I'd clear your calendar for the day after the shot if you can but really there's no way to tell what kind of reaction you'll have, if any. My entire family all had Pfizer and I'm the only one who was knocked down by the second dose (like, I felt REALLY bad - shaking chills, all-over body aches, swollen lymph nodes...). My MIL had Moderna and had a mild fever and fatigue the day after the second dose, but that's it.
I will say that despite feeling like I was hit by a bus, I have never been so happy to feel so sick I have a sedentary computer job, so I powered through the next day (I'm sure it wasn't my best work but I also didn't want to take the day off given past lack of compassion for taking sick days...). So you could power through if you had a desk job maybe. I felt totally back to normal after 36 hours but did have some lingering fatigue all week, which I can't attribute to the vaccine because my allergies were also really bad with the joys of mountain cedar.
I have never been so happy to feel so sick!!! LOL!!! I am sure my kids thought I was crazy...
Did you have any reaction with the first shot? I got Pfizer Thursday night (the pharmacy had a left over that was going to be thrown away!) and my arm hurt when I woke up. My noon yesterday I was starting to feel sick. No fever, just that chilly, lethargic dull headache I’m gonna get sick feeling. Nothing I couldn’t power through, and it passed after a few hours but still made me wonder what I’m in for with my second shot.
DH and I had Moderna. With my first shot I just had a sore arm, similar to how it felt with the tetanus booster. With the second, my arm wasn’t as sore. The next day I felt a little “off” like the day before you get a bad cold but had no issues working. By that night I was fine except a little more tired than usual for a couple days but just went to bed a little earlier than usual.
DH was similar for the first shot. The second he had a mild headache the next day but that was it. He saw a full load of patients that day without issue.
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A new study came out yesterday on long COVID. It's an adult study (not kids) but I would think the findings would roughly translate to kids as well, though with kids in general being at much lower risk of severe disease/long COVID.
This study found that women, older age, and asthma were significantly associated with long COVID. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41591-021-01292-y
This doesn't make me feel any better since in my mind this keeps my kids in a "higher risk" group since they have asthma, although overall they are "lower risk" simply by being kids. Ugh, the pediatric vaccines cannot come soon enough.
Thank you for posting this. What I found interesting is that statistics showed that individuals with 5 symptoms (fatigue, headache, dyspnea, hoarse voice and myalgia) in the first week of infection indicated a greater likelihood of covid symptoms lasting greater than 28 days. This is both men and women.
Im very impatiently waiting for studies of stats on children. Our boys scout troop made the sloppy decision of having winter survival camp meeting this past weekend. They all slept inside together in bunkbeds. One of them had covid so now everyone is scrambling to get tested. I insisted that DH attend with Ds and that they not stay overnight and spend most of their time outside. When inside they were the only ones wearing masks. Now I’m being hailed as the “smart parent” of the group. But when they take these risks and my family doesn’t and everyone comes out healthy we are frowned on as “the difficult family.”
Why can’t all adults just grow up?
" I object to violence because when it appears to do good, the good is only temporary; the evil it does is permanent." Mahatma Gandhi
"This is the ultimate weakness of violence: It multiplies evil and violence in the universe. It doesn't solve any problems." Martin Luther King, Jr.
Mom to two amazing DDs ('07 & '09) and a fur baby.
Gluten free since Nov '11 after non-celiac gluten sensitive diagnosis. Have had great improvement or total elimination of: migraines, bloating/distention, heartburn, cystic acne, canker sores, bleeding gums, eczema on elbows, dry skin and scalp, muscle cramps, PMS, hair loss, heart palpitations, fatigue. I'm amazed.
Per DD's cardiologist this past September, children with congenital heart defect/disease at CHOP have not been impacted more by COVID-19, even the ones who require hospitalization whenever they are ill.
I didn't read the Cleveland Clinic link upthread, but did poke around CHOP's site to find information that might help OP:
From March 2021 - CHOP Experts Discuss COVID-19 Hot Topics: https://www.chop.edu/news/leaders-ac...-19-hot-topics
From March 2021 - Podcast Episode Discussing Cardiac Complications of COVID-19 in Children: https://www.chop.edu/health-resource...ildren-podcast
From November 2020 - COVID-19 in Children is "Typically" Mild: https://www.chop.edu/news/study-invo...-mild-children
From August 2020 - CHOP Podcast Series on COVID-19 Topics: https://www.chop.edu/news/children-s...podcast-series
From July 2020 - MIS-C Differs from Long-COVID in Children: https://www.chop.edu/news/chop-resea...id-19-children
From June 2020 - Susceptibility of Children to COVID-19: https://www.chop.edu/news/journals-s...ldren-covid-19
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Liz
DD (3/2010)
"Make mistakes! Get messy!" - Miss Frizzle
DH was able to get the J&J vaccine yesterday morning as NYC is giving that one overnight. As of today, his only reaction is a sore arm. He willingly chose the J&J because appointments for the others are booking into May now at the state run sites nearby and getting an appointment through the county is like winning the lotto.