gunan01 said:
Couldn't you say the same thing about varicella? What's the point of vaccinating for Varicella if the overwhelming majority of kids do well with varicella infection?
We vaccinate for varicella to protect the vulnerable including kids under 12 months of age and those with compromised immune systems. In addition to protect those who either never had disease or are non immune in adults where it can be devastating.
It is the same reason we vaccinate for whooping cough. For school age kids and adults it is a minor illness, for kids under 2 months it is awful.
Same reason for rubella. If a pregnant woman gets rubella, which is very mild, there is a very high risk of a heart defect in children.
None of these vaccines have any significant risk of causing heart inflammation that leads 90% of the people who get it to be hospitalized and 23% of those still have heart dysfunction. I cannot justify a vaccine that has a small risk of heart damage when the risk of the actual disease is about the same. There is a chance teens will get COVID, if I am giving the shot there is a 100% chance they are getting the shot. I think, in teens with NO RISK FACTORS for severe COVID, they should wait on the FDA to complete the data they are collecting looking at single and/or reduced dose specifically due to the myocarditis side effects.
The rate of vaccine-induced heart inflammation in children (news-medical.net)Quote:
In a paper recently uploaded to the preprint server medRxiv*, a risk-benefit analysis was undertaken utilizing data collected from the vaccine adverse event reporting system (VAERS) relating to adolescents having received an mRNA vaccine before June 18th 2021. The findings suggested that an alternative vaccination schedule may be most appropriate for males in this age group.
A preprint version of the study is available on the medRxiv* server while the article undergoes peer review.
ETA: Varicella vaccine does not cause myocarditis or hospital stays either.
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