To vaccinate or not to vaccinate? That is the question.
<p>I know I am not the only post-transplant patient who is thinking about getting the coVID vaccination. My nurse coordinator has told me that the transplant team at Jacksonville has not approved vaccination yet because of the lack of experience with it for our group. One of the Infectious Disease doctors has indicated in a Mayo communication that transplants should be getting vaccinated. The nurse coordinator has said that if we choose to get vaccinated then we should do our laboratories once a week. I'm frustrated and confused by the lack of clear guidance and seemingly conflicting opinions. Is anybody else feeling like this? Have you made any decisions about when and if you will get vaccinated?</p>
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Transplants Support Group.
I need to get the vaccine [both doses] before starting chemo in March. However, there seems to be a hurdle to cross in getting even the first dose. Having contacted our county's public health director, I will be sending a message to my oncologist via patient portal to try for a solution. It's a dilemma not anticipated, and met with frustration.
Ginger
@gingerw, I am thinking positive thoughts for a solution. I wonder if you can get it somehow thru the oncology center. I hope that you hear something soon.
@gingerw I hope you get the necessary documentation to get the vaccine very soon. I’m sure if your oncologist provides you even with some type of note it will be honored.
I was thinking if I’m able to get the vaccine here due to being a post-transplant patient on immunosuppressants, how do I prove that? Show them my huge scar? 😉🥴
JK
That is great to hear. Thank you for sharing this with us. It’s encouraging to hear about other transplant recipients who have recovered from COVID.
I had my first dose yesterday and so far so good, just a sore arm at injection site. I found out about the availability on the local news; they had put up a link on their website which led to an on-line appointment scheduler. I was able to make the appointment, get a confirmation and get vaccinated with relative ease. I was told back in December when I first asked my coordinator about getting vaccinated that I would need to do weekly labs for two months to monitor immune response and I'm guessing that at some point in a few month an antibody titer will be a good idea to guage the quantity of immunity I've produced. Hope that helps.
Ginger, our public health department is giving vaccinations and many are signing up for appointments on line. I got mine through a local hospital who had partnered with a city government and scheduled it on line; they did the vaccinations at their community center. I found out about that program through my local news station and followed links on the tv station's web site to make my appointment. Worked like a charm.
@silverwoman, Your public health dept is really on top of this!
Did you qualify as a High Risk or was it (forgive me) age? Did you have to give any proof of your high risk transplant qualification?
I qualify by age - no forgiveness needed; I'm proud to have survived 76 years. The questionnaire I filled out before vaccination did have a question about immune suppressed status.
@gingerw- Why can't things, for once, run smoothly? Good luck!
@silverwoman- Good morning. Do you remember what the question was?