arkessian: (headbanging)
[personal profile] arkessian
I had a Pfizer booster on Tuesday, and wiped out the week.

My previous two (AstraZeneca) jabs were at my GP's surgery, which was brilliantly well organised (even if at one point the queue was halfway down the street, it moved very quickly, and -- as everyone in the queue was 'extremely clinically vulnerable' -- everyone was distancing and sanitising and wearing masks). It was also a benefit to be dealt with by a doctor that knew my medical history -- we had a good discussion about the balance of risks and benefits, and came down on the side of All of the Jabs!  I didn't have any reaction afterwards -- it was a non-event.

This time, I was only offered a slot at a (fairly) local Hall, organised by the NHS using local pharmacy staff and a doctor from the local hospital to oversee it, and volunteers from local organisations to manage the queue. Again, the queue was manageable, and when I asked, I was provided with a light weight chair that I could scuttle along on while I was waiting (quite a lot has happened between the original jabs and the booster, not least my SCA). Everybody was masked and distancing again, and they weren't mixing up people going for their first/second jabs with those going for boosters, which was a relief.  For the first two jabs I was steered away from Pfizer, given my history of anaphylaxis, but this time they have much more data to go on, and in discussion with the supervising doctor, I agreed to the Pfizer jab.

Woke up the next morning feeling as if I had been worked over with a 2 by 4 by a particularly aggrieved thug. Sore arm, chills, fevers, pain in every joint.  Paracetamol has helped, but it has taken until today to feel mostly human.

Until I look at the backlog of things I've not done, and then I just feel defeated.

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