Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please direct this to your physician, as we have no ideaj the cost/benefit ratio with your daughter's specific immune issues.
I already said I’m going to talk to our doctor but I am gaining valuable insight from responses here. Thank you to those who are sharing their decisions.
-OP
Anonymous wrote:Please check with your immunologist or endocrinologist. We were told to avoid HPV vaccine for DD who has current autoimmune disease.
Do not ask on DCUM, because there is only one acceptable point of view on the HPV vaccine and most posters do not have even the vaguest understanding of autoimmune issues. (And for the record, having an autoimmune disease where—which is where the immune system is being abnormally aggressive and attacking some system of the body like the thyroid or brain—is very different than being immunocompromised.)
Anonymous wrote:Last month, the National Cancer Insitute confirmed through their own study that 1 shot is as effective as 2. This was following up on a 2022 study out of Kenya that also showed 1 was sufficient. The WHO recommends one shot.
If I had a daughter with autoimmune issues, I'd err on the side of one shot rather than two or three.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does that apply to all strains? Say the vaccine covers strains A, B, and C because those are the ones most correlated with cancer. And I have strain D already. Wouldn’t the vaccine still protect me from strains A, B, and C?
Yes, but the reason why it covers strains A, B and C is because they are the most commonly transmitted strains that cause cancer. Statistically speaking, I don’t know how many people get exposed to a less common strain without also being exposed to more common strains.
Anonymous wrote:Please direct this to your physician, as we have no idea the cost/benefit ratio with your daughter's specific immune issues.
Anonymous wrote:You only need 1 now!!
All the studies show one dose is as effective as two.
Anonymous wrote:Does that apply to all strains? Say the vaccine covers strains A, B, and C because those are the ones most correlated with cancer. And I have strain D already. Wouldn’t the vaccine still protect me from strains A, B, and C?