Gransnet forums

Coronavirus

Vaccine side effects

(235 Posts)
Atqui Wed 06-Jan-21 14:57:52

My husband had the Pfizer jab before Christmas with no ill effects it seemed . Two weeks after he had really bad headaches on 3 consecutive nights . He is not normally prone to headaches . The GP says it could not be related to the jab. Has anyone else had anything similar?

Alegrias1 Thu 21-Jan-21 09:45:41

Gingergirl

I’m aware of lots of similar reactions. In any case, how would the gp know? No one knows. These are ‘vaccines’ that haven’t yet been fully trialled. Hope he feels better soon.

Of course they have been fully trialled. Why have you got "vaccines" in inverted commas?

Lovetopaint037 Thu 21-Jan-21 09:39:32

Go for it if you are offered it and be grateful. We went this week so far no side effects.

Gingergirl Thu 21-Jan-21 09:28:24

I’m aware of lots of similar reactions. In any case, how would the gp know? No one knows. These are ‘vaccines’ that haven’t yet been fully trialled. Hope he feels better soon.

nanna8 Thu 21-Jan-21 09:24:49

Ah well , it is interesting to read all this because none of us here in Australia have been offered the vaccine yet. I feel better about it now I have to say. There is a bit of scaremongering over here about how safe it is so thank you for sharing the positives.

Alegrias1 Thu 21-Jan-21 09:19:02

Clue?

Yogagirl Thu 21-Jan-21 09:10:00

Interesting news from California today.

M0nica Wed 20-Jan-21 14:59:43

Now 5 days since I had the vaccine and still no side effects.

henetha Wed 20-Jan-21 10:21:43

I had my first covid vaccination yesterday morning and today I feel fine. I must admit that my arm is pretty sore, maybe more so than when I have the annual flu jab. I couldn't sleep on that side last night. Also I did have a headache all day yesterday, but think this was due to stress as I was rather wound up about the whole thing.
It does say in the paperwork that it might take one or two days for a reaction to start, so we'll see. But so far I'm ok.

Yogagirl Wed 20-Jan-21 08:40:02

Interesting Monica My son is a scientist and has also had his works in the papers. He is also very much into genealogy & has gone as far back in our family tree as is possible. So our sons have the same sort of analytical brain, where they will search for weeks, months, years even, till they get their answers.

M0nica Tue 19-Jan-21 22:26:21

The problem nowadays, where higher education is part of the market economy, universities want the headlines and news that put their establishments name on the media.

Universities now have press offices and press officers and they have to be informed of all publications to consider whether any have results that might interest a wider interest. They are sent abstracts and summaries of the reearch and results.

Very few of the Press Office staff will have a degree in a relevant subject so they fillet the abstracts etc for anything that they think is interesting and send it out. Any if and buts and qualifications the researchers have put round their research are ignored and you get resulkts like those you quote yogagirl

How do I know, DS is an academic, his subject is archaeology, so he is always having his work sensationalised and we often get texts saying. if you see the reports on such and such a site in the papers with a picture of me holding something. ignore them they are grossly overstated.

Yogagirl Tue 19-Jan-21 18:09:02

I'm a real tea aholic and many years ago it was all over the news that Tea causes cancer! I thought 'well I'll get cancer then as I'm not stopping drinking my tea'. Years on it was all over the news Tea protects from cancer!

M0nica Tue 19-Jan-21 17:28:22

Do not be led astray in these talks, a personable speaker and good performance can hide all the things that he isn't saying.

For example; how do you know you have all the information? and how about the manipulation of data within a study.

He also left out one very common misuse of data, very popular with the media. It is making a fuss of very little.

For example, if I was to say that a cup of tea increases your chances of breast cancer by 20%, I think a lot of people would be worried. But if I say that the base probability of getting cancer from a cup of tea is 1%, then a 20% rises takes the probability of this happening from 1% to 1.2%. The figures are actually so small that they can be disregarded.

Never trust personable speakers, even when you agree with them. In fact listen even more carefully, it is easy to be lulled into a sense of false security.

Elegran Tue 19-Jan-21 16:46:06

Finding all the information isn't easy, but it is all there somewhere, mostly online.
We all have access to the same sources of info on the internet, although some things are harder to get at than others. We all also have the same equipment - a screen, a keyboard, and a brain.
To find out what's what about a medical claim that is trending on social media -
1) Read this excellent site datadetoxkit.org/en/misinformation/healthhoax/
2) Search for the earliest mention you can find of the claim. Entries on Facebook, Twitter, and other sites have dates, and some of them refer back to earlier mentions elsewhere.
3) Make a note of who made the earliest entries. Search for those names and what others say about those people.
4) Search a site such as Snopes, or Hoaxbuster, to see what professional fact-finders have to say about the claim.
5) Put medical hoaxes and misinformation into the searchbox to find other sites investigating possibly false claims and medical misunderstandings

Yogagirl Tue 19-Jan-21 16:11:05

Interesting Elegran Thanks for sharing.

I agree when he said you cannot make an informed decision unless you have all the information

Wheniwasyourage Tue 19-Jan-21 15:23:22

Thanks Elegran. That was indeed a great talk!

Lucca Tue 19-Jan-21 15:00:35

Enjoyed that

Elegran Tue 19-Jan-21 14:40:41

This is a great talk. Lots and lots of ways to look into trending medical claims. He can be very funny too.

www.ted.com/talks/ben_goldacre_battling_bad_science?language=en

Santana Tue 19-Jan-21 13:45:38

My DD1 had Pfizer vaccine before Xmas, DD2 yesterday as both NHS key workers. Tired straight away then hot. Bit of a headache and sore arm. All gone overnight.
All other NHS colleagues reporting similar.
I think your husband's headaches need to be checked out as could be any number of things. Could be as simple as changing his glasses, or reducing anxiety. My DH is having an alcohol free January and has had quite a few headaches. Says gin is the answer.
Not a good example I know, but please speak to your GP.

Alegrias1 Tue 19-Jan-21 13:10:07

OK yogagirl, in order:

Thalidomide is a drug still in use for leprosy and the issues it created 60 years gave rise to the strict licencing rules we have now.

The vaccines were tested on animals during Phase 1, that's what Phase 1 is about. Poor animals, yes. I've been vegetarian for 30 years so don't try to shame me on that. The Vegan Society has said that it is acceptable to take the vaccine because of the huge implications for human health around the world, but that everyone should decide for themselves.

I'm sorry to read about your mum. I'm also sorry if this sounds harsh - but we all have our medical mistakes stories, including me. But they are right much more often than they are wrong.

Even if you are not telling people not to have the vaccine, your constant undermining of it and everything that goes with it will make people with vaccine hesitancy even more worried.

M0nica Tue 19-Jan-21 13:04:28

Thalidomide was over 50 years ago. As I have mentioned a numberer of times.

If that is the best you can do, isn't that proof of the huge seachanges in the practice ofmedicine since then?

Yogagirl Tue 19-Jan-21 12:55:28

Alegrias1

Yogagirl - people know as much about these vaccines as they do about any other drug which has been licenced.

If a drug did worse things to your body than the illness it was treating, why would it be used? That doesn't make sense.

Nobody on the news says they are not having the vaccine because they have more than two brain cells to rub together.

I've just come off my six monthly check up with the specialist at a hospital in Glasgow who have looked after me since a medical problem nine years ago. Done by telephone now because obviously nobody is travelling unless necessary. Our final discussion was about the vaccine, he said, "You will be taking the vaccine, won't you"? So who do I trust? My own scientific background, the medics and scientists who have developed this wonder, and the medical team who have kept me going for nearly a decade? Or some person off an online forum who thinks Bill Gates wants to know what I had for breakfast?

Thalidomide, yes the doctors did make you swallow it in pill form not vaccine, before I'm jumped on!

The other drugs you speak of have been tested on animals for years, these vaccines haven't. [Poor animals]

My poor mum was given a palm full of drugs in her care home, even though she had a swallow problem, I asked for liquid form but not given. I asked them to put a thicken in her tea & drinks, eventually they did, but carers not shown how! After my mum passed I learnt that some of the drugs she was given, she shouldn't have had!

I've not told anyone not to have the vaccine, including my sister, it's personal chose.

Callistemon Tue 19-Jan-21 12:45:15

In fact, if we are going to talk about bullying perhaps you might take a look at some of your own posts, particularly those directed at M0nica^ about her husband.
They are extremely unpleasant.

Callistemon Tue 19-Jan-21 12:42:10

No-one is bullying you, Yogagirl, just questioning your assertions.

M0nica Tue 19-Jan-21 12:41:41

*yogagirl, because all we knew was he was overweight and had high blood pressure. The Phase 3 trials he was part of extended testing to those with the most common morbidities: high blood pressure, obesity, Type 2 diabetes. Prior to the tests, for which he volunteered teed, he was examined and the doctors were happy it was safe to give him the vaccine.

The heart attack was over 2 months after the second jab and was very mild. It was a shock to everyone, including the doctors treating him that his arteries were so badly blocked and that he had been living with angina for so long, bt because it was intermittent, we all assumed his weight was the cause of his problems with exercise.

Do not even try to pretend there was any link whatsoever between the vaccine and my DH's heart attack there wasn't.

Callistemon Tue 19-Jan-21 12:40:40

60% of the French population are not in favour of having the vacccine.
The French tend to be a bit rebellious
And before you tell me I'm being racist or other such nonsense, I'm part French (perhaps that's where I get my rebellious streak).
But I will have the vaccine, when or if ever offered.

This is the UK.