EllanVannin
I'd give my right arm ( no pun intended ) to continue with the vaccination programme if I thought I wouldn't have the reaction that I did in January. I was completely wiped-out in February with dizziness and total unsteadiness on my feet to the extent that I thought I'd had another TIA. I couldn't put one foot in front of the other and the nausea was crippling.
As it is I take a blood-thinner for my condition ( A/Fib ) so there's already a blood-clotting disorder present and only for that medication I shudder to think what could have happened.
This means I'll have to face the future, with, on my part, trepidation, but as far as the public is concerned, refused entry in many/ most venues unless you prove a full vaccination certificate,. and treated like a leper.
However, on another level, those with double vacs and possibly a booster , and because this is the case, feel free to gad about thinking they're protected and they're not !
It's just been announced that there are 60% of covid patients in hospital who've been double-jabbed ? That is high and probably reflects their complacency because they were double-jabbed.
I'm hoping my 'flu jab has a certain amount of protection though the furthest I'll be going is the local shops, no big stores for me-----again.
I understand what you’re saying and the 60% figure of hospitalised fully vaccinate people with Covid is correct, but that’s not the full story. Most of those admitted to ICU with Covid are unvaccinated, and a significant proportion of vaccinated people admitted to hospital are frail, immunocompromised or have co-morbidities and as a result get a more severe dose of Covid despite vaccination - not all of us gad about thinking we’re protected.
I’m CEV and also had a bad reaction to the first jab - it really did make me determined not to have any more because I was so ill. But then I contracted Covid, and it was so much worse. Please don’t make the fact that vaccinated people still contract Covid a reason for not continuing with vaccination - prevention of Covid was never a promise of vaccination, but by and large vaccinated people will have a milder infection, and as we’ve seen with Omicron, the more people who are vaccinated, the less places there will be for the virus to hide out.