People that have very strong views about this one way or the other are by definition not following the science, which shows that the benefits are balanced by the costs. |
Care to cite "the science" you are following that shows the benefits outweigh the risks for kids? |
Heard immunity doesn't work as this vaccine doesn't stop the virus, if anything it only lessens the symptoms. Its not comparable to the polio vaccine. The best thing people can do is stay home when sick and not spread it. |
No European country recommends Covid boosters for kids, so no. The US is an outlier with their indiscriminate recommendation, which is clearly driven by Pfizer lobbying. |
+1 |
No, because the two times we've had covid my teen had barely a sniffle. The two times he got the shot he was sick for 2 days.
I personally get it because when ive had covid its been awful. This year we got infected in September so won't bother with the shots. |
What are your thoughts on the US auto lobby? |
Good luck! Seriously, I wouldn’t wish this on anyone! |
How is this relevant here? I'm sure it's strong, lol. |
What, what, what?? There is NO science that shows that at all. Please provide a link. There is no benefit of the Covid vaccines for teens and young adults. It is wholly unnecessary for healthy children. |
My teens don't get a flu shot either. Honestly, we have no idea what the long term effects of yearly shots (like flu shots and Covid shots) will have. So, we pass. My teens are fully vaccinated otherwise, so I'm not an anti-vaxxer. Just don't see enough benefit to warrant yearly flu/Covid shots. |
+1 I can't believe someone still uses the phrase "follow the science" in 2024! Haven't we learned from 2020? |
Because our public health officials made it seem like this was the case. They were pretty much dishonest about what the Covid shots would do. The adults in our family got the Covid shot and one booster, but my teens have had zero Covid shots. No thanks, will definitely pass for my teen boys. Not worth the risk at all. |
I wouldn't put flu and Covid shots in the same bucket, although the evidence for annual boosters of both is poor. But the flu vaccine is a totally different vaccine with a much longer track record, so we need to be less concerned about unknown long-term effects. Also, as Paul Offit has explained repeatedly, the flu mutates differently and is much more strain-dependent as far as the severe-disease protection goes, so annual boosters make more sense. For Covid, Offit says, boosters are not needed for younger, immunocompetent people, because immunity against severe disease is long-lasting and not variant-dependent. |
Good for you. My kids had three shots, the first two because I still believed that the vaccine would make infection less likely (yes, I too initially fell for that messaging, and I've always been very pro-vaccine) , and the third one due to a camp mandate. I regret the third one for sure. But fortunately, they were in the 5-11 group and not at elevated risk for myocarditis. |