Sorry I don't want to go off into the deepI don't care what people are protesting about. Blocking highways and access to buildings is a crime, disturbing the peace, which can and should result in arrest.

Sorry I don't want to go off into the deepI don't care what people are protesting about. Blocking highways and access to buildings is a crime, disturbing the peace, which can and should result in arrest.
A fam member in Iowa just posted a notice from a nursing home where my great-aunt is saying they're allowing visitation again and outlining procedures (hand washing, masks, 30 min time slots,...).My in-laws finally got their appointments to get the vaccine tomorrow. I can’t even express how relieved I am. My grandmother-in-law had both doses at her nursing home already, so I am hoping visits can start again soon.
Northern California Kaiser seems to be doing the same. overall it says health care workers, care facility residents and those 75 and older. when you read on it says they will contact those 75 and older for appointments.Well, that's better than SoCal Kaiser is doing. They're still only doing health care workers and care facility residents. They say they'll contact those 75 and over when appointments/vaccine become available.
Seeing that in several states in nursing homes and residential living and care facilities. Also, hospitals are relaxing visiting rules.
why do you think that is regarding the person you know who had covid having more serious side effects at dose two? do you think he had too many antibodies in him from previous covid?New to this thread.
DH was in the Pfizer study. He spoke to the principal investigator here back in Dec and found out he got the actual vaccine. Injection site soreness was his only side effect. (As an aside, it *really* bothers me when ppl refer to the current vaccination drive as experimental. The trials on safety and efficacy
I'm also fully vacc (Pfizer) as of Jan 23. Also had very slight arm soreness (less than with the flu shot) with both doses. Usually I have arm soreness for 24-48 hours after a flu shot; this soreness was much less in severity and lasted maybe 2 hours.
I know literally hundreds of people in group 1a, including many with underlying conditions, and I only know of one person who had side effects beyond injection site soreness. That one person is an otherwise healthy male physician in his late 40s who got fairly seriously ill with COVID a few months ago, including 104° fever for ~10 days and short hospitalization. After his second dose of the vaccine he got a 103° fever that lasted less than 24 hours.
Not based on anything scientific that I know of, it just makes sense to me that he had a strong immune response to the actual virus and had a similar reaction to the vaccine which is is meant to activate the immune system. The WHO says, "Regardless of whether the vaccine is made up of the antigen itself or the blueprint so that the body will produce the antigen, this weakened version will not cause the disease in the person receiving the vaccine, but it will prompt their immune system to respond much as it would have on its first reaction to the actual pathogen."why do you think that is regarding the person you know who had covid having more serious side effects at dose two? do you think he had too many antibodies in him from previous covid?
That’s interesting because along the (much fewer number of) people that I knew in the study with us, that’s how we pretty much figured out who received placebo and who received the actual vaccine. Everyone that I knew who got the real vaccine in the study had side effects including fever, chills, fatigue, and aches after the second dose. I hope I’m like the people that you know.New to this thread.
DH was in the Pfizer study. He spoke to the principal investigator here back in Dec and found out he got the actual vaccine. Injection site soreness was his only side effect. (As an aside, it *really* bothers me when ppl refer to the current vaccination drive as experimental. The trials on safety and efficacy
I'm also fully vacc (Pfizer) as of Jan 23. Also had very slight arm soreness (less than with the flu shot) with both doses. Usually I have arm soreness for 24-48 hours after a flu shot; this soreness was much less in severity and lasted maybe 2 hours.
I know literally hundreds of people in group 1a, including many with underlying conditions, and I only know of one person who had side effects beyond injection site soreness. That one person is an otherwise healthy male physician in his late 40s who got fairly seriously ill with COVID a few months ago, including 104° fever for ~10 days and short hospitalization. After his second dose of the vaccine he got a 103° fever that lasted less than 24 hours.
Same at my drive-thru. They marked your injection time on the windshield and then you drove forward to a waiting paramedic and waited for 10 minutes. They're looking for anaphylaxis. At 10 minutes, they ask if you're okay and then send you home.My husband got his first dose last month with the medical personnel. He had the drive up setup and he had noticed that those EMTs were actually watching the cars. Each person had 5 cars to watch from the back.
As I was reading about that in the news I was thinking there wouldn't be a point to posting calling attention to you for the same reasons you're talking about just not really helpful for your situation.Still nothing but frustration here. Missouri finally says they will free up about half of their vaccine for mass vaccination sites around the state (really? Did that just occur to you?) In our metro area they are using a handful of hospitals. 2 are in a county north of us (and you have to live or work there). One other says they will only be vaccinating their own patients for now. The other won't even let us set up a portal to check for access. So we're back to absolutely no chance to even try scheduling for my elderly parents.