Hello there!
Vaccinations don't really kill a lot of people. In super rare cases, they may get a severe allergic reaction to it which can be treated easily if the person gets to the doctor real quick.
Overall, the chances of dying from a vaccine is usually 1 in a million, which is just measly, but dying from a disease is always pretty high. Keep in mind that everyone has a different immune system response which will make people experience either no reaction, to serious anaphylaxis, or anything in between, after receiving a vaccine. Sometimes, people may have underlying conditions that have not been detected earlier, causing them to suffer a bit too much from a jab.
Scientists are not out there to kill you, believe me, 😂 They do their best to improve the vaccine so the majority of the people can get it and achieve excellent herd immunity, protecting all the people, including their dear ones.
Make sure to avoid anti-vax nonsense since these people don't know how to read scientific data, or even know how to read to save their own lives. One can never formulate the perfect vaccine, but can always make the one that can save as many lives with little to no side effects as possible, and has excellent ability to make your immune system ready during an infection for many years or even a lifetime.
I was given a lot of vaccines and I have been perfectly fine, only felt a bit feverish from my Pfizer jabs, and nothing more.
Stay safe! 😊👍
i think its 1000s
I had mine yesterday! I am 12 nearly 13! I am in year 8! you can have it at any age between 12 years old (in year 8) and 18 years old!
I was petrified before having it - my friends who had it before me didn't help! they were crying and everything and they had already had it! me and my bff were crying and on the way to the room to get it a lady said that we should both go to the nurses room and waited for ages (around an hour and a half) then we got it! one of our other bffs had had it earlier and was with us the whole time we were waiting! then we went at the end and i felt a absalute twit! it didn't hurt at all! plus i got a free biscuit!
it didn't hurt at all! the only negative points about it was -
that you worry and feel horrible before it
your arm hurts if you move it after (mine is stiff today) which is why i had the day off!
The number of people who have died after an H1N1/09 vaccination with the death reported to the VAERS program (Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System) is provided below. However each of these circumstances have not yet been evaluated to determine if the death was due to the vaccine. The 42 deaths that were reported are a very small number compared to the number of vaccinations given, and most likely, if related to the vaccine at all, the deaths were from severe allergic reactions to the egg protein or other ingredient in the vaccine.
This is from the VAERS data:
As of January 22, 2010, VAERS had received 8755 adverse event reports following 2009 monovalent H1N1 vaccination.
However, according to the CDC report:
As with all reports of serious adverse events and deaths, the 32 VAERS reports that involve deaths are under review by CDC, FDA and the states where the reported deaths occurred. Preliminary findings do not indicate a common cause or pattern (such as similarities in age, gender, geographic location, illness surrounding death, or underlying medical conditions) to suggest that these deaths were associated with the vaccine. These cases are under further review pending additional medical records (e.g., autopsy reports, medical files).
See the related links section for a link to that full report. The following summary was
developed based upon the information gathered by the FDA and CDC through the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System. This summary from the CDC is as of Dec 30, 2009, shows a possible link between 32 people's deaths and the vaccine. Almost 100 million doses have been distributed for use in the US alone.
VAERS Summary:
There is also a link to a very good article by Dr. Rob Siegel in Psychology Today in the related link section below, along with some other reputable articles on the subject. Here are some relevant excerpts from the article by Dr. Siegel:
In prior years the flu vaccine's ability to reduce death was much greater than its likelihood of causing any side effect more serious than a sore arm.
In otherwise healthy kids . . . who got flu last spring, the probabilty of death from H1N1 "swine" flu was between .001 and .0001; the probability of serious side effects in flu vaccines historically ranges around .00001-.000001. The incidence of H1N1 flu this upcoming fall is unknown, and is important in this analysis.
Studies on the new vaccine could not determine the risk of serious side effects because no serious side effects were reported so far in over 39,000 people who have received it. These studies found that the vaccine is good at preventing Swine Flu
Yes, each year in the US approximately 36,000 people die from the flu; most did not have a flu vaccination.
No
A good use of the swine flu virus is to use it in a preventive vaccine so people who get the flu vaccination are safe from suffering the illness. Get your flu vaccination right away for the 2013-2014 flu season!
no one
You may get the flu. Next year get the flu vaccination.
about 1 percent. It is rare to get the flu with the vaccination.
345
The flu epidemic.
Possibly as low as 0.1 %, there is very little chance you'll get it after you have the immunization and it has had time to be effective (a couple weeks after the vaccine administration in most healthy adults). See the related question below for information about what might have happened if you do get the flu even after a flu vaccination.
Unless you were tested when you were ill, there is really no way to know for sure which type of flu you may have had. If you were not tested at the time, to be sure you have immunity to the swine flu, it is advised that you get a vaccination. It will not hurt you if you already had the same flu, and it can prevent another illness if the flu you had was a different strain. For best protection from the flu during the 2009-2010 flu season, get both a swine flu vaccination and a seasonal flu vaccination.
The common cold does not have a vaccination available. Vaccines are available for the flu (influenza) and chickenpox.
At least 90,000