No. Had a bad reaction to one several years ago and never did it again.
ALL vaccines are immune suppressing, meaning they affect immune function for a period of time and can make some people more susceptible to coming down with a viral or bacterial infection.. The chemicals, adjuvants, lab altered viruses and bacteria and foreign DNA/RNA from animal and human cell substrates in the vaccines may compromise immune system function and depress immunity -- that is the trade-off you are risking.Flu Vaccine: The Horrible "Immune System Mistake" Millions Will Make This Year
Same here. The LAST one I was given years ago resulted in four days of mattress soaking misery and agony.
Even though my wife has RA and is immuno-compromised, health providers still ask and encourage her to get one.
Her co-worker's husband got one, coincidentally developed Guillian Barre Syndrome, and later died (turns out he also had mono. She's filed a lawsuit).
And now the push to take the "$hingles $hot". I'll take my chances and not get that, even after witnessing my dad go through suffering shingles.
That, to my mind, is the chief reason for taking immunizations very carefully and with a clear eye to cost/benefit. Your body might be trying to deal with cancer at the time you take a vaccination.
Immune-suppressing? Seriously?
Vaccines are one of the most natural medical interventions that exist. Far from suppressing your immune system, they "teach" the immune system to recognize deadly pathogens and destroy them before they have a chance to cause disease.
Thanks to vaccines, most children actually survive to adulthood. And the average lifespan has doubled from what it was in the pre-vaccine days.