Will pass on. Thanks!
My neighbor did the same. He only took one shot back around March or April. He said he immediately regretted getting it and he just did it in in a moment at his work where they were offering the vaccine. His wife and 3 children aren't vaccinated (all over 12). I know that really doesn't address your post, but I would imagine there are many people like that.bay fan said:
I am not at all sure why she bothered. She took "risk" with the shot she had, seems to me it's for nothing in light of what we do actually know about what it takes to be effective. Hope she reconsiders and finishes.
bay fan said:
I think it falls to reason that if initially when the vaccine first came out one shot would have provided lasting benefits they would have called for a single dose so more people had access and more quickly slow the spread. They didn't because it wasn't effective.
Perhaps. But all the data I see is how your protection from contracting the virus goes up from the 50s to the 80/90s after second dose.bay fan said:
I think it falls to reason that if initially when the vaccine first came out one shot would have provided lasting benefits they would have called for a single dose so more people had access and more quickly slow the spread. They didn't because it wasn't effective.
Good to know if this is accurate.Captain Positivity said:
There are not enough circulating antibodies after one dose. Confirmed by multiple studies that one dose is not enough. Someone can find the link, but it's something like 20% or less protection.
Two doses does provide fairly significant protection against both contraction and prevention of severe disease. Study released the other day out of the UK showed breakthrough cases are typically less symptomatic.
And Moderna has been shown to be more effective against the Delta than the others.
Admitted to the hospital, very unlikely. However plenty go to the hospital due to how miserable they are, wanting something to be done. Also, having medium to long term side effects from infection is decently high.Salute The Marines said:
Let's be honest here, the chances of someone 23 years old and healthy going to the hospital are statistically low it's not worth even being concerned about.
bigtruckguy3500 said:Admitted to the hospital, very unlikely. However plenty go to the hospital due to how miserable they are, wanting something to be done. Also, having medium to long term side effects from infection is decently high.Salute The Marines said:
Let's be honest here, the chances of someone 23 years old and healthy going to the hospital are statistically low it's not worth even being concerned about.
Stringfellow Hawke said:
Just be safe. Wear a mask at all times as well as get all vaccines at once.
Mu is actually several steps after Delta-- but many variants are not significant so you don't hear about them. Kinda like a hurricane that just fizzles out in the ocean.West Point Aggie said:
On the TV channel on the plane ride I took today, the news channel kept talking about the "MU" variant. Is that the new Greek letter to be used after "delta" abates some?!!
KidDoc said:Mu is actually several steps after Delta-- but many variants are not significant so you don't hear about them. Kinda like a hurricane that just fizzles out in the ocean.West Point Aggie said:
On the TV channel on the plane ride I took today, the news channel kept talking about the "MU" variant. Is that the new Greek letter to be used after "delta" abates some?!!
Greek alphabet - Wikipedia
Good question. I haven't actually seen the data broken down by type of side effect and by age group. Actually the Navy is doing the CHARM 2.0 study that should answer this question quite well. I've seen some of the data, but not everything tabulated. One of the peculiar cases I saw was a Marine that had post covid changes on his EKG. Last I heard he was getting evaluated be cardiology, I'll have to see if I can follow up with that. Could be a clinically silent conductive change in his heart, or could manifest into something later in life. Data is still being gathered.Salute The Marines said:bigtruckguy3500 said:Admitted to the hospital, very unlikely. However plenty go to the hospital due to how miserable they are, wanting something to be done. Also, having medium to long term side effects from infection is decently high.Salute The Marines said:
Let's be honest here, the chances of someone 23 years old and healthy going to the hospital are statistically low it's not worth even being concerned about.
How high? Give me concrete verifiable numbers for medium to long term effects for people in their early 20's.
Ha - same.Salute The Marines said:
Many years ago in basic training I literally got "all the vaccines at once".
Ouch.
I agree with #2 but the data is still pending. I do think a single dose of Moderna will be adequate for children and not have the significant risk of myocarditis.BCG Disciple said:
One shot is enough for:
1. The previously infected/recovered. Early results indicate it may provide the best protection of all alternatives.
2. Any of the youth. I'd say under 25 would work great with one shot. Several countries only allow one shot from 12-15 year olds, including France and Israel. UK does not recommend anything for kids under 16. One shot has a significantly lower risk of myocarditis in kids than the second shot and still provides some protection.
I believe this is what the protocol is in Israel.Quote:
One shot is enough for:
The previously infected/recovered. Early results indicate it may provide the best protection of all alternatives.