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louisstamos said:Both my parents are eligible for the AstraZeneca vaccine ASAP - however, they're chosen to wait until one of the Pfizer/Moderna ones are made available to them. Which, in one sense I kind of understand with all the apprehension in the news about it right now, but at the same time - if AZ was made available to me, I'd probably get it in a heartbeat.
louisstamos said:My 91-year old grandma got her first dose of the vaccine this past Saturday, so I'm super happy about that!
L K said:We ended up with a supply of Moderna vaccine at our medical office. I had three patients decline home visits to get the vaccine because their spouse wasn't going to be able to get the vaccine at the same time.
The doses we got were kind of unexpected and I have no idea when we are likely to get the vaccine again if we ever do. Such a bizarre decision process.
Bender said:I would take AZ if I were offered simply because my blood clot risk in AZ is lower than chance of getting covid and having major complications. Really a no brainer.
Frycer14 said:Bender said:I would take AZ if I were offered simply because my blood clot risk in AZ is lower than chance of getting covid and having major complications. Really a no brainer.
You know, I'd probably have to get more information before I took the AZ. I'm not particularly worried about the blood clotting risk either, but I am unclear about how well it protects against the current and future variants vs the mRNA, which seems to be fuelling the current outbreak, and likely will continue.
So I guess I'd happily take the AZ, but I wouldn't want to go to the back of the line to wait for a reshoot of the Pfizer or Moderna considering how much better they seem to be for the sake of waiting a bit longer up front. It's a tough call.
Bender said:I would take AZ if I were offered simply because my blood clot risk in AZ is lower than chance of getting covid and having major complications. Really a no brainer. Luckily my gf got the Pfizer vaccine as she is a hotel worker. Soon it will become less a problem of having actual vaccines and more a problem of horrible logistics.
bustaheims said:Bender said:I would take AZ if I were offered simply because my blood clot risk in AZ is lower than chance of getting covid and having major complications. Really a no brainer. Luckily my gf got the Pfizer vaccine as she is a hotel worker. Soon it will become less a problem of having actual vaccines and more a problem of horrible logistics.
Seriously. This blood clotting thing is being over-sold. Risks of typical blood clotting incidents aren't higher than expected in the general population. There's been a small percentage of cases (and by small, I mean ~0.000125%) where those receiving the vaccine presented more serious rare blood clotting issues, but they have yet to identify a causal link between the vaccine and these blood clotting issues. It could very well be a random correlation, it could be the result of very specific underlying issues, or a number of things that wouldn't impact the general population. I appreciate the need to be cautious, but it feels like a lot of the reporting around it is pure fearmongering.
L K said:...
We also know that COVID itself promotes a pro-collaguable and thrombocytopenic state.