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After effect of the Moderna vax
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I had a persistent cough after the Moderna jabs. Somebody suggested Flonase (or something with Fluticasone Propionate(Glucocorticoid)). I took it and it went away in a few days. I've no idea if my cough symptoms or cause are the same as others.Comment
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I think you took allergy med. So moderna might of given you a new seasonal allergy, dunno.
But my 70yo coworker has been coughing on a daily basis after moderna vaccine and blames on his smoking.
Im the only person in my workplace without vaccine shot. I think I had covid or 2 since march 2020, never been tested though. I just assume I had it.
Sent from my SM-N960U using TapatalkLast edited by CheapBloke; 10-29-2021, 1:19 AM.Comment
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No you missed the "definition change".
What do you call the people that abandoned the agenda of John Kennedy and adopted the agenda of Lee Oswald?
Pronouns: "Dude" and "Playa".
https://billstclair.com/Unintended-Consequences.pdf
I was born under a wandrin star.Comment
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Count me as one of the millions who got Moderna and have no lingering cough.Neither myself nor any of the 15+ I know with double Moderna experienced a chronic cough.
I also can't find evidence this is widespread. Some healthcare professionals suggest this is a possible sign of post-vaccination infection, so you might consider getting tested.
Maybe their wife is gagging because they forgot to wash their pits
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Neither myself nor any of the 15+ I know with double Moderna experienced a chronic cough.
I also can't find evidence this is widespread. Some healthcare professionals suggest this is a possible sign of post-vaccination infection, so you might consider getting tested.
These studies don't always tell the full picture, or the most current one. I was on a pre-approval anti-nausea drug during my chemo treatment regime. It had the very strange side effect of giving me the hiccups a few minutes after taking it. The oncology pharmacist who worked closely with me said that in his sources, that while this was not an officially listed side effect, but there was quite a bit of evidence of others experiencing the same thing, and it would probably be added as a side effect.
A good physician doesn't dismiss what his patients are telling him about their symptoms. That the OP's doctor told him about this side effect should not be so quickly dismissed because you read one study or polled 15 of your friends. Nor should all the other posters sharing their experiences be dismissed. We are not at the stage where everything regarding the vaccines has been documented and in fact, see evidence that they don't want to.
A pharmacist I know uses 3-5 different industry references to research interactions and side effects for critical care patients, because sometimes even the leading publications don't have all the information, and these are references are only available to pharmacists (thousands of $$$ to subscribe.)
We're not going to know the full picture of what the vaxx does for years, and that's assuming everyone is honest. So at this point, going off the experiences of friends and neighbors is a valid data point, and should be something that is investigated further, not dismissed because of studies that haven't investigated this.Comment
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These studies don't always tell the full picture, or the most current one. I was on a pre-approval anti-nausea drug during my chemo treatment regime. It had the very strange side effect of giving me the hiccups a few minutes after taking it. The oncology pharmacist who worked closely with me said that in his sources, that while this was not an officially listed side effect, but there was quite a bit of evidence of others experiencing the same thing, and it would probably be added as a side effect.
A good physician doesn't dismiss what his patients are telling him about their symptoms. That the OP's doctor told him about this side effect should not be so quickly dismissed because you read one study or polled 15 of your friends. Nor should all the other posters sharing their experiences be dismissed. We are not at the stage where everything regarding the vaccines has been documented and in fact, see evidence that they don't want to.
A pharmacist I know uses 3-5 different industry references to research interactions and side effects for critical care patients, because sometimes even the leading publications don't have all the information, and these are references are only available to pharmacists (thousands of $$$ to subscribe.)
We're not going to know the full picture of what the vaxx does for years, and that's assuming everyone is honest. So at this point, going off the experiences of friends and neighbors is a valid data point, and should be something that is investigated further, not dismissed because of studies that haven't investigated this.sigpic
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