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Panic? Don't panic?Monday, November 9. 2009Trackbacks
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My Friend,
I've had H1N1 - it was a terrible experience. What makes H1N1 different from other influenza virii is the way it attacks your lungs. I live in Ottawa, Canada and the virus is currently ripping it's way through our community. Hospitals are overloaded with people needing respirators. In Ontario - 30 perfectly healthy people have died from this virus. While this is not the end of civilization - it is cause for concern. Before I contracted this my opinion was similar to yours. But after actually getting the H1N1 virus - my opinion has changed. This is a nasty bug that goes right to your lungs. The adjuvant used in the vaccine is a fairly well understood organic compound and has been used in various parts of Europe for the last 10 years. My advice - get vaccinated before the virus mutates into something more severe. Stay safe. Chris
Think about it this way: once you're vaccinated, you help stopping further distribution, because your immune system kills all viri that come your way. So getting vaccinated is something like a community saving responsibility. That's how mankind tries to get rid of many illnesses before...
You're not always stopping further distribution when you get vaccinated. One of the concerns with H1N1 is that it can mutate and cross the species boundary with ease, unlike H3N2.
H1N1 was recently found to be transmissible from human to feline, and they're seeing if it can transmit back to human from feline. That could be another part of it. I agree -- panic is probably not necessary, but reminding people to wash their hands and stay home if they're sick is a huge benefit, and if it requires a media panic to do that, then so be it.
If you get the seasonal shot, then the same reasoning applies to the H1N1 shot. And while having H1N1 might temporarily reduce your chances of catching the seasonal flu, research shows that you can get both simultaneously with the resulting infection being worse than each separately. Furthermore, having H1N1 does not give you any immunity to the seasonal flu and vice versa. People die from both, so allowing one free reign will only increase the number of deaths. When enough people refrain from getting the shot, then herd immunity will not kick in and the number of deaths will skyrocket. Why would you want to contribute to that?
Agreed, Brian,
that's why I had the seasonal shot four weeks ago, and the H1N1 last week... I did have sideeffects of H1N1 shot (shudderfrost, or how do you call that in english?) the first night, but no fever. Still, I also have a normal cold (nose running) right now, but besides that (OK, and some hurtings at the injection location, but only light, and only two days) no problems so far... Matthias |
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