Interesting. Thanks. So it sounds like the J&J's not nearly as worthless as the media has made it out to be.
Haha. Since you're the undisputed king of gifs, you might appreciate this one:
https://www.reactiongifs.us/wp-conte...ive_office.gif
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Interesting. Thanks. So it sounds like the J&J's not nearly as worthless as the media has made it out to be.
Haha. Since you're the undisputed king of gifs, you might appreciate this one:
https://www.reactiongifs.us/wp-conte...ive_office.gif
Exactly. I think it is a great vaccine in the fight against COVID.
At first I didn't think so, but once I read the data, I realized it was a great tool. The nuances in the study and timing in the studies are major points I hit when I'm giving presentations to educate healthcare providers so they can educate their patients.
I always get that "punched in the arm" feeling after vaccinations, but my second Covid vax was a whole different level. It felt like my arm was broken. There's no way I could lift my arm over my head.
I'm closing in on 48 hours post vax now and it's certainly getting better. It still hurts when I lift my arm, but it's not excruciating.
I was the opposite--first dose caused super sore arm for almost a week, second dose I had almost no arm soreness. Wife was the same. It was weird because I was expecting my arm to be really sore again but it didn't happen. I wonder if it has anything to do with where they stick the needle?
Anyway, reactions to these vaccines are all over the map.
Just got the second shot now I’m even more paranoid they messed up the first one. I trust they didn’t but gee it was like they poked me with a sewing pin for like a 1/16th of a second; this time second shot I could feel the needle and it seemed like the “right” amount of time. Oh well. 14 Days.
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I suppose theyre thinning out the silicone coating on the cannula(sharp pointy part) due to supply chain issues, or foregoing it altogether.
Needle factory near me has been 6 days a week since before it blew up last spring, bittersweet for the local economy.
The bandage companies must be raking in the cash, too.
Nurses learn to give intramuscular shots from older nurses (who learned it from older nurses etc) - the problem with that is that can lead to bad habits being passed along - there is a real problem with not using long enough needles especially given how fat a lot of people are (thereby not injecting into the muscle when that is the target) and with not landmarking the right target area to stick the needle in (which can sometimes lead to injecting too close/into a nerve)
There seems to be a real fear of "hitting the bone" which 1) isn't that big a deal if they aren't jabbing it in there with speed and force 2) if the bone is hit the person doesn't generally feel pain from that happening (though they might feel it hit) and the needle can then be pulled back into the muscle easily
This might seem minor - but these vaccines are designed to work through injection into the muscle and putting it into fat isn't helping.
To be clear I think it would be very hard to determine from your own vax side effects where the shot was delivered since it seems so variable (unless you got it in a nerve - that is likely gonna be noticeable)
How much a shot hurts going in depends mostly on chance--does the needle hit a pain receptor in the skin or not. The skill and confidence of the person giving the shot may make a slight difference but if the needle hits a nerve it will seem like the injection took longer than if it didn't. No reason to think they messed up the first shot because you didn't feel as much the first time.
There are major nerves that can be hit with a deltoid injection (shoulder muscle) but that's an entirely different, more serious, and preventable issue than the needle hitting a skin nerve receptor--which is harmless and unpreventable.
12 yr old signed up for shot 1 Tuesday....
This is one article I found--they were studying antibody levels, not clinical disease, in a small number of volunteers. Antibody levels kept rising, even beyond 4 weeks, and also were higher if a second shot was given. I don't know if this is the data Summit was referring to. I did a Pub Med search which wouldn't include preprints, press releases, etc--only articles that have already appeared in print.
Edit--here's a better one--definitely better clinical efficacy at 28 days than at 14, and looks like efficacy continues to improve beyond 28 days, eyeballing figure 2.
Any reason we aren't giving the shot in the ass for maximum potential effectiveness as with some other injections. Seems you can't possibly miss with that target and lotsa muscle for proper release.
Are you sure you’re not from Boston? Not a big fan of San Adams but this commercial made me laugh.
https://youtu.be/N8AFHeaHp5U
Sure but to be clear you’re talking about pain from the needle piercing the skin (which is short lived and yes is just due to chance) and then pain post injection (which I suspect has little to do with pain receptors in the skin).
People not feeling any muscle pain post injection could be due to many reasons - the most likely is the individual immune system response to the vaccine - but it could also in some cases be due to the injection being delivered into fat between the skin and muscle (if a long enough needle is not used or the needle isn’t inserted deep enough).
Haha. That's hilarious. Having gotten shots in the ass, I don't mind. Sucks to sit or do sit-ups for a couple days but like I said, I felt the tech couldn't screw it up quite as easy.
Serious question regarding the COVID shot, though. Would it be any more effective in general, or have they chosen the arm location for a specific reason? Any chance it's MORE effective in the arm than butt, or are we just trying to make people less averse to getting the poke to begin with since ass shots ain't for everyone.
My guess is that they picked the intramuscular location most conducive to a mass vax clinic setting.