I didn't have a period at all for five months after the second shot. Yes, that affected my fertility. TikTok didn't have anything to do with it. Maybe the nurses are smarter than I am. |
Vax affected my period also. And I already have some kids, so it’s not as huge if an issue for us. But if I were a young, female nurse, or if I was pregnant, I could see being concerned. |
I'd like to avoid hospitals that have vaccinated but symptomatic staff in the building. |
| which don't pose much of a danger to you - if you are vaccinated |
Ok, we’ll exactly zero studies have shown any link between the vax, periods, and impaired infertility. It seems like a nice theory that a change in your period could render you infertile because you didn’t have a period that month or it was late or heavy or light, but its a theory that has not been borne out by any data. I’ve gotten sick from a cold and my periods were jacked up. Stress, lack of sleep- all of these things can change a cycle. Studies have shown exceptionally modest impacts on period length from the vaccine. There is absolutely no way this vaccine could biologically render someone infertile, short of an over the top immune response like GBS. The vaccine just doesn’t work like that. Biological impossibility. You know what does conclusively impact fertility though, right? COVID. It has been associated with increased likelihood of very bad outcomes in pregnancy, including death, placental abruption, stillbirth, and miscarriage, as well as other assorted increased harms to the mother. But you know, so much uncertainty with those vaccines. |
Don’t worry. Everyone knows how many of you morons there are. |
Wrong. Three months with “natural immunity,” and only if you’re even one of the 2/3 to 3/4 of COVID cases that produce any immunity at all. |
No, you are completely and totally wrong on this. "One important takeaway from all that pre-omicron research: Infection-induced immunity and vaccine-induced immunity are pretty similar. On the whole, studies found that the efficacy of infection-induced immunity was about the same as what you’d get from a two-dose mRNA vaccine, and sometimes higher. For example, research from the U.K., in which a few hundred thousand participants were followed in a large-scale longitudinal survey, found that prior to May 16, having had two doses of the vaccine (regardless of the type) reduced the risk of testing positive by 79 percent, while being unvaccinated and having had a previous infection reduced the risk by 65 percent. After the delta variant became dominant,1 vaccination became less effective, reducing the risk by 67 percent, while a previous infection reduced the risk by 71 percent. Likewise, both kinds of immunity seemed to wane over time — though Moore said infection-induced immunity might take longer to decline because a vaccination happens nearly all at once, while an infection takes longer to go through a process of growing, declining and finally being cleared from the body. “But it’s also not radically different [from antibody titers to vaccination]. It’s not measured in years, but months,” he said. This is why some countries, including the member states of the European Union, treat documented recovery from COVID-19 as functionally the same as vaccination in their “vaccine passport” systems." |
Well, actually there are studies that show a link between the vax and periods, which impacts fertility. The effects are short term, but they are real and do exist. |
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Don't get me wrong, They shoudl get it but THEY Don't have to.
I am okay with a doctor not wearing a mask or getting a vax they didn't pe covid why should they now? |
That’s ridiculous. The experts who knew the vax wouldn’t lose efficacy over time are quite sure there will be no long term side effects. #trustthescience |
Wrong. https://www.statnews.com/2022/01/19/those-who-recovered-from-covid-19-were-less-likely-than-vaccinated-to-get-infected-during-delta-wave/ |