NOT EVERYONE gets a fever for a few days after a vaccination. It depends what vaccination - the strongest reaction I remember was a smallpox vaccination I received around 1970 for my first trips from Europe to Asia - many years ago, now obsolete.fschmidt wrote: ↑December 11th, 2020, 2:17 pmI hate to agree with CE on anything, but I got a flu vaccine (before visiting a nursing home) and I felt nothing. I generally trust old vaccines that have a historical record of not causing problems.Winston wrote: ↑December 11th, 2020, 11:32 amBtw, why did you lie before when you said that each time you get vaccines you feel nothing? I asked around and everyone usually gets a fever for a few days when they get a vaccine. That's normal and to be expected. Why do you lie and pretend to feel nothing?
About side-effects, pregnant women and people with strong allergies or otherwise medical serious issues have to report that to their medical doctor before lining up for flu-and any other vaccination. In Japan there is an obligatory form with questions and every person applying for any vaccination has to reply to those questions in written form and to sign with full name and date.
My experience so far:
Pneumonia vaccination - nothing to feel at all.
Flu vaccination, the vaccine is updated every year, in my case always some little pain in the left upper arm for a few days. That's all. No fever. Nobody in my family had any fever after flu vaccination... never.