evildave
Unregistered
E
While I agree that most people fear vaccinations for the wrong reasons, it's not 100% guaranteed that a flu vaccine will grant immunity to the correct virus that eventually makes the rounds. They make their best, most educated guess, and it can be (and has been in the past) wrong.
This isn't to say vaccinations in general, or even influenza vaccinations are ineffective. It's just the flu vaccination you get is not guaranteed to be effective against EVERY strain of influenza that might reach you. Ask your doctor (they'll usually explain this when they give you the shot). You can still catch a different strain of influenza.
Last year I got my flu shots through the company I worked for, I sufferd mild flu symptoms after the shot, and I got very sick with the REAL flu (the one they didn't expect) a few weeks later, because they 'missed' last year.
http://www.cdc.gov/flu/protect/keyfacts.htm
In general, since I'm healthy, and getting the shot is almost guaranteed to make me sick (repeateded direct personal experience) and not free this time around, I'll stick to hygiene for prevention, and just tough it out it if/when I catch it. I'm current with all my other shots.
http://www.cdc.gov/flu/protect/preventing.htm
What would be sad would be new epidemics of preventable illness among kids whose parents buy into this 'vaccine is bad' nonsense.
This isn't to say vaccinations in general, or even influenza vaccinations are ineffective. It's just the flu vaccination you get is not guaranteed to be effective against EVERY strain of influenza that might reach you. Ask your doctor (they'll usually explain this when they give you the shot). You can still catch a different strain of influenza.
Last year I got my flu shots through the company I worked for, I sufferd mild flu symptoms after the shot, and I got very sick with the REAL flu (the one they didn't expect) a few weeks later, because they 'missed' last year.
http://www.cdc.gov/flu/protect/keyfacts.htm
Vaccine Effectiveness
The ability of flu vaccine to protect a person depends on the age and health status of the person getting the vaccine, and the similarity or "match" between the virus strains in the vaccine and those in circulation. Testing has shown that both the flu shot and the nasal-spray vaccine are effective at preventing the flu.
In general, since I'm healthy, and getting the shot is almost guaranteed to make me sick (repeateded direct personal experience) and not free this time around, I'll stick to hygiene for prevention, and just tough it out it if/when I catch it. I'm current with all my other shots.
http://www.cdc.gov/flu/protect/preventing.htm
What would be sad would be new epidemics of preventable illness among kids whose parents buy into this 'vaccine is bad' nonsense.