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When/if a Covid vaccine is made available, will you get vaccinated?
11 Answers
- capitalgentlemanLv 75 months ago
Yes. I am 61, diabetic, with heart issues. The vaccine is WAY better than trying to fight Covid-19!
- ?Lv 65 months ago
I won't get it until April, by then I will be able to see if there is any side effects.
- Weasel McWeaselLv 75 months ago
I was more than willing to do it...........but now they are saying people with allergies, and especially those that carry an Epi-Pen need to beware.
I carry an Epi-Pen------so, clearly now it's a problem.
- old timerLv 75 months ago
If i was in America i'd wait, i don't trust any Government official over there, in Australia where i am than yes i would.
- Anonymous5 months ago
Unless I am required to by my jobs, then no. I will not. With this being such a new vaccine, I am not willingly going to let the government experiment with my body. I work hard to maintain it, and I’ll be pretty pissed if someone came along and ruined it.
- 5 months ago
Nope. I will wait and see with you all being guinea pigs for an untested vaccine that was rushed.
- Walter BLv 75 months ago
-- Yes, I will gladly have the Covid-19 vaccine, whichever one is given to me by the hospital during my Dialysis treatment.
-- The Australian government has put in early orders for the vaccines (two of the potential four options), and they will be rolled out whenever the Australian government's Drug authority approves the vaccine(s). Healthcare workers and elderly and infirmed will be the first to receive it, then the general population.
- Anonymous5 months ago
No if. When. The vaccine that Great Britain came up with just got approved today by the FDA and the first doses will be made available next week. When it becomes available to me, yes, I will get vaccinated. Not only is there a 2.2% chance of dying from COVID-19 if you get it, which is a higher mortality rate than the flu or measles, which I've gotten vaccinated for, but also surviving COVID-19 means lifelong permanent scar tissue on your lungs that permanently reduces your lung capacity, which means developing adult asthma and emphysema, if not now because you're young, later on in life as your lung capacity naturally declines. On top of that, having COVID-19 is generally an extremely miserable experience with a 40% hospitalization rate. I don't know about you, but I don't want to pay my insurance copays for being hospitalized. I'd much rather get the vaccine, which is being given out for free.
- MogLv 75 months ago
Probably. Unless something comes up that shows it to have bad side effects. But that probably won’t happen. It looks like I won’t have a chance to get one for quite a while since I live in a rural area.