Am older than 60 with very mild asthma otherwise healthy. My Dr recommended I get the RSV vaccine. After the covid debacle am a little concerned about ulterior motives, especially respiratory related. Is this shot safe?
I had the RSV shot months ago, as an overweight adult male age 77 at the time. I had a reaction - just a slightly sore arm - for a day or so. So as a statistical insignificant n=1, I see no downside to getting the shot.Am older than 60 with very mild asthma otherwise healthy. My Dr recommended I get the RSV vaccine. After the covid debacle am a little concerned about ulterior motives, especially respiratory related. Is this shot safe?
No one here can answer that question for you and believe it or not your doctor can't either. I've always believed in TANSTAAFL (there ain't no such thing as a free lunch) and that applies to any medication or vaccine. I have found that wise choices for healthy living go much further than medicines.
For instance ... how many here take BP medicine but could likely do without it by weight loss, exercise, healthy diet, reducing stress, proper sleep habits, and good spiritual morality? Most I suppose. I'm not saying that everyone can ditch BP meds but many could but they choose to take medicine because it's easy enough to do and get on with life. If you feel you need a vaccine then you have to decide to take the risk involved. If you cannot identify the risk then you must consider whether taking a vaccine without knowing the risk is worth it for you.
Addressing Covid in particular on this board will be an exercise in futility as there are facts to be considered but they generally get drowned out by the roar of those that seem to forget that all people have the right to make a decision for themselves and that their decision is right for them. Whatever someone else decides to do is none of my business whether I agree or not.
FWIW ... IBTL
After the covid debacle am a little concerned about ulterior motives, especially respiratory related.
I do agree with you...as a wise man once said, "Government isn't the solution to our problem, government is the problem".Down that path is a loss of freedom where people who think they know it all decide what others must do.
Huh. After all, those flights I made through the Rocks in Skyhawks. As an instructor, too. Good thing we didn't know it was so dangerous. We would never have trained so many students in safe mountain flying, and what the risks were. We'd have stayed over the cities and the big flat farms. Or taken an airliner. Or stayed in bed. And missed all the awesome fun.A pilot thinks he can brave the Rocky Mountains on a summer afternoon in a Skyhawk. That decision is not "right for" him. It's a stupid decision and very likely to get him killed.
Most inaccurate thing on that one is studying only 6 years through PhD. Try more like 9-10, not to mention that a lot of the pharma development is done by MD/PhDs so more like 12. Wish I could have finished my PhD after only 6 years…
Yep...6 has been done, but not by mere mortals. 9-10 is about right. But that's not counting postdoc appointments, which can often add another 2 years before landing that first 'real' job.Most inaccurate thing on that one is studying only 6 years through PhD. Try more like 9-10, not to mention that a lot of the pharma development is done by MD/PhDs so more like 12. Wish I could have finished my PhD after only 6 years…
6-7 is not that uncommon in Europe where undergrad is generally 3 years and PhDs are more reliably 4 years like they were in the US decades ago. In the US, 4 years to PhD after undergrad is rare and 3 years is basically unheard of now. Average is 5 for most departments, but bio especially is more like 7.Yep...6 has been done, but not by mere mortals. 9-10 is about right. But that's not counting postdoc appointments, which can often add another 2 years before landing that first 'real' job.
People have the right to make their own choices and I have to believe that when they make that choice they believe it is the best option at the time. I'm not saying that every choice will be the best one that could have been made but it was theirs to make.I actually think the idea that every one makes their own decision (true) and that "their decision is right for them" is the wrong conclusion. Just because one makes their own decision doesn't make it right for them.
Just checked CVS and It’s available to anyone out by me. It may differ from state to stateIs the RSV vaccine available for anyone or is it limited to older folks?
Additionally, no choice any of us makes is ever just limited to ourselves in its implications and consequences. My rights stop the moment they impinge on yours.
From WELL before Covid:
Is the RSV vaccine available for anyone or is it limited to older folks?
I thought the new ones were only for adults age 60 and up, or for pregnant women--to pass along the protection to the child. Maybe the '60 and up' is a recommendation, not a limitation.Just checked CVS and It’s available to anyone out by me. It may differ from state to state
This is exactly the kinda stuff I find disgusting and unnecessary and leads to thread lock ...From WELL before Covid:
What I kept reading was recommended for 60+ but the language wasn't too specific.I thought the new ones were only for adults age 60 and up, or for pregnant women--to pass along the protection to the child. Maybe the '60 and up' is a recommendation, not a limitation.
The adult vaccines are different than the RSV vaccine for infants. That one has been around for quite a few years.
Wow - sorry. Not my intent.This is exactly the kinda stuff I find disgusting and unnecessary and leads to thread lock ...
There is a false equivalence these days between genuine research for new solutions by people trained to do so vs. people seeking agreement with their presupposition. It’s frustrating to see how the latter has gained so much traction lately, so humor seemed like the best approach.
Thanks for your reply. Please do not take how I reply here as hostile or anything other than intending a good conversation.This is true and I get your point.
However, there is another point and another side to the situation alluded to by your meme, and that is experts who believe that their expertise alone should put their opinions above question.
I am not a physician. I am, however, an engineer with a considerable amount of scientific training, a few degrees, and a great deal of experience at reviewing all types of data and drawing meaningful conclusions from it. I'm reasonably convinced that I'm not an idiot (though I'm open-minded on that point if you have conflicting data). I have also been required over the course of my career to explain rather complex technical matters to laymen, so I expect a scientist or physician to do the same.
If I ask a physician to explain some recommended treatment and he falls back upon "your google search doesn't equal my MD" I am going to find another physician quickly. I expect to hear a reasoned, understandable explanation with facts and figures that I can check. If I don't get one, then I question the validity of the explanation and the explainer. If the expert treats me like an idiot, I will conclude that he is one.
And that's for a one-on-one situation. Things are worse in the public arena, as too often political factions and the media pick winners and losers, without any real understanding of their own, so only one idea or one aspect of research is heard.
Your meme, like many, over-simplifies a complex matter and insults intelligent people who expect reasoned, substantiated opinions from experts on all sides of a particular question. I don't want to speak for @Daleandee , but that might be why he didn't appreciate your post.
You're absolutely right about the false equivalence. In particular in the last 15 years the internet has given voice to the mindless, rudderless, incompetent mob.There is a false equivalence these days between genuine research for new solutions by people trained to do so vs. people seeking agreement with their presupposition. It’s frustrating to see how the latter has gained so much traction lately, so humor seemed like the best approach.
I bet in your engineering life you faced the same thing, at least to some degree. New things that us mere mortals don’t fully understand
You asked a very reasonable question.Thanks for the information. Didn't mean to stir the pot. There has been so much conflicting medical information in the last few years don't know who to believe. Probably will wait till fall then decide.
How often do engineering issues get involved in blatant misinformation campaigns bought into by so many people? Can you show me an example? I can’t think of one.Occasionally. But I didn't respond with a meme like you posted.
Honest question... before 2020 how did you feel about people getting an annual flu shot?What we need are more boosters.....
I got them....even got the shingles vax. That's probably the last I'll get. Way to much controversy, politics, and less science.Honest question... before 2020 how did you feel about people getting an annual flu shot?
Understand that my objection to your meme wasn't because I'm anti-vax or against medicine. I've used both as needed and I know the world is a better place because of the amazing medical advances that have been made.No vaccine is 100% without risk, as no treatment for hypertension, diabetes, or headache is either.