Open main menu ☰
HealingWell
Search Close Search
Health Conditions
Allergies Alzheimer's Disease Anxiety & Panic Disorders Arthritis Breast Cancer Chronic Illness Crohn's Disease Depression Diabetes
Fibromyalgia GERD & Acid Reflux Irritable Bowel Syndrome Lupus Lyme Disease Migraine Headache Multiple Sclerosis Prostate Cancer Ulcerative Colitis

View Conditions A to Z »
Support Forums
Anxiety & Panic Disorders Bipolar Disorder Breast Cancer Chronic Pain Crohn's Disease Depression Diabetes Fibromyalgia GERD & Acid Reflux
Hepatitis Irritable Bowel Syndrome Lupus Lyme Disease Multiple Sclerosis Ostomies Prostate Cancer Rheumatoid Arthritis Ulcerative Colitis

View Forums A to Z »
Log In
Join Us
Close main menu ×
  • Home
  • Health Conditions
    • All Conditions
    • Allergies
    • Alzheimer's Disease
    • Anxiety & Panic Disorders
    • Arthritis
    • Breast Cancer
    • Chronic Illness
    • Crohn's Disease
    • Depression
    • Diabetes
    • Fibromyalgia
    • GERD & Acid Reflux
    • Irritable Bowel Syndrome
    • Lupus
    • Lyme Disease
    • Migraine Headache
    • Multiple Sclerosis
    • Prostate Cancer
    • Ulcerative Colitis
  • Support Forums
    • All Forums
    • Anxiety & Panic Disorders
    • Bipolar Disorder
    • Breast Cancer
    • Chronic Pain
    • Crohn's Disease
    • Depression
    • Diabetes
    • Fibromyalgia
    • GERD & Acid Reflux
    • Hepatitis
    • Irritable Bowel Syndrome
    • Lupus
    • Lyme Disease
    • Multiple Sclerosis
    • Ostomies
    • Prostate Cancer
    • Rheumatoid Arthritis
    • Ulcerative Colitis
  • Log In
  • Join Us
Join Us
☰
Forum Home| Forum Rules| Moderators| Active Topics| Help| Log In

Covid booster

Support Forums
>
Ulcerative Colitis
✚ New Topic ✚ Reply
1 23
❬ ❬ Previous Thread |Next Thread ❭ ❭
profile picture
island time
Veteran Member
Joined : Dec 2014
Posts : 2335
Posted 1/6/2022 10:13 AM (GMT -8)

ks1905 said...
Antivaxxers are the worst and they are killing people and infecting others with blatant disregard for the people they infect.

Putting this in your signature would save you quite a bit of typing.
profile picture
ks1905
Veteran Member
Joined : Sep 2005
Posts : 6331
Posted 1/6/2022 10:17 AM (GMT -8)

ks1905 said...
Antivaxxers are the worst and they are killing people and infecting others with blatant disregard for the people they infect.

island time said...
Putting this in your signature would save you quite a bit of typing.

No, it's only necessary in replying in the Covid threads. Thanks for replying.
profile picture
ks1905
Veteran Member
Joined : Sep 2005
Posts : 6331
Posted 1/6/2022 12:01 PM (GMT -8)

CCinPA said...


So true

I made an appt for my booster (4th dose) on 1/12. That puts me right in the middle between my remicade infusions. It's a little over 5 months from my last shot on 8/19 if counting 4 weeks per month. Going just by the date it would be a week early. I doubt they will be that anal about the date.

How did you pull that one off? I can't sign up at my state's site for a 4th vaccine just yet.
profile picture
Twingirls
Regular Member
Joined : Aug 2017
Posts : 117
Posted 1/6/2022 12:42 PM (GMT -8)

CCinPA said...

notsosicklygirl said...
You could wait a few months, but by then there will probably be another variant and there will be another booster being developed. It could put you into a waiting game for however long.

[quote]So true

I made an appt for my booster (4th dose) on 1/12. That puts me right in the middle between my remicade infusions. It's a little over 5 months from my last shot on 8/19 if counting 4 weeks per month. Going just by the date it would be a week early. I doubt they will be that anal about the date.[quote]



I have an appointment for 1/15 because that will be 5 months for me. I know people who have been turned away for trying to early. I would love to get mine a week early (this weekend) because I am about to go back to teaching and I hear it’s been crazy in the schools that have gone back this week.

Post Edited (Twingirls) : 1/6/2022 1:46:38 PM (GMT-7)

profile picture
CCinPA
Veteran Member
Joined : Dec 2014
Posts : 2469
Posted 1/6/2022 1:26 PM (GMT -8)
Keith -- I went on my hospital website and clicked on buttons for "immune compromised" and "booster" and it let me register. I think it would have stopped me if I wasn't eligible since I did all my other doses through the same site. Before I go next week I will call to make sure I can get it. In Pennsylvania there isn't a state site that we have to use. I think you can even do walk-ins at some places. I made an appt because the site I like to go to is close to my house so I can just run there over my lunch hour
profile picture
Old Hat
Veteran Member
Joined : Feb 2007
Posts : 5815
Posted 1/6/2022 5:00 PM (GMT -8)
Keith, have you tried signing up for vaccine at WCM site Belfer (via CONNECT) You'd have to register for that patient portal if you haven't already. I know it's not the most convenient for you driving distance considered, but they are well-organized there & aware of immuno-compromised protocols. / Old Hat (40+ yrs with left-sided UC; in remission taking Colazal)
profile picture
IamCurious
Veteran Member
Joined : Jan 2010
Posts : 3689
Posted 1/6/2022 7:14 PM (GMT -8)

ks1905 said...
Antivaxxers are the worst and they are killing people and infecting others with blatant disregard for the people they infect.

That is not what the Science says, Science says vaccinated people can just as easily transmit the virus as the unvaccinated. Even the CDC had to finally admit that.

https://www.thelancet.com/journals/laninf/article/piis1473-3099(21)00648-4/fulltext
A year-long study from the Imperial College London published in The Lancet found that the Covid virus is still highly transmissible within a vaccinated population.
"Fully vaccinated individuals with breakthrough infections have peak viral load similar to unvaccinated cases and can efficiently transmit infection in household settings"


Then there is data from Israel, a country way ahead of us in the percentage people who are fully vaccinated:

https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2021/08/having-sars-cov-2-once-confers-much-greater-immunity-vaccine-no-infection-parties
The new analysis relies on the database of Maccabi Healthcare Services, which enrolls about 2.5 million Israelis. The study found in two analyses that people who were vaccinated in January and February were, in June, July, and the first half of August, six to 13 times more likely to get infected than unvaccinated people who were previously infected with the coronavirus.

In one analysis, comparing more than 32,000 people in the health system, the risk of developing symptomatic COVID-19 was 27 times higher among the vaccinated, and the risk of hospitalization eight times higher.
profile picture
poopydoop
Veteran Member
Joined : Dec 2018
Posts : 1757
Posted 1/7/2022 1:05 AM (GMT -8)

IamCurious said...

That is not what the Science says, Science says vaccinated people can just as easily transmit the virus as the unvaccinated.

Science does NOT say that.
See for example https://www.clinicalmicrobiologyandinfection.com/article/s1198-743x(21)00638-8/fulltext
And this https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/nejmc2102507
which show that vaccinated individuals are infectious for a shorter period of time than unvaccinated people. In other words, they are less likely to infect others because there is a smaller time window in which they can do so.

This study which shows that vaccinated individuals are 40% less likely to transmit coronavirus (delta variant) to household members than unvaccinated
https://www.rivm.nl/en/news/vaccination-reduces-transmission-to-unvaccinated-household-members-by-63-for-delta-variant

Vaccinated individuals are also less likely to develop a covid infection in the first place which further reduces their risk to others.

Most unvaccinated people are doubters rather than anti-vaxxers and it's really important that the latter have access to the full facts.
profile picture
poopydoop
Veteran Member
Joined : Dec 2018
Posts : 1757
Posted 1/7/2022 1:20 AM (GMT -8)
Regarding your second point, the data have not been corrected for people who died the first time around that they got covid.

Noone is doubting that natural immunity gives a broader immune response than a vaccine.

But a vaccine significantly reduces the risk of long covid, severe illness, hospitalisation and death, when you do get infected.

Remember there are people on this forum who have lost loved ones to covid and downplaying the severity of the risk of being unvaccinated is a little insensitive to them.

Post Edited (poopydoop) : 1/7/2022 2:30:26 AM (GMT-7)

profile picture
CCinPA
Veteran Member
Joined : Dec 2014
Posts : 2469
Posted 1/7/2022 3:43 AM (GMT -8)
Yes, the vaccinated can get and spread Covid. However it's the unvaccinated who are filling up hospitals. The biggest hospital here now has federal assistance (airforce medics) to help because they are so overwhelmed. The hospital said the patients are 90% unvaccinated (we have a about a 60% vaccinated rate in the county).

People who have had Covid before are getting infected again and some say this is worse than the first time.

Get vaccinated or not. But the debate about whether the vaccines save lives should be over now.
profile picture
Michelejc
Forum Moderator
Joined : Jan 2011
Posts : 2836
Posted 1/7/2022 4:32 AM (GMT -8)
POOPYDOOP: I know that my boss is vaccinated and he got Covid and has been very sick for two weeks now. Also, my friend is vaccinated and got Covid and sick for three weeks now. If they had not gotten the vaccine maybe they would of been in the hospital, I don't know.

I think everybody gets different symptoms or no symptoms at all with this virus. Vaccinated or not, you can get it. If an unvaccinated person gets Covid, are their symptoms more intense? For some yes, for some no. If a vaccinated person gets Covid, are their symptoms more intense? For some yes, for some no.

I think we will always have people that won't get the jab and people that will get the jab.
profile picture
CCinPA
Veteran Member
Joined : Dec 2014
Posts : 2469
Posted 1/7/2022 7:17 AM (GMT -8)
Michele -- a nurse friend told me that unless you are hospitalized you are considered to have a "mild" case. Apparently there is a wide range of "mild" -- from just some sniffles to being sick for weeks but not sick enough to be hospitalized. I agree with you -- some people will get the shots and others won't. I am tired of trying to convince anyone. I think the word we are getting from hospitals across the country is proof enough that the vaccines are working to keep people out of the hospitals.... Unless you believe that they are all lying to us.
profile picture
poopydoop
Veteran Member
Joined : Dec 2018
Posts : 1757
Posted 1/7/2022 7:36 AM (GMT -8)
CC - my neighbour who refuses to get vaccinated told me that the hospital numbers are misleading because many people are admitted WITH covid rather than because of it. If I'd been more clued up at the time (i had to check what she said later) I would have explained that many of those people have a downturn in their comorbidity BECAUSE of the covid infection. Here is an article explaining. I tried not to freak out when they gave UC as the example (and my point was...no evidence will convince some people because they will just make up a story to deny the truth. But there was a study done locally that showed most unvaccinated people are doubtful because they are afraid of side effects, rather than being hardcore antivax. And therefore I get frustrated when they are fed a story of falsities and contortions)
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/dec/29/how-can-we-measure-the-true-scale-of-uk-covid-hospital-admissions
profile picture
FlowersGal
Veteran Member
Joined : Feb 2017
Posts : 1597
Posted 1/7/2022 3:54 PM (GMT 0)
This is the real point for me as a UC’er — what we need to worry about is the overcrowding at hospitals and overworked drs and nurses. We know how quickly a flare can develop and worsen and that when it’s at its worst we need hospitalization. But when hospitals are full of covid patients do they have room for us or time to give the help we need? And worse —would we be close enough to then catch covid from other patients? Keeping covid contained should be even more important to us. Yes it’s proven that you can get covid if you’re vaccinated (as you can even if you’ve had a previous infection) but also in most cases the vaccine keeps you out of the hospital. And to me that’s the most important thing. Our healthcare is being overwhelmed by this covid virus which affects our UC healthcare.
profile picture
ks1905
Veteran Member
Joined : Sep 2005
Posts : 6331
Posted 1/7/2022 8:43 AM (GMT -8)

Michelejc said...
POOPYDOOP: I know that my boss is vaccinated and he got Covid and has been very sick for two weeks now. Also, my friend is vaccinated and got Covid and sick for three weeks now. If they had not gotten the vaccine maybe they would of been in the hospital, I don't know.

Statistically one or both of them probably weren't vaccinated against Omicron. The CDC recommends a booster shot to protect against Omicron and only 22% of the eligible US population has a booster. The CDC needs to update their definition of fully vaccinated for Covid to include a booster

Staying out of the hospital or worse is the desired outcome for these vaccines. They do prevent or lessen some Covid infections but that is not their primary design; herd immunity by vaccination will prevent infection and spread. Certain conspiracy theorists, pundits, and trolls like to conflate "breakthrough" infections with vaccine failures, but they are either willfully or unintentionally ignorant.
profile picture
Michelejc
Forum Moderator
Joined : Jan 2011
Posts : 2836
Posted 1/7/2022 9:00 AM (GMT -8)
Thank God this thread is a normal adult discussion about the vaccine. Thanks to everyone that is keeping this thread positive, regardless of how you feel about the vaccine.
profile picture
ks1905
Veteran Member
Joined : Sep 2005
Posts : 6331
Posted 1/7/2022 9:11 AM (GMT -8)

ks1905 said...
Antivaxxers are the worst and they are killing people and infecting others with blatant disregard for the people they infect.

IamCurious said...
That is not what the Science says, Science says vaccinated people can just as easily transmit the virus as the unvaccinated. Even the CDC had to finally admit that.

https://www.thelancet.com/journals/laninf/article/piis1473-3099(21)00648-4/fulltext
A year-long study from the Imperial College London published in The Lancet found that the Covid virus is still highly transmissible within a vaccinated population.
"Fully vaccinated individuals with breakthrough infections have peak viral load similar to unvaccinated cases and can efficiently transmit infection in household settings"


Then there is data from Israel, a country way ahead of us in the percentage people who are fully vaccinated:

https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2021/08/having-sars-cov-2-once-confers-much-greater-immunity-vaccine-no-infection-parties
The new analysis relies on the database of Maccabi Healthcare Services, which enrolls about 2.5 million Israelis. The study found in two analyses that people who were vaccinated in January and February were, in June, July, and the first half of August, six to 13 times more likely to get infected than unvaccinated people who were previously infected with the coronavirus.

In one analysis, comparing more than 32,000 people in the health system, the risk of developing symptomatic COVID-19 was 27 times higher among the vaccinated, and the risk of hospitalization eight times higher.

There are 2,000+ Americans dying each day and many more infected, scared, and suffering - our medical institutions' are buckling from unvaccinated people flooding their ERs with covid infections. We have members on this forum who are at high-risk &/ immunocompromised that are worried about going out in public because of the virus. If 80% of the population took the CDC's advice and got fully vaccinated against the Omicron variant then we wouldn't be in this current situation. But instead, we have you on here spouting your usual wrong non-sense.
profile picture
IamCurious
Veteran Member
Joined : Jan 2010
Posts : 3689
Posted 1/7/2022 10:39 AM (GMT -8)
I am very reluctant to discuss Covid vaccines on a forum with those who are immunocompromised. That is why I will never bring up the possible side effects of vaccination that poopydoop hinted about.

But I don't think it is fair for some to use inflammatory rhetoric such as saying the vaccine hesitant are “killing people and infecting others with blatant disregard for the people they infect.”

On October 2nd, the CDC acknowledged that a staggering 146.6 million people have been infected by the Sars-CoV-2 virus and have survived it. I am sure the number is much higher now. This means that many of the young and healthy already have Covid immunity at least as robust as those who have received a vaccine.

Not only that but there are now about five independent studies that strongly suggest that individuals who already have natural immunity have a higher risk of side effects from the vaccine.

I can understand why some choose to get vaccinated, but please don't say that those who are vaccine hesitant are selfish with no regard for others.

Post Edited (IamCurious) : 1/7/2022 11:43:44 AM (GMT-7)

profile picture
clo2014
Veteran Member
Joined : Feb 2015
Posts : 1773
Posted 1/7/2022 10:41 AM (GMT -8)
I believe I read yesterday? that 43 percent of the vaccinated hospitalized patients in Texas were immune compromised, and I have forgotten the other percentage of vaccinated hospitalized patients that were in with their complex medical issues plus Covid--but it was pretty high. I can't remember where I read it so you can take the numbers with a grain of salt. Still That concerns me.

I understand people's reluctance to get the vaccine. I have family members with health issues, they had horrible "go to the hospital" reactions to their vaccines... now they have been informed by their specialists not to get a second or third vaccine yet. So I understand some not getting vaccinated. At the same time we have lost 4 people in our family now to Covid, 2 others were in the hospital for months, and still haven't recovered completely. First 2 were before vaccines were available. Others were vaccinated no health issues w/Delta-they still died. Yet unvaccinated family members have gotten Covid and were fine. So confusing.

Just like this forum I have family members debating the pros and cons. It's important to debate and show others your information.... maybe it will make them understand your stance better. (And maybe they will eventually get vaccinated...or not..)

Thank you all for posting your sources and making them live. It helps me so much.

Stay safe all.

Clo
profile picture
ks1905
Veteran Member
Joined : Sep 2005
Posts : 6331
Posted 1/7/2022 11:58 AM (GMT -8)

IamCurious said...
I am very reluctant to discuss Covid vaccines on a forum with those who are immunocompromised. That is why I will never bring up the possible side effects of vaccination that poopydoop hinted about.

But I don't think it is fair for some to use inflammatory rhetoric such as saying the vaccine hesitant are “killing people and infecting others with blatant disregard for the people they infect.”

On October 2nd, the CDC acknowledged that a staggering 146.6 million people have been infected by the Sars-CoV-2 virus and have survived it. I am sure the number is much higher now. This means that many of the young and healthy already have Covid immunity at least as robust as those who have received a vaccine.

Not only that but there are now about five independent studies that strongly suggest that individuals who already have natural immunity have a higher risk of side effects from the vaccine.

I can understand why some choose to get vaccinated, but please don't say that those who are vaccine hesitant are selfish with no regard for others.

The stat released by the CDC yesterday was 58.5 million confirmed total infections in the United States. You wouldn't be trying to conflate the something, would you?

P.S. the global confirmed infection rate was a total of 300M as of yesterday.
profile picture
IamCurious
Veteran Member
Joined : Jan 2010
Posts : 3689
Posted 1/7/2022 12:52 PM (GMT -8)
from the CDC website:

https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/cases-updates/burden.html
146.6 Million
Estimated Total Infections

124.0 Million
Estimated Symptomatic Illnesses

Last Updated: October 2, 2021
profile picture
Sara14
Veteran Member
Joined : Mar 2007
Posts : 7543
Posted 1/22/2022 3:50 PM (GMT -8)
I don't remember which vaccine thread I was posting in last, but I got my booster today! I got the pfizer this time and opted for a booster instead of a third full shot because the second Moderna made me flare. Hopefully I'll have no issues this time.
profile picture
clo2014
Veteran Member
Joined : Feb 2015
Posts : 1773
Posted 1/22/2022 6:43 PM (GMT -8)
Sara,

Maybe things will be better for you with the Pfizer. You'll have to update so that others know. If it works sir you it might work with someone else.

I had my 3rd full dose in November. It was Moderna and I have tested negative for antibodies yet again. The first 2 were Pfizer. I didn't have any reaction to the first two. The Moderna... I was in a flare so unsure what was going on.

Crossing my fingers that this works for you!
Clo
profile picture
Sara14
Veteran Member
Joined : Mar 2007
Posts : 7543
Posted 1/22/2022 7:16 PM (GMT -8)
Thank you, clo! Will do. No side effects so far, not even a sore arm. Sorry again that you have not developed antibodies. That is so frustrating.
profile picture
clo2014
Veteran Member
Joined : Feb 2015
Posts : 1773
Posted 1/23/2022 6:33 AM (GMT -8)
Sara14,

I was watching TV awhile back and some person had gotten vaccinated like 5 or 6 times in one week.

I was very disappointed when they didn't indicate her antibody load. LOL.

Not developing antibodies has warped me. But I am not a quitter... I will be going in for the 4th shot.

I hope this works for you. Fingers crossed.

Clo
✚ New Topic ✚ Reply
123


More On Ulcerative Colitis

Living With An Ostomy

Living With An Ostomy

5 Beneficial Foods You Need In Your Ulcerative Colitis Diet

5 Beneficial Foods You Need In Your Ulcerative Colitis Diet


HealingWell

About Us  |   Advertise  |   Subscribe  |   Privacy & Disclaimer
Connect With Us
Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest LinkedIn
© 1997-2023 HealingWell.com LLC All Rights Reserved. Our website is for informational purposes only. HealingWell.com LLC does not provide medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.