The flu shot?

I get them because I travel alot for business and so am cooped up on airplanes with many questionable germs! :) Airplanes are not the cleanest environment! I can't tell you how many times I've been stuck sitting for 5 hours by someone really sick!

I didn't get one last year because of the shortage but have been getting them since 1992. I have never had a reaction and never got the flu from them.

If I wasn't traveling, I probably wouldn't get one. It's just a safeguard for me.

Jo
 
I have never had a flu shot either. I get the occasional flu (once every few years) but it comes and goes quickly for me.

The way I understand it the flu virus mutates easily and quickly. If it didn't mutate we would have lifelong immunity once we had been infected, like the chicken pox. So the flu shot scientists are making some sort of educated guess on what the most common flu mutation will be for the year, and produce a vaccine based on that. That is why you can still get the flu even if you've had the shot. You can react to the shot and experience flu symptoms because the body is fighting the fake infection to build immunities, since that's the whole point of the vaccine. Anyway I think this sort of thing is amazing. Virus's are really strange things.
 
Sometimes I get one, sometimes I don't. I am going to try to get one every year from here on on. What materials girls said about the traditional flu vaccine is true...it is comprised of an inactivated virus and you can't catch it from the vaccine, its a dead virus. You could feel achy and sore from the shot and usually for only 24 hours after...(this is due to your cytokine response that occurs immediately after getting the vaccine) but that's it. You won't get the sore throat, cough, lower respiratory symptoms and high fever associated with an actual infection and the actual infection leaves you ill for at least several days and sometimes a week or slightly more. If you get the vaccine just after or just before you are exposed to the flu, your immunity wouldn't have built up yet and you would have caught it making it appear that you caught it from the vaccine. If you get the shot early in the season, your immunity could wane as a previous poster said and you could catch it later in the season if it is still around but it will likely be a mild infection as you won't lose all of your immunity. Also, past flu vaccines in previous years did not correctly predict all of the seasonal flu strains for that year and so vaccinees weren't protected against some of the flu when it made its appearance. There is a new vaccine that is nasally administered and this is live virus but is cold-adapted meaning that it could only replicate in tissues of your body that are loweer than 37 c such as your nose. There is probably a small chance that this virus could infect some individuals or that a mutant that reverts back to its normal temperature profile could arise. This data is probably available in published clinical trial results.
 
I get one. I have asthma and work in a hospital lab, which puts me in a high risk category. I never have had a bad reaction to the shot besides some arm soreness, but my supervisor always gets a mild flu-like illness after she gets the shot.
 
I don't get one. I've never had the flu and I'm not in the high risk category. I feel confident, if I get the flu, my body will be strong enough to fight it off.
 
Got mine just yesterday. I work at the local Health Department, so I get exposed to lots of things from all of the clients!

I was a little tired last night, but that is normal for me. Feel fine today. I did Imax this morning with no side effects, except my arm occasionally ached during a movement to remind me that I had a shot.

My husband and son don't get the shot.

Tina
 
I have never had a flu shot and I don't feel that I need it. I am very rarely sick. In fact, the last time I was truly sick was ~6 years ago. It is strange to me, that I can work 9 hours a day around people sniffling and hacking and never get ill. I consider myself extremely lucky in this respect. I do believe I must have an immune system made of steel.
 
I'm with the no flu shot gang.

I prefer to leave supplies to those who really need it: pregnant ladies, small babies, the elderly, hospital and medical staff.

Eat well, keep exercising, rest, and practice good hygiene and you run little risk.

Clare
 
Just wanted to say that I am in nursing school now and we had this big debate on whether getting a flu shot afforded you any additional protection and virtually ALL the nursing instructors insisted that it DID, very much so, and that we all should get one if given the opportunity.

I never used to get them, and never got the flu, but I will likely get them from here on out. (and now I have to if I am going to go into nursing, LOL)
 
My daughter and I get flu shots every year. I have not had side effects from the shot, but I will wear a sleeveless shirt to avoid the sore arm!

I get the flu at least once each year. With the shot, it only lasts 2 or 3 days, but without it, I will be down for at least a week. It's worth it to me.

For those who don't get the shot, or who get the flu anyway, call the doctor as soon as it starts. Tamiflu knocks it out quick, but you have to catch it within 48 hours.

Also, try Zicam. I use the swabs daily when my daughter has a cold, and that usually prevents me from catching it. I'm in the middle of a cold right now, and I forgot to use Zicam right away. However, since I've been taking it, my symptoms are better.

I wash my hands constantly, but I still always get sick. I'm grateful for modern medicine.
 
From the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) website:

Key Facts about Influenza and the Influenza Vaccine
September 28 , 2005

Every year in the United States, on average:
- 5% to 20% of the population gets the flu
- more than 200,000 people are hospitalized from flu complications
- about 36,000 people die from flu

Some people, such as older people, young children, and people with certain health conditions, are at high risk for serious flu complications.

Who Should Get Vaccinated?
In general, anyone who wants to reduce their chances of getting the flu can get vaccinated. However, certain people should get vaccinated each year. They are either people who are at high risk of having serious flu complications or people who live with or care for those at high risk for serious complications. People who should get vaccinated each year are:

1.) People at high risk for complications from the flu:
- People 65 years and older;
- People who live in nursing homes and other long-term care facilities that house those with long-term illnesses;
- Adults and children 6 months and older with chronic heart or lung conditions, including asthma;
- Adults and children 6 months and older who needed regular medical care or were in a hospital during the previous year because of a metabolic disease (like diabetes), chronic kidney disease, or weakened immune system (including immune system problems caused by medicines or by infection with human immunodeficiency virus [HIV/AIDS]);
- Children 6 months to 18 years of age who are on long-term aspirin therapy. (Children given aspirin while they have influenza are at risk of Reye syndrome.);
- Women who will be pregnant during the influenza season;
- All children 6 to 23 months of age;
- People with any condition that can compromise respiratory function or the handling of respiratory secretions (that is, a condition that makes it hard to breathe or swallow, such as brain injury or disease, spinal cord injuries, seizure disorders, or other nerve or muscle disorders).

2.) People 50 to 64 years of age. Because nearly one-third of people 50 to 64 years of age in the United States have one or more medical conditions that place them at increased risk for serious flu complications, vaccination is recommended for all persons aged 50 to 64.

3.) People who can transmit flu to others at high risk for complications. Any person in close contact with someone in a high-risk group (see above) should get vaccinated. This includes all health-care workers, household contacts and out-of-home caregivers of children 6 to 23 months of age, and close contacts of people 65 years and older.
 
I'm a teacher, and usually our district provides the flu shot at a clinic for a very reduced price. The past few years they haven't, and then had the nerve to complain about all the sub hours that are being logged in the winter months. All that to say...that years the flu shot hasn't been convenient or readily available, we have many more sick teachers. I know I feel a little less paranoid during flu season when I've had the flu shot. x( x(
 
I got a flu shot last October. I was fine for a week, then got sick for 1 week after that. I was so sick I actually wanted to just lay down and die.:-( My PCP said that the flu shot affects some people like that sometimes. I didn't know, as I have never had the shot before.
 
If you were fine for a week and then got sick for a week, it is not due to the flu vaccine...it is likely due to the fact that you picked up another infection somewhere. Except for the sore arm, reactions to the vaccine arise in less than 24 hr and persist for no more than 24 to 36 hr after receiving the vaccine. Reactions are either allergic or due to the inate immune response and involve cytokine production which can make you feel tired and achy. The most serious reaction is a type of allergic reaction called anaphylactic reaction and shock which occurs mostly in those with egg allergies ( the flu is prepared from inoculated eggs). If your doctor is telling you stuff like this, its time to find a new doctor.
 
Last year, I took my son to get his flu shot and I came down with the flu that exact same day.

If I had gotten the flu shot that day also, I'm sure that many people would have assumed that I got it from the flu shot.

Two of my kids got the flu mist last year and one came down with mild flu symtoms several days later.

Erica
 
Others may assume this but the assumption is incorrect . You absolutely cannot catch the flu from the injected vaccine; Its comprised of completely inactivated virus. Also, the incubation period for the flu is 24-48 hours and that means you were exposed 1-2 days beforevyou got sick. If you were exposed, its likely your kids were exposed too, at least to you. Flu mist is different, this has live virus but its cold adapted and doesnt grow outside of the nasal cavity. This vaccine has a very small chance of making you slightly ill.
 

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