Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes. Studies show vaccinated people don’t transmit the illness. Getting the vaccine means life returns to normal.
Which studies? It hasn't been fully examined at this point. Studies suggest that vaccinated people don't transmit illness. They also suggest that vaccinated people are unlikely to get sick, but there is still a chance. So you should be careful with your parent's health as well.
People without symptoms are much less infectious. As studies have shown, asymptomatic transmission is .7% of spread. And if you do spread Covid to your vaccinated parents, you are spreading a cold to them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes but only after 6 weeks since final injection and preferably outside. Vaccines don't work instantaneously.
Why 6 weeks? I thought tests showed effectiveness 2 weeks after last dose?
Anonymous wrote:Yes but only after 6 weeks since final injection and preferably outside. Vaccines don't work instantaneously.
Anonymous wrote:Yes. I went to visit my mom after her first vaccine, and once I saw how badly she’d declined over the past year, I wished I’d gone even sooner, despite the risk. She lives alone, and the isolation/lack of social activity has taken a huge toll, both physically and cognitively.
Anonymous wrote:Absolutely. I have been seeing my parents the whole time though; we bubbled together and nobody works out of the house or goes to school in person.