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Started By
Message
re: Shingles Vaxx. What to do.
Posted on 12/12/22 at 4:23 pm to Asusundevil23
Posted on 12/12/22 at 4:23 pm to Asusundevil23
I had the two shots, my arm was sore AF after both, but only for the rest of the day.
Posted on 12/13/22 at 12:06 am to Blizzard of Chizz
quote:
Speaking from personal experience and what my dad has been through after being pressured into the shingles vax by the VA, don’t do it.
How old was dad when this happened?
Posted on 12/13/22 at 1:21 am to Asusundevil23
Who on earth would be getting a vaccine of any sort at this point? Oh my, just sad.
Posted on 12/13/22 at 3:05 am to Asusundevil23
quote:
How old was dad when this happened?
68
Posted on 12/13/22 at 3:54 am to Asusundevil23
Take at your own risk
Posted on 12/13/22 at 5:30 am to LSUAngelHere1
quote:
My sister is an RN in cardiology.
So in other words, she has no advanced medical training
quote:
hasn’t vaccinated my 2 month old niece bc she no longer trusts her own industry to not attempt slipping the mRNA into any of the scheduled vaccines.

Posted on 12/13/22 at 6:16 am to Asusundevil23
I had the shingles. My case was pretty mild but I started the antivirals before the rash appeared. A few days before the rash there is a soreness of the skin, neuralgia. That is the clue to start meds immediately.
Posted on 12/13/22 at 7:23 am to LRB1967
I got mine years ago. My wife was wanting to get it, but it would cost over $400. But after January 1st it will be included with her Medicare plan and she will get it then.
Posted on 12/13/22 at 7:38 am to subidc
quote:
worked in the medical field for 28 years
What kind of weed are you growing in that field?
Asking, you know, for a friend.
Posted on 12/13/22 at 9:46 am to Dex Morgan
I'm debating on whether to get the 2nd shingles shot. If one won't do it, I doubt a second will, either.
Posted on 12/13/22 at 10:11 am to Asusundevil23
They "estimate" a million cases each year ( they don't know) they know less than 100 deaths each year, most over the age of 70.
Shingles sucks, but do the math.
Shingles sucks, but do the math.
Posted on 12/13/22 at 10:17 am to LSUAngelHere1
quote:
LSUAngelHere1
quote:
You’d have to be a fool to get anything called a vaccine being peddled by big pharma.
How's that polio working out for you?
Posted on 12/13/22 at 10:31 am to ole man
quote:
Take at your own risk
Shingles disease is horrible to look at and excruciatingly painful. If the shot provides any degree of protection it's worth it, even if there's a microchip embedded in it
Posted on 12/13/22 at 11:19 am to WestTexasTiger
quote:
I suffer from the same thing in my left side. Feels like ants crawling and biting under my skin. Did find out that marijuana helps with the nerve pain. I was given a medicinal marijuana script. Pharmacy is over off Essen if you are in Baton Rouge.
Thanks, WestTexasTiger!
Posted on 12/13/22 at 11:37 am to pfcTigah
quote:
I was given a medicinal marijuana script.
That's not an option in Texas; now what?
Posted on 12/13/22 at 12:27 pm to Asusundevil23
I’ve had shingles and both doses of the Shingles vaccine.
I had no significant issues with the vaccines, slight soreness at the injection site.
The shingles absolutely sucked and I'd gladly take the vaccine to minimize any future issues with Shingles.
I had no significant issues with the vaccines, slight soreness at the injection site.
The shingles absolutely sucked and I'd gladly take the vaccine to minimize any future issues with Shingles.
Posted on 12/13/22 at 12:39 pm to tigger42day
I would take the shingles vax 100% if I knew it was what has always been given.
But now that I know they are culling the population with the mRNA stuff I am now a bit leery of the possibility that they will try to kill me with what historically has been a safe vaccine (as far as I know).
Likelyhood of something changing with the vax is probably very small. But if it has been tampered with, I would be risking my life to prevent a nonfatal disease.
I am undecided at this point.
But now that I know they are culling the population with the mRNA stuff I am now a bit leery of the possibility that they will try to kill me with what historically has been a safe vaccine (as far as I know).
Likelyhood of something changing with the vax is probably very small. But if it has been tampered with, I would be risking my life to prevent a nonfatal disease.
I am undecided at this point.
Posted on 12/13/22 at 8:33 pm to omegaman66
quote:
But now that I know they are culling the population with the mRNA stuff I am now a bit leery of the possibility that they will try to kill me with what historically has been a safe vaccine (as far as I know).
This is my primary concern.
Posted on 12/13/22 at 8:38 pm to omegaman66
quote:
I would take the shingles vax 100% if I knew it was what has always been given. But now that I know they are culling the population with the mRNA stuff I am now a bit leery of the possibility that they will try to kill me with what historically has been a safe vaccine (as far as I know). Likelyhood of something changing with the vax is probably very small. But if it has been tampered with, I would be risking my life to prevent a nonfatal disease. I am undecided at this point.
They now have the mRNA in the shingles vax. Trials started in July. I do not trust the industry anymore so just knowing that the shingles MRNA shot is already out there…. I’m out.
Posted on 12/13/22 at 8:45 pm to Asusundevil23
Pfizer and BioNTech are teaming up to develop a new shingles vaccine with the same mRNA technology used to develop their COVID-19 shots, the companies announced on Wednesday.
The companies plan to develop a vaccine using Pfizer’s antigen technology and BioNTech’s mRNA technology to further prevent the disease that effects 1 in 3 Americans. The vaccine’s clinical trials are expected to launch in the second half of 2022.
The collaboration will mark the third time Pfizer and BioNTech work together on an mRNA-based vaccine, following the widely used COVID-19 series and an influenza vaccine project started in 2018.
Shingles vaccines already exist, but the companies will strive to create a vaccine that has “better tolerability” and is easier to develop worldwide.
Pfizer agreed to pay BioNTech $225 million, including an equity investment of $150 million, with the option for BioNTech to receive future regulatory and sales milestone payments reaching up to $200 million.
BioNTech will send $25 million to Pfizer for its antigen technology.
Under the companies’ agreement, Pfizer has the rights to commercialize the vaccine globally, except for in Germany, Turkey and other specific developing countries.
Shingles usually occurs in older adults who had a chickenpox infection sometimes decades earlier. The virus can resurface after being dormant for years, leading the patient to endure rashes and more rare symptoms of facial paralysis, deafness and blindness.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) cites studies that show that 99 percent of Americans aged 40 and older have had chickenpox.
The Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine is one of two mRNA-based series approved in the U.S. to prevent the coronavirus, with Americans having received nearly 300 million doses, according to CDC data.
The companies plan to develop a vaccine using Pfizer’s antigen technology and BioNTech’s mRNA technology to further prevent the disease that effects 1 in 3 Americans. The vaccine’s clinical trials are expected to launch in the second half of 2022.
The collaboration will mark the third time Pfizer and BioNTech work together on an mRNA-based vaccine, following the widely used COVID-19 series and an influenza vaccine project started in 2018.
Shingles vaccines already exist, but the companies will strive to create a vaccine that has “better tolerability” and is easier to develop worldwide.
Pfizer agreed to pay BioNTech $225 million, including an equity investment of $150 million, with the option for BioNTech to receive future regulatory and sales milestone payments reaching up to $200 million.
BioNTech will send $25 million to Pfizer for its antigen technology.
Under the companies’ agreement, Pfizer has the rights to commercialize the vaccine globally, except for in Germany, Turkey and other specific developing countries.
Shingles usually occurs in older adults who had a chickenpox infection sometimes decades earlier. The virus can resurface after being dormant for years, leading the patient to endure rashes and more rare symptoms of facial paralysis, deafness and blindness.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) cites studies that show that 99 percent of Americans aged 40 and older have had chickenpox.
The Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine is one of two mRNA-based series approved in the U.S. to prevent the coronavirus, with Americans having received nearly 300 million doses, according to CDC data.
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