only thing i heard is it does have to be the 6 months apart, so i can’t get mine til decemberShiddddddd. I'm finna handle that in da next few days, then.
otherwise im hearing it’s no questions asked
only thing i heard is it does have to be the 6 months apart, so i can’t get mine til decemberShiddddddd. I'm finna handle that in da next few days, then.
Covid-19 infections leave an impact on the heart, raising concerns about lasting damage
only thing i heard is it does have to be the 6 months apart, so i can’t get mine til december
otherwise im hearing it’s no questions asked
@bnew and they still have to figure out the reason for and the implications of the anosmia.
Those are the same people saying we should wait and see what side effects the vaccine has before taking itpeople are way too nonchalant about losing their senses with this virus and it's messing with peoples brains in ways scientists don't fully understand.
only time will tell whether folks have experienced the worse of it the first time around.
Unvaccinated people are 20 times more likely to die from COVID-19 than fully vaccinated people, per new state research.
Driving the news: To determine the effects of COVID-19 vaccination in Texas, researchers at the Department of State Health Services analyzed data from electronic lab reports, death certificates and the state immunization registry.
What they found: Besides the dizzying difference in death rates, unvaccinated people are 13 times more likely to become infected with COVID-19 than fully vaccinated people.
- The analysis included a period from Jan. 15 to Oct. 1, 2021 with a focus on the four weeks from Sept. 4 to Oct. 1, which allowed researchers to measure the effect of COVID-19 vaccination as the more contagious Delta variant surged across Texas.
State of play: Despite more than 10 days of lower hospital admissions, Austin Public Health officials said Friday they will remain in Stage 3 COVID risk-based guidelines ahead of the holidays.
- Vaccination had a strong protective effect on infections and deaths among people of all ages.
- "I know we're tired," Austin-Travis County Health Authority Desmar Walkes said. "We've been in this for two years. We've lost friends; we've lost family. As the virus continues to struggle to survive, we have to continue to get smarter, make sure that we're using every piece of data that is at our disposal, make sure that we're giving the community the best information possible."
Sources tell CBC News that Al-Begamy was not immunized against COVID-19 and did not agree with vaccine mandates.
Where it all started
post 1
It’s crazy how an entire pandemic is cataloged from beginning to now on a message board![]()
We won't know the impact of COVID on the body for many years.