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DiscussionSide Effects of Shingles Vaccine
Just Want to Talk | Last Active: Mar 4 2:20pm | Replies (187)Comment receiving replies
Replies to "@russet3 From what I understand, yes, it’s that way because those mild aches and low fevers..."
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@methel @cmcmcguire10 Thanks for your kind thoughts. Yes, I know that the reaction is supposed to be a sign that the immune system is working. But that’s not what I was asking. Let’s see if I can clarify:
1. The experts tell us that people who don’t have bad reactions to vaccines still gain immunity. Therefore, a bad reaction is not necessary to produce immunity. So can they do something to prevent or mitigate the reaction?
2. Relatedly: If some people have bad reactions and others don’t, there must be a reason. Do we know what the reason is? If so, can they figure out a way to prevent or mitigate the reaction?
3. I didn’t have bad reactions to older vaccines, like Tdap or hepatitis. It’s only in the last five years, with Covid, high-dose flu, and now shingles. That’s why I wonder if something has changed in the vaccines themselves. Of course the Covid vax was a new type, mRNA, and Covid-19 was a new virus. But I can’t explain the others. (@methel, I also had the smallpox vaccine, but as an infant, so I don’t remember how it felt. 🙂 )
4. Alternatively: Has something changed in my body in the last five years, so that I now have worse reactions than before? I’ve never heard of anything like this, but I guess it’s possible.
5. Does the medical profession care?
I want to emphasize that it’s not just mild discomfort. I get sick: I can’t work, study, exercise, or eat normally, and I feel awful. The bivalent Covid vax put me out of commission for four days.
It’s scary as well as unpleasant: hard to believe that this is really good for me. I wish the medical profession would at least acknowledge that reactions are a problem instead of dismissing them.
On a hopeful note, I did find this article, which shows that medical researchers do know that different people respond differently to vaccines, and they know some possible reasons. The research described in the article was concerned with actual immunity more than with feeling ill, but it is suggestive. I couldn’t find anything more recent than this piece, which dates from 2022.
https://medicine.yale.edu/news-article/researchers-probe-why-vaccine-responses-differ-from-person-to-person/
Thanks for listening.