On the fence about getting vaccinated....

13,070 Views | 133 Replies | Last: 3 yr ago by Proposition Joe
Aston94
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El Chupacabra said:

Aston94 said:

El Chupacabra said:

I don't feel like I need it. And I damn sure don't feel like some Karen or some politician needs to mandate it from me.

My wife had Covid, cold like symptoms for a week. I never got it.

There's millions and millions of undocumented cases...because the symptoms weren't bad enough for the person to go in, or the person decided to not go in and got better at home on their own.

There's millions and millions of documented, asymptomatic cases (I think, in my pea brain, that means that the most deadly and dangerous virus of our time posed zero risk to the person).

The deaths and serious cases are heavily lopsided on the older population, of which I'm not.

The deaths and serious cases are heavily lopsided on the obese population, of which I'm not.

The deaths and serious cases are heavily lopsided on the unhealthy (asthmatic, diabetic, high bp, etc) population of which I'm not.

I don't feel like I need a vaccine for a virus, which statistically speaking, poses little harm to me. Being sick for a week...if I ever catch covid...isn't a big deal. I may be the outlier though, that's a risk I'm willing to take.

I'm 100% in favor of people personally choosing to get vaccinated, there is virtually zero risk in getting it.
I completely agree about it being your choice and that there are a lot of undocumented cases.

I don't know your demographics, but I can tell you as a 50 year old male I watched too many friends that I consider healthy end up in hospital for 2-3 weeks with Covid and have lasting effects. I have been to 3 Covid funerals and known 3 others that have died due to Covid. The randomness of who had bad effects and who did not really concerned me. I have known 2 people in their 40's that have dies (one in good condition physically and one not).

So I chose to get vaccinated to avoid the fear and concern about being one of the random ones who suffered greatly. The risks of Covid, to me, far outweighed the vaccine risks. But again, your demographics might be different.
I know exactly 0 people that have died or had a serious case of covid. The fact that you know 2 people in their 40's that have died of Covid is a statistical anomaly.

I'm not going to focus on the outliers, but rather on the 10's of millions of mild or asymptomatic cases.
Are you focusing on the outliers of the vaccine? This is where I have trouble with this line of thinking. There are MANY, MANY, MANY more outliers of Covid, to the point where 650,000 people have died in the US. The outliers for the vaccine are much , much, much less.

So if you really are focusing on the non-outliers then I would look at the success of the vaccine, the number in hospitals and the number of deaths.

But you do you, I will pray we don't see a thread about you getting Covid in a few weeks and then you go silent on the thread because you are in the hospital.
Knucklesammich
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How is Lord Covid and Dear Leader in this particular passion play?

A is A
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Double Diamond said:

Here's the thing. They weren't rushed.
weren't rushed? Operation Warp Speed says otherwise.
Quote:

allowing for faster distribution if clinical trials confirm one of the vaccines is safe and effective. The plan anticipated that some of these vaccines will not prove safe or effective, making the program more costly than typical vaccine development, but potentially leading to the availability of a viable vaccine several months earlier than typical timelines
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Warp_Speed


edit* sorry if this derails, not my intention. But cannot let a post that is blatantly false and has some of the most stars on this thread be left alone.
Knucklesammich
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El Chupacabra said:

Aston94 said:

El Chupacabra said:

I don't feel like I need it. And I damn sure don't feel like some Karen or some politician needs to mandate it from me.

My wife had Covid, cold like symptoms for a week. I never got it.

There's millions and millions of undocumented cases...because the symptoms weren't bad enough for the person to go in, or the person decided to not go in and got better at home on their own.

There's millions and millions of documented, asymptomatic cases (I think, in my pea brain, that means that the most deadly and dangerous virus of our time posed zero risk to the person).

The deaths and serious cases are heavily lopsided on the older population, of which I'm not.

The deaths and serious cases are heavily lopsided on the obese population, of which I'm not.

The deaths and serious cases are heavily lopsided on the unhealthy (asthmatic, diabetic, high bp, etc) population of which I'm not.

I don't feel like I need a vaccine for a virus, which statistically speaking, poses little harm to me. Being sick for a week...if I ever catch covid...isn't a big deal. I may be the outlier though, that's a risk I'm willing to take.

I'm 100% in favor of people personally choosing to get vaccinated, there is virtually zero risk in getting it.
I completely agree about it being your choice and that there are a lot of undocumented cases.

I don't know your demographics, but I can tell you as a 50 year old male I watched too many friends that I consider healthy end up in hospital for 2-3 weeks with Covid and have lasting effects. I have been to 3 Covid funerals and known 3 others that have died due to Covid. The randomness of who had bad effects and who did not really concerned me. I have known 2 people in their 40's that have dies (one in good condition physically and one not).

So I chose to get vaccinated to avoid the fear and concern about being one of the random ones who suffered greatly. The risks of Covid, to me, far outweighed the vaccine risks. But again, your demographics might be different.
I know exactly 0 people that have died or had a serious case of covid. The fact that you know 2 people in their 40's that have died of Covid is a statistical anomaly.

I'm not going to focus on the outliers, but rather on the 10's of millions of mild or asymptomatic cases.
I have two high school classmates who have passed away from it. I'm 47. One died in the winter and one died earlier this month. Neither were vaxxed.


PJYoung
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A is A said:

Double Diamond said:

Here's the thing. They weren't rushed.
weren't rushed? Operation Warp Speed says otherwise.
Quote:

allowing for faster distribution if clinical trials confirm one of the vaccines is safe and effective. The plan anticipated that some of these vaccines will not prove safe or effective, making the program more costly than typical vaccine development, but potentially leading to the availability of a viable vaccine several months earlier than typical timelines
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Warp_Speed


edit* sorry if this derails, not my intention. But cannot let a post that is blatantly false and has some of the most stars on this thread be left alone.

No steps were skipped - just tons of money was invested to have the steps done parallel in some cases.

Saying a vaccine was rushed implies that safety steps were skipped.
TheMasterplan
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kevmiller said:

Was 100% against getting vaccine we didn't know much about.

Now the one vaccine is FDA approved and I realize vaccine won't 100% put a shield around you.. but have noticed that hospitalizations and deaths are mostly unvaccinated.

Any doctors or nurses or medical people on here have an opinion?


The key statistic you're noticing is the hospitalization and death rate being low to non-existent for those that are vaccinated. To me, that is so obvious and is a key reason why I'm getting it in addition to just not wanting to be sick.

I'm a 32 year old male so I'm not scared of the virus but I'm also not scared of the vaccine.

You're right to distrust the CDC, FDA, Fauci, media etc. but the hospitalization/death data around unvaxxed people is too hard to ignore.

It is the only thing that actually works. It's obvious masks don't work and I can see why the terrible messaging and policy decisions of the US medical leadership would make you seem leery.
TulsAg
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El Chupacabra said:



I know exactly 0 people that have died or had a serious case of covid. The fact that you know 2 people in their 40's that have died of Covid is a statistical anomaly.

I'm not going to focus on the outliers, but rather on the 10's of millions of mild or asymptomatic cases.
Actually, your experience is the outlier, and as such, not a real good basis for argument. See, for example: https://texags.com/forums/84/topics/3218305
TheMasterplan
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goatchze said:

One decision point is what I will call the "Misery Index" and has nothing to do with hospitalization or death.

Early on, I knew several people who were vaccine hesitant because they were low risk, and the side effects of the vaccine were about on par with what they expected from the virus (a day or two of knock-me-out symptoms). So the misery index was about a 1. I was one of those people. With a Misery Index of one, why get the jab?

Lately, though, the misery of those who catch the disease and do not go to the hospital itself seems to have increased. I know about five families who have gotten COVID in the last few weeks (so about 20+people). None were vaccinated. All the adults had knock-me-out symptoms for over 10 days and were absolutely miserable. So that's a misery index of 10. Might be worth getting the jab with the index that high.

Several have said they wish they had gotten vaccinated (this is not a repeat of the dyeing patient/nurse story), if for nothing else, they were that miserable with the symptoms.

Give them a month and that misery further behind in the rear-view mirror, and they may change their mind. But for now, they're telling their unvaccinated friends to get the jab to simply avoid the misery they just went through. They don't wish that experience on anyone.
Misery index - I like it.

I don't work from home but if I am sick, I'd rather be well enough to actually do so. Hence the vaccine.
txaggie79
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AG
nm
TheMasterplan
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txaggie79 said:

TheMasterplan said:

kevmiller said:

Was 100% against getting vaccine we didn't know much about.

Now the one vaccine is FDA approved and I realize vaccine won't 100% put a shield around you.. but have noticed that hospitalizations and deaths are mostly unvaccinated.

Any doctors or nurses or medical people on here have an opinion?


The key statistic you're noticing is the hospitalization and death rate being low to non-existent for those that are unvaccinated. To me, that is so obvious and is a key reason why I'm getting it in addition to just not wanting to be sick.



I think you meant to say vaccinated. Might want to edit.
Definitely meant unvaccinated.
eric76
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El Chupacabra said:

Aston94 said:

El Chupacabra said:

I don't feel like I need it. And I damn sure don't feel like some Karen or some politician needs to mandate it from me.

My wife had Covid, cold like symptoms for a week. I never got it.

There's millions and millions of undocumented cases...because the symptoms weren't bad enough for the person to go in, or the person decided to not go in and got better at home on their own.

There's millions and millions of documented, asymptomatic cases (I think, in my pea brain, that means that the most deadly and dangerous virus of our time posed zero risk to the person).

The deaths and serious cases are heavily lopsided on the older population, of which I'm not.

The deaths and serious cases are heavily lopsided on the obese population, of which I'm not.

The deaths and serious cases are heavily lopsided on the unhealthy (asthmatic, diabetic, high bp, etc) population of which I'm not.

I don't feel like I need a vaccine for a virus, which statistically speaking, poses little harm to me. Being sick for a week...if I ever catch covid...isn't a big deal. I may be the outlier though, that's a risk I'm willing to take.

I'm 100% in favor of people personally choosing to get vaccinated, there is virtually zero risk in getting it.
I completely agree about it being your choice and that there are a lot of undocumented cases.

I don't know your demographics, but I can tell you as a 50 year old male I watched too many friends that I consider healthy end up in hospital for 2-3 weeks with Covid and have lasting effects. I have been to 3 Covid funerals and known 3 others that have died due to Covid. The randomness of who had bad effects and who did not really concerned me. I have known 2 people in their 40's that have dies (one in good condition physically and one not).

So I chose to get vaccinated to avoid the fear and concern about being one of the random ones who suffered greatly. The risks of Covid, to me, far outweighed the vaccine risks. But again, your demographics might be different.
I know exactly 0 people that have died or had a serious case of covid. The fact that you know 2 people in their 40's that have died of Covid is a statistical anomaly.

I'm not going to focus on the outliers, but rather on the 10's of millions of mild or asymptomatic cases.
TWIAVBP

The fact that you might not know anyone who died from covid does not mean that others who did know people who died from covid is a statistical anomaly.

You not knowing anyone who died from covid probably says more about your circle of acquaintances than anything else.

In my county, just about any long term resident of the county who is over 30 probably knows at least two who died of covid. Here, the real anomaly would be an adult who has lived here for years who doesn't know anyone who died of covid.

I knew four people who died from covid. The former wife of a nephew of mine knew far more than that.
Old McDonald
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TulsAg said:

One can always - ALWAYS - find (or, more accurately stated, perceive) some discrepancy or inconsistency in data or reporting. Particularly people who are not trained to evaluate studies and testing data and/or are not willing to look at things objectively.


this is spot on. the Information Age has democratized access to data, but not the ability to interpret it. hence people overestimating their ability to interpret and draw conclusions, underestimating the extent to which their biases taint those conclusions, and resentment and embarrassment when the educated "elite" who do have that training look down on them/perception of gate keeping that knowledges.

hence the "i think my doctor is wrong about covid/ivermectin/the vaccine, tell me why I'm right" reassurance threads that seem to pop up here all the time
AggieUSMC
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AG
Nurse Practitioner here.
In general, yes, get the jab. Your chances of having a bad outcome with COVID (which you will be exposed to eventually), regardless of age or comorbidities, far outweigh any risk of a serious adverse effect from the vaccine.

But, I am not your healthcare provider and don't know your medical history. Talk to your doctor and get informed before making your decision.
AggieUSMC
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Quote:

Why wouldn't you get it?
Because it's rushed/poison/garbage/99.9% survival rate/doesn't work/BillGates/infertility/micro chip/changes your DNA/5G/blah/blah/blah

But seriously, the only reasons to not get vaccinated are:

Medical contraindications (allergies, immune compromised etc.)
Natural immunity
Ineligibility (those under 12]

That's it
cone
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you will get covid eventually

you can either get the vax and have at worst the flu or you can not and have a real shot at developing pneumonia and becoming hypoxic

that's the legit risk profile
kevmiller
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cone said:

you will get covid eventually

you can either get the vax and have at worst the flu or you can not and have a real shot at developing pneumonia and becoming hypoxic

that's the legit risk profile


The sky is falling crowd is another reason I'm skeptical of the vaccine

I only know about 6-7 people who have had Covid... but the most severe symptoms were pretty much a runny nose and a headache for a couple days
Pale Rider
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That's awesome.

One friend who is 37 and not high risk got Bell's palsy.

Another friend who was 31 and average health had a mild stroke.

Third friend who 29, his fianc died.

I don't have that many friend. All unlucky I guess?
petebaker
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Teslag
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A better headline would be "DeSantis and Abbott push for proven treatment, support voluntary vaccination, and oppose mandates that don't work"
El Chupacabra
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Aston94 said:

El Chupacabra said:

Aston94 said:

El Chupacabra said:

I don't feel like I need it. And I damn sure don't feel like some Karen or some politician needs to mandate it from me.

My wife had Covid, cold like symptoms for a week. I never got it.

There's millions and millions of undocumented cases...because the symptoms weren't bad enough for the person to go in, or the person decided to not go in and got better at home on their own.

There's millions and millions of documented, asymptomatic cases (I think, in my pea brain, that means that the most deadly and dangerous virus of our time posed zero risk to the person).

The deaths and serious cases are heavily lopsided on the older population, of which I'm not.

The deaths and serious cases are heavily lopsided on the obese population, of which I'm not.

The deaths and serious cases are heavily lopsided on the unhealthy (asthmatic, diabetic, high bp, etc) population of which I'm not.

I don't feel like I need a vaccine for a virus, which statistically speaking, poses little harm to me. Being sick for a week...if I ever catch covid...isn't a big deal. I may be the outlier though, that's a risk I'm willing to take.

I'm 100% in favor of people personally choosing to get vaccinated, there is virtually zero risk in getting it.
I completely agree about it being your choice and that there are a lot of undocumented cases.

I don't know your demographics, but I can tell you as a 50 year old male I watched too many friends that I consider healthy end up in hospital for 2-3 weeks with Covid and have lasting effects. I have been to 3 Covid funerals and known 3 others that have died due to Covid. The randomness of who had bad effects and who did not really concerned me. I have known 2 people in their 40's that have dies (one in good condition physically and one not).

So I chose to get vaccinated to avoid the fear and concern about being one of the random ones who suffered greatly. The risks of Covid, to me, far outweighed the vaccine risks. But again, your demographics might be different.
I know exactly 0 people that have died or had a serious case of covid. The fact that you know 2 people in their 40's that have died of Covid is a statistical anomaly.

I'm not going to focus on the outliers, but rather on the 10's of millions of mild or asymptomatic cases.
Are you focusing on the outliers of the vaccine? This is where I have trouble with this line of thinking. There are MANY, MANY, MANY more outliers of Covid, to the point where 650,000 people have died in the US. The outliers for the vaccine are much , much, much less.

So if you really are focusing on the non-outliers then I would look at the success of the vaccine, the number in hospitals and the number of deaths.

But you do you, I will pray we don't see a thread about you getting Covid in a few weeks and then you go silent on the thread because you are in the hospital.
I stated initially that I believe the vaccines pose virtually zero risk (except for my 31 y/o SIL who had a stroke 14 hours after receiving).

It's obvious that MANY people have bought into the notion that Covid = hospitalization or death.

Based on the fact that my wife had it and it was just a cold for her and I didn't contract it, it doesn't worry me too much. Or the fact that my 500 lb coworker with every disease on the planet survived with no hospitalization, vent, or lasting detriments. Or my 47 y/o coworker who had a heart attack at 43 survived with no issues.

Or the fact that I'm one of those jackasses who didn't wear a mask in stores when they were 'mandated'. And I've attended multiple maskless, unvaccintated 'super spreader' events like banquets and gun shows and fund raisers and youth sporting events and recently a couple concerts. And my kids during the peak(s) of outbreaks lived life as normal and had sleepovers and went to sleepovers (with kids of nurses) and played sports and went to school.

I can go on, we all can go on with anecdotes that support our positions or beliefs. But I will never buy into the notion that covid = death or that unvaxxed = suicide. I'm fully comfortable with my decision, and I will live (or die) with the consequences.

dunlay
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EriktheRed said:

kevmiller said:

Was 100% against getting vaccine we didn't know much about.

Now the one vaccine is FDA approved and I realize vaccine won't 100% put a shield around you.. but have noticed that hospitalizations and deaths are mostly unvaccinated.

Any doctors or nurses or medical people on here have an opinion?


I would encourage you to read this article from some Geneticists and Immunologists at TAMU. I know 2 of them quite well (have known them all my life), and they have no agenda or dog in the fight. They published this in the local paper to try to answer some questions.

https://theeagle.com/in-support-of-covid-vaccination/article_fea7a7ee-fb84-11eb-8de0-6f963ce2a577.html



This is a very good article, thanks for posting it. The one thing it does not address, however, is the concerns about any potential long-term side effects... 10yrs down the road or so. That's one of those that do concern my family. Yeah, I'm pretty confident that the short term IS safe and mostly effective. Long term questions, though, are still out there.
"Democracy: 2 wolves and 1 sheep deciding one what to have for supper. Liberty: 2 wolves set on supper, and finding 1 well armed sheep."
Old McDonald
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what long term effects in particular are you concerned about?

there's a lot we can confidently predict about long term impacts given what we know about the biological mechanisms the vaccine uses, and the body's response to it. most if not all adverse effects present themselves shortly after injection.
Old McDonald
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kevmiller said:

cone said:

you will get covid eventually

you can either get the vax and have at worst the flu or you can not and have a real shot at developing pneumonia and becoming hypoxic

that's the legit risk profile


The sky is falling crowd is another reason I'm skeptical of the vaccine

I only know about 6-7 people who have had Covid... but the most severe symptoms were pretty much a runny nose and a headache for a couple days


sounds like you have been quite fortunate in that regard. unfortunately, there are many who cannot say the same. I know it may be tempting to draw on your immediate experience, but do you have any friends or family who are medical professionals (whether doctors or nurses) and whom you trust and can ask these questions to? they might provide a different perspective and be able to answer these questions better than we message board dolts.
nhamp07
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Salute The Marines said:

A better headline would be "DeSantis and Abbott push for proven treatment, support voluntary vaccination, and oppose mandates that don't work"
A better headline would be....

DeSantis and Abbott push for proven treatment on an Emergency Use Authorization (not fully approved like the Pfizer vaccine) that has shown little benefit when given to patients that are sick enough for hospitalization and who take campaign donations from people tied to the unproven drug, support voluntary vaccination and oppose statewide mandates that go against little government policies of conservatives for years?
The Shank Ag
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I've repeated this probably 5 times on forum 16, mostly to jeers and reasons why the statement doesn't matter.

My doc got the vaccine and thinks all over the age of 18 should. All of my friends that are doctors got the vaccine. More than 9 out of 10 doctors in the country got the vaccine. That was good enough for me.

Either they know something about what they are talking about and doing, or there will be a huge shortage of docs in the future. Luckily I would be gone with them so it doesn't matter much to me.
aggieheart
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AG
I tell all my friends, family and patients to get the vaccine. There would be no long term side effects from the vaccine that the virus spike protein wouldn't cause as well. Which is likely none. But the virus can have extremely debilitating long term effects including death.
No material on this site is intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. See full Medical Disclaimer.
Mike88
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I'm 55 and in good health. I was anti-vaccine up until a month ago when I decided to get it (combination of time since it was introduced and minimal reported side effects, work pressure and believing it would minimize symptoms if I did catch it). Plus, I haven't ever quarantined or changed my activity habits and don't want to.

Got first moderna shot and four weeks later (12 days ago) was in a "super spreader" setting where 7 of us got the virus. 5 of us were vaccinated, 2 of us with only one shot. The vaccinated had 4-6 days of mild symptoms. The 2 unvaccinated had it real bad, including one who still isn't better and should probably go to hospital.
SanDiegoAG
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I'm almost 45 and have been reluctant up until recently. One question I have is should I get my first dose only a few days before I fly out for a work trip? I don't know if it's better to do it before or wait until I get back? I just didn't know if somehow you put yourself in a worse position if you were to get infected.
aggieheart
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A small number of people will feel lousy for more than a day or two after a Vaccine shot. More so with the second dose. Thhat is just their immune system ramping up.. Most people do fine.. That would be my only consideration. Otherwise get vaccinated ASAP.
No material on this site is intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. See full Medical Disclaimer.
Aston94
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SanDiegoAG said:

I'm almost 45 and have been reluctant up until recently. One question I have is should I get my first dose only a few days before I fly out for a work trip? I don't know if it's better to do it before or wait until I get back? I just didn't know if somehow you put yourself in a worse position if you were to get infected.
As prevalent and as wide spread as the Delta varient is I would get the dose before travelling to offer some protection.

I took a couple advil with both doses and had no side effects. But worst side effects I have heard from friends was a bit of nausea and headache. Those side effects I would take over the potential complications from the Delta variant.
Teslag
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nhamp07 said:

Salute The Marines said:

A better headline would be "DeSantis and Abbott push for proven treatment, support voluntary vaccination, and oppose mandates that don't work"
A better headline would be....

DeSantis and Abbott push for proven treatment on an Emergency Use Authorization (not fully approved like the Pfizer vaccine) that has shown little benefit when given to patients that are sick enough for hospitalization and who take campaign donations from people tied to the unproven drug, support voluntary vaccination and oppose statewide mandates that go against little government policies of conservatives for years?


There is nothing more small government than the individual
Aston94
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El Chupacabra said:

Aston94 said:

El Chupacabra said:

Aston94 said:

El Chupacabra said:

I don't feel like I need it. And I damn sure don't feel like some Karen or some politician needs to mandate it from me.

My wife had Covid, cold like symptoms for a week. I never got it.

There's millions and millions of undocumented cases...because the symptoms weren't bad enough for the person to go in, or the person decided to not go in and got better at home on their own.

There's millions and millions of documented, asymptomatic cases (I think, in my pea brain, that means that the most deadly and dangerous virus of our time posed zero risk to the person).

The deaths and serious cases are heavily lopsided on the older population, of which I'm not.

The deaths and serious cases are heavily lopsided on the obese population, of which I'm not.

The deaths and serious cases are heavily lopsided on the unhealthy (asthmatic, diabetic, high bp, etc) population of which I'm not.

I don't feel like I need a vaccine for a virus, which statistically speaking, poses little harm to me. Being sick for a week...if I ever catch covid...isn't a big deal. I may be the outlier though, that's a risk I'm willing to take.

I'm 100% in favor of people personally choosing to get vaccinated, there is virtually zero risk in getting it.
I completely agree about it being your choice and that there are a lot of undocumented cases.

I don't know your demographics, but I can tell you as a 50 year old male I watched too many friends that I consider healthy end up in hospital for 2-3 weeks with Covid and have lasting effects. I have been to 3 Covid funerals and known 3 others that have died due to Covid. The randomness of who had bad effects and who did not really concerned me. I have known 2 people in their 40's that have dies (one in good condition physically and one not).

So I chose to get vaccinated to avoid the fear and concern about being one of the random ones who suffered greatly. The risks of Covid, to me, far outweighed the vaccine risks. But again, your demographics might be different.
I know exactly 0 people that have died or had a serious case of covid. The fact that you know 2 people in their 40's that have died of Covid is a statistical anomaly.

I'm not going to focus on the outliers, but rather on the 10's of millions of mild or asymptomatic cases.
Are you focusing on the outliers of the vaccine? This is where I have trouble with this line of thinking. There are MANY, MANY, MANY more outliers of Covid, to the point where 650,000 people have died in the US. The outliers for the vaccine are much , much, much less.

So if you really are focusing on the non-outliers then I would look at the success of the vaccine, the number in hospitals and the number of deaths.

But you do you, I will pray we don't see a thread about you getting Covid in a few weeks and then you go silent on the thread because you are in the hospital.
I stated initially that I believe the vaccines pose virtually zero risk (except for my 31 y/o SIL who had a stroke 14 hours after receiving).

It's obvious that MANY people have bought into the notion that Covid = hospitalization or death.

Based on the fact that my wife had it and it was just a cold for her and I didn't contract it, it doesn't worry me too much. Or the fact that my 500 lb coworker with every disease on the planet survived with no hospitalization, vent, or lasting detriments. Or my 47 y/o coworker who had a heart attack at 43 survived with no issues.

Or the fact that I'm one of those jackasses who didn't wear a mask in stores when they were 'mandated'. And I've attended multiple maskless, unvaccintated 'super spreader' events like banquets and gun shows and fund raisers and youth sporting events and recently a couple concerts. And my kids during the peak(s) of outbreaks lived life as normal and had sleepovers and went to sleepovers (with kids of nurses) and played sports and went to school.

I can go on, we all can go on with anecdotes that support our positions or beliefs. But I will never buy into the notion that covid = death or that unvaxxed = suicide. I'm fully comfortable with my decision, and I will live (or die) with the consequences.


And as I said above, although I disagree with your decision I do completely agree that it is your choice. I hope your run of luck with Covid continues.
TheMasterplan
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Salute The Marines said:

A better headline would be "DeSantis and Abbott push for proven treatment, support voluntary vaccination, and oppose mandates that don't work"
Agreed. Real stupid, low-IQ headline.

Just goes to show you it's not even about ivermectin. The media will try to paint conservative governors into a bad light no matter what.

TheMasterplan
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Mike88 said:

I'm 55 and in good health. I was anti-vaccine up until a month ago when I decided to get it (combination of time since it was introduced and minimal reported side effects, work pressure and believing it would minimize symptoms if I did catch it). Plus, I haven't ever quarantined or changed my activity habits and don't want to.

Got first moderna shot and four weeks later (12 days ago) was in a "super spreader" setting where 7 of us got the virus. 5 of us were vaccinated, 2 of us with only one shot. The vaccinated had 4-6 days of mild symptoms. The 2 unvaccinated had it real bad, including one who still isn't better and should probably go to hospital.

Nice story.

This is why the vaccine scolding and convincing nonsense needs to end. Let people come to their own conclusions.
BiochemAg97
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AG
kevmiller said:

Uhh.. not enough info.
To me it was rushed , we don't know the long term effects and I wasn't interested in being a lab rat for what seemed like an experimental vaccine

I could be 100% wrong and foolish in that way if thinking but that's why me and my family have not gotten it .

There has been a lot made of the shortened timeline to "develop" and test these vaccines.

First, much of the development of these new vaccine technologies was already done. Did you know Moderna has about a dozen mRNA vaccines in various stages of clinical trials, including a phase 3 trial that started preCOVID?

Second, the entire reason for developing these vaccine technologies is the ability to rapidly modify the vaccine to a new target (change the mRNA sequence for the Moderna and Pfizer vaccines).

Yes, testing was accelerated. However that had a lot to do with available resources. In a normal testing cycle, you have preclinical animal studies, phase 1, phase 2, and phase 3 clinical trials, each step along the way gets considerably more expensive. Completing the entire process is extremely expensive and vaccines are not blockbusters and have low profit margins. All this adds up to a typical testing cycle that requires completion, analysis, and sign off on one stage before even beginning to plan for the next stage. And it can take a while to plan the study, manufacture the product, enroll the participants, and then finally start the trial. However, with COVID, the govt was basically footing the bill for the testing. So you have companies planning phase 3 as they are starting phase 2.

As far as long term effects, vaccines are not like other pharmaceuticals and long term effects show up within 2 months. The studies all lasted at least that long to look for those effects, and they continued monitoring the people who got vaccinated. At this point, many of the phase 3 participates started being vaccinated a year ago, and phase 1 participants were vaccinated 18 months ago.

Now some are saying this is new vaccine technology and it isn't valid to just assume old technology rules regarding long term side effects apply. Except, as I mentioned above, these new technologies have been in clinical trials for years already, just for different viruses. So there is confidence that the long term side effects follow the same pattern.

Another thing to consider, we can do a 2 month phase 3 trial because the outcome can be measured in 2 months. Phase 3 is looking at efficacy which compares how many people in the control group get sick to how many in the test group get sick. You need sufficient numbers to get sick to have a meaningful result. Also, if the end point is outcome (reduced hospitalization and death), you need to wait long enough for the disease to progress. COVID got a lot of people sick very quickly (we had a spike during the phase 3 trials last year) and you can tell the outcome in a matter of weeks. That gives you a very fast turn around on the trial. In contrast, the HPV vaccine was looking for reductions in cervical cancer years later. That is a long trial to get to the disease outcomes.

Tl;dr testing was fast because companies faced little risk from failure (govt paid), the disease is weeks not months/years, and the disease was spreading quickly at the time of the phase 3 trial.
 
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