Both of my kids (8, 11) got their first shot today. No issues. We went and played 9 holes of golf this afternoon afterwards and not even a sore arm. Throwing this out in case anyone is interested.
pocketrockets06 said:
Both of my kids (8, 11) got their first shot today. No issues. We went and played 9 holes of golf this afternoon afterwards and not even a sore arm. Throwing this out in case anyone is interested.
ReloadAg said:
You do what's best for you but I want no part of that for my 6 and 8 year olds.
pocketrockets06 said:
Both of my kids (8, 11) got their first shot today. No issues. We went and played 9 holes of golf this afternoon afterwards and not even a sore arm. Throwing this out in case anyone is interested.
pocketrockets06 said:
Both of my kids (8, 11) got their first shot today. No issues. We went and played 9 holes of golf this afternoon afterwards and not even a sore arm. Throwing this out in case anyone is interested.
ReloadAg said:
You do what's best for you but I want no part of that for my 6 and 8 year olds.
01agtx said:pocketrockets06 said:
Both of my kids (8, 11) got their first shot today. No issues. We went and played 9 holes of golf this afternoon afterwards and not even a sore arm. Throwing this out in case anyone is interested.
Report back in 10 years.
Infection_Ag11 said:01agtx said:pocketrockets06 said:
Both of my kids (8, 11) got their first shot today. No issues. We went and played 9 holes of golf this afternoon afterwards and not even a sore arm. Throwing this out in case anyone is interested.
Report back in 10 years.
What exactly are you concerned about happening in 10 years? That they'll sprout a third arm?
I'm STILL waiting on a proposed mechanism from this board regarding just how these mythical distant vaccine manifestations in kids would occur.
Infection_Ag11 said:01agtx said:pocketrockets06 said:
Both of my kids (8, 11) got their first shot today. No issues. We went and played 9 holes of golf this afternoon afterwards and not even a sore arm. Throwing this out in case anyone is interested.
Report back in 10 years.
What exactly are you concerned about happening in 10 years? That they'll sprout a third arm?
I'm STILL waiting on a proposed mechanism from this board regarding just how these mythical distant vaccine manifestations in kids would occur.
Pinche Abogado said:Infection_Ag11 said:01agtx said:pocketrockets06 said:
Both of my kids (8, 11) got their first shot today. No issues. We went and played 9 holes of golf this afternoon afterwards and not even a sore arm. Throwing this out in case anyone is interested.
Report back in 10 years.
What exactly are you concerned about happening in 10 years? That they'll sprout a third arm?
I'm STILL waiting on a proposed mechanism from this board regarding just how these mythical distant vaccine manifestations in kids would occur.
First, do no harm.
Quote:
You have zero idea whether what you propagate will cause harm in the future.
Pinche Abogado said:Infection_Ag11 said:01agtx said:pocketrockets06 said:
Both of my kids (8, 11) got their first shot today. No issues. We went and played 9 holes of golf this afternoon afterwards and not even a sore arm. Throwing this out in case anyone is interested.
Report back in 10 years.
What exactly are you concerned about happening in 10 years? That they'll sprout a third arm?
I'm STILL waiting on a proposed mechanism from this board regarding just how these mythical distant vaccine manifestations in kids would occur.
First, do no harm.
You have zero idea whether what you propagate will cause harm in the future.
DannyDuberstein said:
Healthy kids are at incredibly minuscule risk. Basically no risk. This is also not the last coronavirus our kids are going to face. I think vaccinating is potentially doing them a disservice, because I think having a full immune response to the real deal in their history may benefit them later. A healthy immune system is a wonderful thing with an incredibly long memory. Sometimes we just need to let it work.
DannyDuberstein said:
And yet 2002-2004 SARS patients had strong immune responses to this one
DannyDuberstein said:
Yeah. i'm talking about coronavirus. You are not
pocketrockets06 said:
Both of my kids (8, 11) got their first shot today. No issues. We went and played 9 holes of golf this afternoon afterwards and not even a sore arm. Throwing this out in case anyone is interested.
01agtx said:pocketrockets06 said:
Both of my kids (8, 11) got their first shot today. No issues. We went and played 9 holes of golf this afternoon afterwards and not even a sore arm. Throwing this out in case anyone is interested.
Report back in 10 years.
01agtx said:Infection_Ag11 said:01agtx said:pocketrockets06 said:
Both of my kids (8, 11) got their first shot today. No issues. We went and played 9 holes of golf this afternoon afterwards and not even a sore arm. Throwing this out in case anyone is interested.
Report back in 10 years.
What exactly are you concerned about happening in 10 years? That they'll sprout a third arm?
I'm STILL waiting on a proposed mechanism from this board regarding just how these mythical distant vaccine manifestations in kids would occur.
I like to see the rates of cancer in those vaccinated vaccine those not. I'd like to see the rates of insulin dependent diabetes in those vaccinated can those not. I'd also be interested in rates of allergies, asthma, infertility, etc, etc.
An Aggie friend's teen daughter developed seizures after the HPV vaccine. Neurologist told them it was from the vaccine and a known risk. Mom is a doctor and very pro-vaccine but obviously has regrets that her daughter still has occasional seizures. They hope it will go away. It's been over a year.pocketrockets06 said:
To add a little more context here, the 11 year old has significant risk factors for COVID (compromised lungs among a number of other factors) which might influence your thoughts. This was also recommended by pediatrician for both kids.
That said, even without the risk factors I would still have done this. The safety data for the vaccines is so incredibly good that although the benefit would be small for kids this age and only a modest effect on population transmissibility, I think it would still be worth it on a pure cost/benefit basis. It also boggles my mind how people think vaccines have some long term risk (that we've literally never observed with any vaccine and for which no plausible mechanism exists) but ignore the long term risk of a viral infection (I mean an HPV infection literally leads to cancer later).
Diyala Nick said:
Not remotely close to the same thing. There are also other corona viruses that have been around for a very long time that are also not remotely the same thing as SARS-CoV-2.
pocketrockets06 said:
Both of my kids (8, 11) got their first shot today. No issues. We went and played 9 holes of golf this afternoon afterwards and not even a sore arm. Throwing this out in case anyone is interested.