Uncle Wally One Ball
Well-Known Member
AIDS. It will be alright4 days after the Oxford jab, I’ve started inching all over my body bloody red blotches
AIDS. It will be alright4 days after the Oxford jab, I’ve started inching all over my body bloody red blotches
FOCs. Wait until the next layer of jabs though, the 40somethings will be having a breakdown.Some right Drama Queens on here
They'll be getting their mums to pick them up.FOCs. Wait until the next layer of jabs though, the 40somethings will be having a breakdown.
Great to hear,glad things are on the up.Visits will soon be the norm again :-)My mum had her AZ at 10am this morning. Sore arm all day but that's about it so far other than feeling knackered. Seemed in good spirits when i spoke to her an hour ago. It'll be three weeks since my dad was jabbed with Pfizer on Tuesday too - he had no side effects at all when he had it.
On a personal note, now both my parents have had theirs - well, it's quite a nice feeling! Daring myself to feel optimistic for about the first time in a year ha.
They don't mix and match vaccines surely?Is that your 2nd Kaz? If it is did you have AZ first
Same as quite a few of us, I'm hoping the second jab is an easier event after that.Poorliest I've been in many years last night, shaking uncontrollably and couldn't get warm. Feel better now just got a massive headache, feel hungover.
Yep I was exactly the same, but my brother had no symptoms at all, it’s a fuckin weird vaccine that’s for sure..Poorliest I've been in many years last night, shaking uncontrollably and couldn't get warm. Feel better now just got a massive headache, feel hungover.
According to the 'consentor' I spoke to (perhaps not the right title, the one who asks all the questions) those who had bad reactions to the 1st jab are usually fine for the 2nd. Whereas if you have no reactions first time around you're more likely to when having the 2nd jab.Same as quite a few of us, I'm hoping the second jab is an easier event after that.
Great news then, if I'd not just had the jab when the headache started leading onto a sleepless shivery night I'd have honestly thought I'd caught the fucker.According to the 'consentor' I spoke to (perhaps not the right title, the one who asks all the questions) those who had bad reactions to the 1st jab are usually fine for the 2nd. Whereas if you have no reactions first time around you're more likely to when having the 2nd jab.
Obviously this is only from a single person (an auxiliary I think) although she is involved so hopefully correct. That said I barely had a reaction so hoping it's a general comment rather than a hard and fast rule.Great news then, if I'd not just had the jab when the headache started leading onto a sleepless shivery night I'd have honestly thought I'd caught the fucker.
The speed of 'illness' would have been scary as fuck if it actually was CV rather than the mini controlled vaccine dose.
Like falling off a cliff.Obviously this is only from a single person (an auxiliary I think) although she is involved so hopefully correct. That said I barely had a reaction so hoping it's a general comment rather than a hard and fast rule.
CV does hit you fast does it not? I thought I had it last September when I went from walking the dog twice a day to not being able to get beyond the back gate overnight. Turned out to be a serious chest infection that made me housebound for 2 weeks and knackered for another 4 (with maybe a little left over yet).
That's funny.Both me and my wife are in our 70th year, my wife is registered disabled. We both had the first jab, Astra-Zeneca, and both had minor ache around the injection which lasted a couple of days. The government web site, gov.co.uk covid update section has a a lot of info about side effects which is updated on a regular basis as more data is available. Worth looking at if you are at all worried. Remember, in the trial before general availability, almost 60% said they had side effects of various levels of severity, almost half of them had been given the dummy jab.
The school vaccination program for TB required parental permission of all children under 16.No reaction at all to jab 1 . I once had a yellow fever or cholera jab and that was a ride . Never felt worse over 12 hours. I still have a mark on my arm from a kid when we got some 8 needle thing in school. Of course in those days no one asked permission or whined if it hurt or there was a reaction.