Did you walk to work or bring your lunch? [non sequitur]I still don't see the point in getting a flu jab if I have never had flu. {snip}
Did you walk to work or bring your lunch? [non sequitur]I still don't see the point in getting a flu jab if I have never had flu. {snip}
I have a very active life. I do a lot of exercise and a good diet and yet I've had flu 2 times in the past three years. BAD ones. You know, the type where you puke your stomach out? Yea. Not fun.
So this year I had my flu shot. And as you can see, I'm just fine! I had a sore arm for 2 hours or so and that's it. Maybe a little weird feeling a few hours afterwards too but by the morning I was perfectly new.
Flu shots are the way to go!
While anorexia is a typical flu symptom and kids throw up regardless of the kind of infections they have, there is a common misconception that "stomach flu" is influenza. Influenza is a serious respiratory infection, not a GI infection.My son has a fever and is throwing up todayI didn't have the money to get the kids any flu shots this year.
Nobody else is sick yet. I'll find out how well this flu shot works soon though, I'm sure. I need to be in good shape for a new job, argh. Silly germy kids, lol.
I was feeling well enough for a work-out yesterday myself (finally beating this sinus infection).
Tell your doctor the infectious disease nurse practitioner on your skeptic community forum said he was contributing to the common influenza misconceptions using the term "stomach flu". The most common actual diagnosis, and a better means of educating patients would be to call it a "probable norovirus". Miserable but short lived.Bah humbug. The doc did say my kid was getting the stomach flu. Now I've been exposed. Argh. I can only hope I've gotten it before and won't get sick at my new job.
*worries*
I have to say that in this neck of the woods they don't offer the flu vaccine to young heathy types unless there is some other reason. Like working in a hospital or caring for an elderly person. However, that was still a non sequitur. Like, I don't bother to fasten my seat belt because I've never been in an accident.
Rolfe.
I thought it was because there are insufficient doses manufactured for everyone to get the vaccine annually.That would be because it's a waste of resources for seasonal flu.
I thought it was because there are insufficient doses manufactured for everyone to get the vaccine annually.
Are there even enough chickens in battery farms to lay sufficient eggs to grow the virus on? Bird flu wiping out the chicken population would be a set back too.It's sort of a self-fulfilling prophesy, circular type thing, I think.
The manufacturers don't make more because there's not more demand.
If the NHS were to aggressively pursue a universal vaccination policy, the supply would fall into place.
Here in the US we've been having an excess for the past couple of years. Our government has awarded multiple million (or billion? I forget...) dollar contracts to manufacturers to make more, but the demand hasn't quite caught up with the new supply yet.
Are there even enough chickens in battery farms to lay sufficient eggs to grow the virus on? Bird flu wiping out the chicken population would be a set back too.
Are there even enough chickens in battery farms to lay sufficient eggs to grow the virus on? Bird flu wiping out the chicken population would be a set back too.
Many times what people attibute to "stomach flu" is actually a case of food poisoning.
?Gotta wonder what sort of "informed consent" we have going on, when someone can get a flu shot and not even know what the shot actually prevents! A bit of a communication problem, perhaps?