Recent comments in /f/science

kingmea t1_jcmpo4b wrote

Agreed. And when you do have to leave you stress yourself out trying to find folks to keep your ball rolling. Or complete time sensitive tasks in a shorter timespan.

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rjkardo t1_jcmm70h wrote

This many years in and people like you STILL don't understand how vaccines work.

Vaccines are not a shield. They are not a force field preventing anything from getting through. Vaccines teach your immune system how to fight an infection that is present.

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Foodums11 t1_jcmkp1j wrote

It's the modern era and we both saw the link. It's not my job to educate you and frankly I have no interest in doing so.

Why should I go back through the links and posts when you're too lazy? What makes you so special that knowledge must be spoonfed to you like a baby bird? This is pathetic. Read.

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Dramatic_Rich_9413 t1_jcmimtz wrote

If you're a doctor then you should be smart enough to know that a lot of these cases of myocarditis are asymptomatic in children. To make it simple for you, they aren't going to the doctors because they don't feel different. You wouldnt really be able to tell unless you did a study and recorded heart health data.

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nillerwafer t1_jcmi0j4 wrote

When my workload is overwhelming, I do what I can and I return to my boss with the work orders that haven’t been completed and say “I’ll add one or two of these in tomorrow and the next day to see if we can get caught up, but this is too much for today.”

I’m not going to pull the impossible and set crazy expectations for the future.

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weird_elf t1_jcmbfv1 wrote

They don't forget, they're not trained to. With most "classical" vaccines it makes no difference. It's pretty well recorded. (There's been a podcast of one German expert on the topic, it's on youtube but it's in German obviously. He goes into detail on how myocarditis cases were seen more in patients that got the jab in a vax center, where mostly young recently-trained people worked, as opposed to resident GPs which tended to work the "old-school" way, with aspiration.)

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weird_elf t1_jcmb57e wrote

It's not routine for most vaccinations any more (at least not in my part of Europe). It takes longer, is potentially uncomfortable for the patient, and doesn't make the "classical" vaccinations any safer. (e.g. MMR or polio boosters don't mess you up if they get into the blood stream.)

Once people figured out it was different for this one (thanks, spike protein) and the vascular complications seen in some covid infections could also happen post-vax if the spike got loose in the blood vessels, aspiration was recommended. This was some time last year, I believe.

I got the second booster just before christmas last year, at a vax center, and had to explicitly request aspiration. It's still not routine everywhere.

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