The vaccines | vaxxed boosted unvaxxed? New poll

How's your immunity looking? Had covid - vote twice - vax status and then again for infection status

  • Vaxxed but no booster

  • Boostered

  • Still waiting in queue for first vaccine dose

  • Won't get vaxxed (unless I have to for travel/work etc)

  • Past infection with covid + I've been vaccinated

  • Past infection with covid - I've not been vaccinated


Results are only viewable after voting.
Just had a booster of Moderna. First two shots were Pfizer.

The guy administering the shot said they recommended that they mix vaccines to help with immunity. First I’ve heard of that…
 
Just got my booster. First time having a jab as an adult without popping a diazepam beforehand due to my phobia. Went really well. One positive about this whole shit show has been a possible easing of my phobia.
Nice, is having to get them more frequently than normal making them easier to approach?
 
Just got my booster. First time having a jab as an adult without popping a diazepam beforehand due to my phobia. Went really well. One positive about this whole shit show has been a possible easing of my phobia.
Sounds like it could be the start of a diazepam phobia.
 
Nice, is having to get them more frequently than normal making them easier to approach?
Possibly. Also the environment. Got my first two in a tent, and this one on a modified bus! Not having to go into an obviously medical environment has helped a lot.
 
Can someone help me out please?

I have read on several web pages that you should not get a booster jab untill four weeks after your isolation date has passed if you have recently had Covid.

I finished my isolation after covid two weeks ago and was hoping to get my booster done before Xmas as I know we have my wifes parents coming round and wanted to be as safe as possible for them.

Does anyone know if that is the case - I have to wait four weeks?
 
Can someone help me out please?

I have read on several web pages that you should not get a booster jab untill four weeks after your isolation date has passed if you have recently had Covid.

I finished my isolation after covid two weeks ago and was hoping to get my booster done before Xmas as I know we have my wifes parents coming round and wanted to be as safe as possible for them.

Does anyone know if that is the case - I have to wait four weeks?
I think you would be considered extremely safe as someone who has just had covid anyway.
 
Big booster numbers today - still need to go up by another ~30% to reach end of December target, and not convinced many people are going to be getting jabbed on Christmas Eve/Day. Still, good to see the achievement of the people involved on the ground.

Booked my booster for next Friday and I was surprised by how many available slots there are. The vaccination center is in central London, which I presume is quite busy otherwise.
 
3rd dose taken now.
Should have taken it a few months back, but was sick.

Also wtf is with you guys getting 2 shots at once? We've been strictly told no other vaccines 2 weeks prior to the covid vaccine.
 
I've been eligible to get the booster since the 6th of December. We get walk-ins with no prior registration, so whenever. It was really bad after my first shot, so I decided to wait a bit, so I could somehow fit a day in bed between my work shifts and kids' school stuff. However, after reading some of the hot takes in the Football Forum, I decided to go and get it today. feck it, I will ask for one for each limb.
 
3rd dose taken now.
Should have taken it a few months back, but was sick.

Also wtf is with you guys getting 2 shots at once? We've been strictly told no other vaccines 2 weeks prior to the covid vaccine.

They give the flu and covid vaccine combined here, but for some reason the covid must go in first, even if its only a minute before.
 
Flu in left arm, Pfizer covid jab in right arm at the vaccine centre I went to here. They recommended the different arm thing so that could keep tabs on any reactions.

The trials of doing them at the same time in the UK started last year, and continued when they did the booster trials in the summer. No new side effects found and no worsening of the immune response. They don't do it everywhere in the UK but I think that's more an admin thing at some centres rather than anything medical.
 
How have people been exercising a few hours after having their booster? I've booked mine for Monday but been asked to play football on Monday evening so not sure whether it makes sense to just delay it until Tuesday instead.
 
How have people been exercising a few hours after having their booster? I've booked mine for Monday but been asked to play football on Monday evening so not sure whether it makes sense to just delay it until Tuesday instead.
At the rate this variant is spreading surely its more responsible to delay the football? I ended up booking my booster shot a few weeks later than originally planned and low and behold I tested for positive on the day I received my jab. Don't be like me. The sooner the merrier, even if it is just a day.

Maybe you'll be lucky enough not to get any noticeable side effects from the booster anyway.
 
At the rate this variant is spreading surely its more responsible to delay the football? I ended up booking my booster shot a few weeks later than originally planned and low and behold I tested for positive on the day I received my jab. Don't be like me. The sooner the merrier, even if it is just a day.

Maybe you'll be lucky enough not to get any noticeable side effects from the booster anyway.
Fair point. I can't reschedule my appointment until a few days later now anyway so I'll either try to get a walk-in slot tomorrow or just continue with my appointment as it is.
 
How have people been exercising a few hours after having their booster? I've booked mine for Monday but been asked to play football on Monday evening so not sure whether it makes sense to just delay it until Tuesday instead.

I had my booster at 4pm yesterday and went bouldering from 8pm to 10pm.

Arm is a bit sore today but reckon I could play football. Wouldn’t be shouldering anyone very hard, mind you.
 
Managed to move my booster appointment earlier, got it next week. Keen to get it done and keep my head down until Christmas day.
 
Six months late and a billion doses short of their year end production target Novavax gets a EUA from WHO.



The WHO approval is based on production at SII in India.

EMA approval may come next week or it may get bounced back until the UK and EU production can be certified as well.

Just for clarity - this is a vaccine designed to fight the original Wuhan variant. It started clinical trials in the UK in October 2019. It's also been through trialists in the US, Mexico and India. Clinical trials showed it works well against the Alpha and Delta strains.
 
Just had a booster of Moderna. First two shots were Pfizer.

The guy administering the shot said they recommended that they mix vaccines to help with immunity. First I’ve heard of that…

My first two were Pfizer and had my Moderna booster on Wednesday. I cannot describe how ill i've felt since the booster. I've felt pretty much every side effect from common to rare. Was a bit ropey after 24 hours bit since this morning its actually been vile.

The nurse who administered it said "you will probably be poorly. I felt nothing after my first two Pfizer jabs
 
Just over 24 hours on and my arm and shoulder are really fecking sore. I'm also a bit fatigued but all in all, it's not too bad.
 
Six months late and a billion doses short of their year end production target Novavax gets a EUA from WHO.



The WHO approval is based on production at SII in India.

EMA approval may come next week or it may get bounced back until the UK and EU production can be certified as well.

Just for clarity - this is a vaccine designed to fight the original Wuhan variant. It started clinical trials in the UK in October 2019. It's also been through trialists in the US, Mexico and India. Clinical trials showed it works well against the Alpha and Delta strains.


This is currently my big worry with Valneva - that the MHRA say sure, it looks good for WT Covid, but probably not so good for Omicron, so we're not approving. I expect I'll be getting my two more doses of Pfizer next year.
 
Can someone help me out please?
I have read on several web pages that you should not get a booster jab untill four weeks after your isolation date has passed if you have recently had Covid.
I finished my isolation after covid two weeks ago and was hoping to get my booster done before Xmas as I know we have my wifes parents coming round and wanted to be as safe as possible for them.

Does anyone know if that is the case - I have to wait four weeks?

Don't read 'several web pages' just look at the official NHS guidance, which states..

If you've recently tested positive for coronavirus, you should wait until 4 weeks after the date you were tested positive to get any dose of the vaccine. You should do this even if you have no symptoms.

So roughly speaking, if you tested positive on the first of the month, you could get a booster from the 29th.... ;)
 
swelling? is that a normal enough reaction because Ive not heard of anyone having that.
Yeah, it's your lymphatic system reacting to the vaccine. Doing what it's supposed to do when under attack from a virus. Same thing happened to people I know, but settled down after a few days or so.
 
Don't read 'several web pages' just look at the official NHS guidance, which states..

If you've recently tested positive for coronavirus, you should wait until 4 weeks after the date you were tested positive to get any dose of the vaccine. You should do this even if you have no symptoms.

So roughly speaking, if you tested positive on the first of the month, you could get a booster from the 29th.... ;)
Thanks, I couldn't see that for want of looking on the NHS page.

Appreciate the answer.
 
I got my booster yesterday. Very mild dull ache in arm. No other symptoms. Would almost prefer to be flattened by it as that would make the effect feel more powerful!
What are your thoughts on serious vaccine side effects being caused by accidental injection into a blood vessel rather than the muscle? Millions of people getting vaccinated, vast majority are lucky and it is injected into the muscle of the arm like it should be. They then suffer normal mild side effects and develop an immune response in the cells of their arm muscle. A minority are unlucky and it is injected into a blood vessel. This is very bad. They suffer very serious side effects and a wide range too because it is travelling throughout the entire body and the immune response develops anywhere it happens to land. Makes sense that of all the possible places to land travelling through the blood vessels of the body, the most common place would be the heart. Now let's assume this is the reality of what's happening and there is no other danger associated with the vaccines. The only danger is accidental injection into a blood vessel. If every vaccine was injected into the arm muscle and no vaccine was ever injected into the blood vessel, there would be ZERO serious side effects, only mild normal side effects. ZERO serious side effects would mean any person reluctant to get vaccinated would not be able to use serious side effects as a reason not to get vaccinated. This would indirectly lead to increased vaccine uptake and it would be significant too as for many it is the main reason for their vaccine hesitancy. There is a very simply remedy to this too.
 
What are your thoughts on serious vaccine side effects being caused by accidental injection into a blood vessel rather than the muscle? Millions of people getting vaccinated, vast majority are lucky and it is injected into the muscle of the arm like it should be. They then suffer normal mild side effects and develop an immune response in the cells of their arm muscle. A minority are unlucky and it is injected into a blood vessel. This is very bad. They suffer very serious side effects and a wide range too because it is travelling throughout the entire body and the immune response develops anywhere it happens to land. Makes sense that of all the possible places to land travelling through the blood vessels of the body, the most common place would be the heart. Now let's assume this is the reality of what's happening and there is no other danger associated with the vaccines. The only danger is accidental injection into a blood vessel. If every vaccine was injected into the arm muscle and no vaccine was ever injected into the blood vessel, there would be ZERO serious side effects, only mild normal side effects. ZERO serious side effects would mean any person reluctant to get vaccinated would not be able to use serious side effects as a reason not to get vaccinated. This would indirectly lead to increased vaccine uptake and it would be significant too as for many it is the main reason for their vaccine hesitancy. There is a very simply remedy to this too.

I’ve heard about that theory and I’m not convinced. It’s difficult to get a needle into a vein without a tourniquet. And the average deltoid isn’t exactly bulging with veins. Plus the doctors and nurses giving these injections know what they’re doing.

I just think rare side effects are unavoidable. Every medicine known to man has side effects. When you treat billions of people with the same medicine then a lot of them are going to get side effects, some very serious. It’s unfortunate but unavoidable. The main thing is that the risk of side effects should always outweigh the risk of not being given the medicine (in this instance, the risk of getting very sick from covid)
 
I got my booster a few days ago and felt nothing but a sore arm afterward. Same with all 3 jabs.