drb391
Recycles dryer sheets
all I experienced was slight soreness at spot of injection. (got at same time as flu shot)
I had all three a week before traveling to Europe because it was the only way to do it. I was definitely sick (like mid-range flu) for about three days, and then it was over. I comforted myself with the fact (perhaps spurious?) that side effects prove a robust effect of the vaccines.
DW got a sore arm and flu symptoms. I asked my doctor if I should get it and he said no. He doesn't recommend.
Our PCP recommended RSV, Covid and Fluzone, so there’s probably not a consensus.Did he say why? I had read someone else (doctor online) not recommending it as well - something along the line maybe when you are older. (I didn't pay a lot of attention since I am not old enough for the current one). Just curious.
My doctor didn't say why he gave a No, but I trust his judgement. I'm in my early 60s, so that might be why. DW didn't ask her doctor before she got jabbed. She's a few years older than me.
I'd be sure to ask WHY to my doc, as that recommendation opposite of CDC.
Maybe its based on the Doc's religion or personal anti-vaccine beliefs, but you won't know until you ask.
I got the trifecta last week - flu Covid RSV. I’m 60. All done in one arm. Arm hurt for several days, longer than I recall other shots. Of course I can’t tell which one. I was not a fan of doing them in one arm.CDC stopped short of recommending it to all seniors and just said "talk to your doctor". I wondered why they did that really. Apparently it is called "shared clinical decision making".