Got my Covid jab last Thursday and I'm under 60. SWMBO is vunerable so as her carer I got one the same time as her. Well why wouldn't you when I'm sat in a chair right next to her. Hers was actually quite late as medical advice was she waited for the AstraZeneca.
Blood on equipment normally preceeded by the thought, if this slips....
Be prepared for a slightly sore shoulder and neck for a while now then. I had a flue jab about 4 weeks ago and the Covid jab last week, in the same arm and it is aching now.
I suspect it depends on which vaccine.
My mother had no side effects with the Oxford AstraZenica, I know of someone with muscular aches 2 days after the Pfizer. In addition it is not necessary to wait 15 mins after the AstraZenica vaccine to ensure no adverse reaction.
Thats strange because I had the AstraZenica jab, and I was asked if I walked or drove to the vaccination centre and I replied, drove, I was told to go and sit in the car for 15 minutes before attempting to drive. My Mother in Law had her jab at the same centre 3 weeks ago, also had the same vaccine but had to sit in another room for 15 minutes before they would let her go, she didn't drive, Brother in Law drove her. Seems to be conflicting advice being given out.
My mother wasn't driving, and maybe advice has changed with experience. She had it a couple of weeks ago.
I suspect that there is a lot of confusion among the clinicians as to what the procedures
are and
why they are what they are and to which vaccines they apply. My experience is that, in general, medics and nurses have a very poor grasp of the underlying biology and biochemistry of what they're doing. Add to that, this is immunology we're talking about here. At university the biochemists, who could happily tell you exactly what a drug does, how it does it and why it works, tended to fail two courses, immunology and statistics. The medics don't have a hope in hell.
The 15 minute wait period is intended to allow any serious allergic reaction (i.e. anaphylaxis) time to present itself. Anaphylaxis is life threatening and must be treated
immediately, it can kill in single digit minutes. It makes sense to ensure that people stay in a medical setting that is prepared to treat anaphylaxis rather than letting them get 10 minutes down the road and then have to wait for medical aid to arrive, by which time the patient could be dead. Anaphylaxis is a particular concern for the
Pfizer-BioNTech and
Moderna COVID-19 vaccines; these are mRNA vaccines. It is not a particular concern for the
Oxford-AstraZeneca which is a more conventional vaccine in that a harmless virus is injected. The Oxford-AstraZeneca carries risks of anaphylaxis,
as does any vaccine, but only to the comparatively minor level that
any vaccine does.
There's an
excellent explainer, not dumbed down at all,
here ("How the Oxford-AstraZeneca Vaccine Works") from the New York Times on how the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine works. They also have similar explainers for
"How the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine works" and
"How Moderna's vaccine works". (Use "private browsing" mode to evade the NYT paywall.) Read those three and you'll know more than the doctors treating you. If you
really want to run circles around the doctors find and read the datasheets for the vaccines, I can guarantee that less than 1% of
them will have.