Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:this is probably old news, but in case it helps anyone getting ready to do this now and schedule it for the best time, i had my pfizer booster last night and have a very sore arm (at time of injection, all night, and this morning). if i had small children, i would be unable to pick them up, or do any type of physical work with this arm.
i am only surprised because i felt absolutely nothing with the first 2 pfizer shots this past spring.
apparently this is a good sign:
https://www.uthscsa.edu/patient-care/physicians/news-item/sore-arm-after-covid-vaccine-good-sign
I think that's a little overdramatic. Have you had a tdap lately? That's about the worst sore arm around, in my experience. But, it's not like it's an actual injury. You can just power through the pain, the arm is still perfectly functional.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:this is probably old news, but in case it helps anyone getting ready to do this now and schedule it for the best time, i had my pfizer booster last night and have a very sore arm (at time of injection, all night, and this morning). if i had small children, i would be unable to pick them up, or do any type of physical work with this arm.
i am only surprised because i felt absolutely nothing with the first 2 pfizer shots this past spring.
apparently this is a good sign:
https://www.uthscsa.edu/patient-care/physicians/news-item/sore-arm-after-covid-vaccine-good-sign
I think that's a little overdramatic. Have you had a tdap lately? That's about the worst sore arm around, in my experience. But, it's not like it's an actual injury. You can just power through the pain, the arm is still perfectly functional.
Wrong. I’ve had tetanus/tdap shots and yes, my arm was very sore for a few days. But after my Moderna booster the pain in my arm was excruciating and I could barely move it. Everybody reacts to vaccines differently.