basically just a bit tired for four days with sniffles. Maybe I'll wait until December to get this shot before the holidays begin.
There's a fair bit of masking or luck involved in that at this point. The current crop of COVID vaccines don't prevent disease for more than a few months.
I just avoid most people. But with two young kids, yes, we are lucky. Not a single case of covid in our household.
Probably doesn't hurt that we are all vaccinated, remind our kids to wash every time they come inside from playing, do most play with others outside (playground, bike ridesz etc), and I work from home about 95% of the time.
For what it's worth, you most likely had much more mild symptoms for a much shorter duration because you were vaccinated! But I still apologize, getting sick sucks.
I got it about five or six months after getting the first round of boosters after traveling for work. I was fucking exhausted for four or five days and couldn't start awake for more than a few hours. Still planning on getting this round because it would be nuts not to.
I did that a couple of years ago and got sicker than I got when I actually had COVID. I staggered them by two weeks last year and felt fine. I'm going to do that from now on.
It didn't affect me when i did it. Got both, one in each arm. My covid arm was a bit sore and tight around the injection site, and the flu arm was fine. I didn't feel any adverse effects.
My colleague did the same but felt rough as arseholes for a week or so.
It varied across the office, but i would say that only maybe 30% of us felt anything close to being sick at all. The estates department next door were all off for days after it.
So it's different for everyone.
(For context, i work in a hospital, and they go around offering these vaccines every year)
Thankfully I've never really had any major reaction to flue shots aside from a sore arm for a couple of days, but I know people who get knocked flat for a day or two afterward and they still get them because they know the actual illness is much, much worse and affects more than just them.
There's this bizarre fixation on trying to force Covid response to fit into the flu pattern. Sure, we may end up there eventually, but the two waves a year pattern is here now.
Really you can if you pick a different pharmacy to get it at. Then again not sure if you’re in a state that has mandated record keeping. Then I guess you can’t but in GA I just go to CVS for my first one and the Kroger for my mid year one.
I got covid before I was allowed to get the first vaccines and I'm still pissed about that since I drove by the closest vaccination spot every day for work and it was almost always empty. I lived in a very red area so it was very much a case of "doors are open but nobody's lining up" but I was still not part of o e of the groups they allowed to get one yet.
So yeah, I will be continuing to keep up on it, because that was the worst 2 months of my adult life, and I am absolutely certain I got some of the cognitive side effects of covid.
It's an article about the stats of vaccination rates, and a lot of structural explanations for why those rates have dropped (mostly loss of funding for covering the uninsured or paying for getting the vaccines to nursing homes or the disabled). It's an important discussion.
If we can't have universal healthcare I would at least like the goverment to cover all vaccines folks are eligible for. The cost to benefit ratio should just make it a no brainer.
Who will get them? I'd say the answer is anyone who doesn't feel the need to be sick as fuck for two weeks.
Also anyone with any health issues who lives anywhere with the anti-vaccine MAGA idiots probably should too, since if you don't take care of yourself they sure as fuck won't lift a finger either.
If you or someone you know are having trouble making reasonable decisions right now, take my advice... Get it. This variant is FUCKING miserable. The peak lasts longer than previous and then just fucking lingers and lingers into a persistent dry cough that lasts (for 5 weeks at this point).
Get vaccinated for yourself and the people around you
Probably not my Trump-loving conspiracy theorist coworker who mentioned this to me and said “It’s scary”. Not to be confused with the other Trump-loving conspiracy theorist coworker who believes that there wasn’t a pandemic but several people that he knows got COVID multiple times each.
I tried to get a booster a couple months ago because last autumn's shots had waned. I was turned away by pharmacists, even though my insurance would cover it. They claimed they were reserved for people in certain high risk groups (maybe due to a shortage, although I'm not aware of a demand peak in summertime, and I hadn't seen any shortage mentioned in the news).
Whatever the underlying reasons might be, the result was that I tried repeatedly to get a booster, and was denied.
I mentioned this on lemmy (in this community, I think) and a couple of jerks appeared, one suggesting that I was anti-vax (how??) and another accusing me of spreading misinformation (what misinformation??) A mod then removed my comment, citing misinformation.
In any case, both experiences were really discouraging. I hope other people who actually want to be vaccinated don't run in to the same problems.
“Residents, families and staff become confused about how many vaccinations are required to stay up to date, and many are reluctant to continually inject vaccine product into their bodies, particularly more than once per year,” she wrote.
So, it's not that they aren't available to them. They just don't want to take it. It's twice a year, not a hard calculus to make and if you refuse the vaccine don't fucking cry when you're on you're death bed. Fuck these people.
Meanwhile their shitty voting habits are making it hard to get vaccines to the working poor. I say the more of them who are dead the better. One less vote against common sense.
I get a flu shot every year. Mostly, I forget to do so until the text comes out from my pharmacy. I don't recall hearing about a new covid shot from my pharmacy. I also listened to the radio campaign s they did but didn't know a new shot was out
They really need to just offer them in parallel at flu shot clinics. It's just a thing responsible people should do, and our health infrastructure should make as simple as possible for them to do it.