Posted on 02/03/2021 4:48:11 PM PST by ransomnote
MODERNA’S vaccine is causing a rash on some people’s arms after injection.
The side effect, dubbed “Covid arm”, appears around a week after receiving a dose and affects very few patients, doctors say.
But they stressed that people with the harmless reaction should still get their second dose of the jab for optimal protection against Covid - around 95 per cent for the Moderna jab.
The Moderna vaccine is being dolled out in the US after authorisation in December, but is not expected in the UK until March.
It uses the same mRNA technology as the Pfizer vaccine, which has been given to millions of Britons.
SNIP
Amelia Brown, who lives in Visalia, California, got her first Moderna vaccine dose on January 11.
Shortly after her jab, Amelia began to feel dizzy and had a minor allergic reaction, she told FoxTV.
Then, a week after her first dose, Amelia said her arm was “just red and angry and had hives”.
The next morning, Amelia says she woke up with a lump.
“It had just grown overnight from like, a dollar size to like, a baseball size," Amelia said.
"And it was very swollen, hot to the touch, sore, even if I wore my coat that day, the pressure of the coat was painful."
SNIP
I feel very sad for you if you call what you wake up with, a “lump”.
:)
I feel very sad for you if you call what you wake up with, a “lump”.
:)
I got the Moderna vaccine 1st does yesterday.
Didn’t seem any worse than a flu shot really.
Yes you really have gaslighted and strawmanned the other side very well. Good for you.
The CDC tells of these side effects from the flu vaccination:
“Common side effects from a flu shot include soreness, redness, and/or swelling where the shot was given, headache (low grade), fever, nausea, muscle aches, and fatigue. The flu shot, like other injections, can occasionally cause fainting.”
After my wife got her COVID-19 vaccination, she was told to sit in a chair for 15 minutes, just in case she had a reaction from it. I think this is the protocol for all of these vaccinations. You could get a reaction from a bee sting.
I had a flu vaccination today and my deltoid feels like nothing happened.
They already say that in the article (a sign that the vaccine was working).
“And the first went, and poured out his vial upon the earth; and there fell a noisome and grievous sore upon the men which had the mark of the beast, and upon them which worshipped his image.”
Revelation 16:2
So the breakouts of covid are happening in nursing homes after the vaccinations and not before. Many deaths where there were not before. One worker also states that the the residents that have not been sick have become like zombies after being vaccinated. The spark of life is gone from them.
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Do you have any links to any of that info? Just trying to be as informed as possible concerning these vaccines.
Look up auburn nursing home in New York.
Did you ask for the vial or used syringe so you could confirm what you were given?
You paid for it.
Weird question but I submit the answer to any such request would be stranger.
what happens if you didnt check the plunger and it hits a blood vessel and in goes the Moderna MRNA into the bloodstream...or for that matter any vaccine?
Got it.
Praying for good, long term results!!
Yes. Multiple colleagues of mine have had numbness, shooting pain, burning sensations, and weakness in their faces, arms, legs, sometimes entire side of the body.
Did you see where they’re dropping the threshold for getting the vaccine to age 65 next week?
A bruise and swelling.
The injection is intramuscular. Pulling back on the plunger may pull some blood out.....that’s normal. You just don’t want it in a vein or (although deeper) artery.
Really not a big deal. I’ve pushed emergency drugs without the plunger withdrawal.
An Epi Pen is self injecting and I.M. administered w/o a plunger withdrawal.
what about when they do it the wrong way...like it is suppose to subcutaneous and not IM or vice a versa.
When looking up the MMR shot I saw some comments from people that they had been giving it the wrong way. It is suppose to be subcutaneous.
Most nurses have probably given thousands of IM injections and never pulled back blood. I am aware of it happening to a nurse one time as I said and so I know it can happen and so I always make it a habit to check. The chance is minimal though in the deltoid muscle. I'm being overly cautious I think.
It's interesting that you brought it up because I wanted to research this some more.
Yeah......diabetics inject insulin Sub-Q...........
There are veins and arteries throughout your body.......those can be broken down to venues (very small veins).
When you put a needle into your body, its hitting some vein (or artery) even on a very small cellular level.
One of the main reason for I.M. vs Sub Q is how it’s absorbed, or desired absorption. I should include I.V. or even Endotracheal tube but that’s not relevant here.
So what I saying is you body is getting a blood supply all over......every inch of skin and tissue.......in order to get a blood supply one needs arteries and veins. As far as a vaccine, hitting veins during inject will result in swelling and a bruise.
To bad the COVID vaccine isn’t in an inhaled form. Perhaps it because of the content, mRNA........
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