Just curious, what kind of reaction did you have? If you don't mind sharing, of course.FFHAuthor said:About 3 months ago I got a Tetanus Vaccine with Whooping cough booster.
Ironically I'm pro vaccine, even though I had reactions to the Measles vaccine I recived as a child that were 'medically impossible' as the Doctors said.
my old job offered them also but I always refused.VanQ said:I get a flu vaccination for free every year at my workplace since I work in medicine and I'm due for my next one in the next month or so. I have only been sick once in the last 10 years of my life since starting annual vaccinations. Thanks, Science!
Well I had to believe in something especially since I survived a trial by fire when I was born in the form of pneumonia upon birth. But don't get me wrong I'm not one of these Jenny McCarthy twits I came from a poor background so going to the doctor with any regularity was out. I also didn't have health coverage from 18 till now so going to the doctor for anything was prohibitively expensive until obamacare. I would get vaccced for anything major like tet or rabies. It just with cold and flu it feels pointless since they mutate too damn fast for it to be worth the time.Mutant1988 said:It actually doesn't.Darks63 said:I got all the one you get when your a kid like polio and the like. However I avoid flu vaccination since I hate going to get them and I also believe that its better to get sick and get over things naturally since it gives your immune system a good wargame practice.
The wargame practice you refer to is what vaccines provide, with far less risks and unpleasant side effects than you would get from contracting the actual disease. Even relatively mild diseases can have disastrous effects or leave you disfigured for life.
Misery might build character, but getting sick when it's possible to avoid it is not doing anyone any favours.
That said, flu is a bit of a crap shoot, since there's a new strain ever so often and most vaccines only work for a single strain. So yeah, if you are in the risk groups (i.e. those that are likely to die from it) then it's a very good idea to get vaccinated.
Sorry if I sound preachy. Again, be critical of what medical companies do, but don't altogether dismiss vaccination as a method to prevent disease.
Why am I insistent on this? See the anecdote in my previous post.
I suppose there is some merit to that train of though. Anyone that has any kind of condition that could exacerbate flu symptoms though should really, really get vaccinated. If you have a heart condition, high blood pressure, any kind of lung illness really, it's just best to not take any chances then.Darks63 said:Well I had to believe in something especially since I survived a trial by fire when I was born in the form of pneumonia upon birth. But don't get me wrong I'm not one of these Jenny McCarthy twits I came from a poor background so going to the doctor with any regularity was out. I also didn't have health coverage from 18 till now so going to the doctor for anything was prohibitively expensive until obamacare. I would get vaccced for anything major like tet or rabies. It just with cold and flu it feels pointless since they mutate too damn fast for it to be worth the time.