SoupNazi2001 said:
Port of Hepatis said:
The reason for low risk people to get the vaccine is to protect others. Not only from infecting others directly but also to help keep hospital elective services available. Most large urban hospitals are shutting down elective services again due to being inundated with sick unvaccinated patients. This propagates unnecessary suffering for our fellow Americans. For example, I couldn't get a very sick cancer patient admitted this past week due to lack of beds.
IMO-it's a patriotic thing for us all to get the vaccine; protect our fellow Americans. It's safe. And it works.
If one is low risk they likely aren't filling hospitals up. Vaccinated individuals are spreading the disease likely even more as many as asymptomatic.
They might not be getting admitted at the same rate as older, higher risk, individuals, but they are still inundating emergency rooms because when reality hits that they're sick and likely have COVID they start panicking and suddenly demand the healthcare system that they don't trust do something to help them. And the worst part is that they go to the ER and sit there coughing in the waiting room, spreading it to all the other people that are there.
That being said, people are very bad at estimating and understanding their risk for various issues (be it medical, financial, business, etc). We've seen multiple people on this board and in the news that thought they were low risk end up hospitalized, right?
Also, the vaccianted may be more clinically asymptomatic, but they're also getting over the disease much quicker than the unvaccinated (who may also be asymptomatic).
I don't understand why we're trying so hard to validate high risk behavior.