
Originally Posted by
TFarnon
Based on the demographics of the patients I "see" who have severe COVID symptoms, and the extreme transmissibility of the delta strain, I say get the shot. There is no other risk calculus. Seriously. You don't know who is carrying this plague, and who will inadvertently infect you. By "seeing" these patients, I mean scanning down the ER board to see what kind of a testing load I might have over the next hour, and what kind of results and tests to watch for. The additional information I get as I do this is age and sex. You are in a prime demographic for severe COVID. Your current state of health reduces your risk of being on a ventilator, but that's not a risk I would be willing to take. And after combing through one patient's need to determine that patient's need for transfusion, if I hadn't already had the vaccine, I would have knocked people down to get the shot. I didn't want to look at or find horrifying information, but I found it only looking for the potential for more transfusions. In short, your risk is higher than you think it is. It isn't astronomically high, but still high enough to make the shot a prudent choice.
And after last night's shift at work, in a hospital already overloaded because it's September, with nurses now spread between 3 ICU patients when they should only have one, and a testing load that shot through the roof, anything anyone can do to stay out of the hospital right now is a good thing. That even means no ATV riding, no skateboarding, no "Here, hold mah beer" antics, no hunting, no distracted driving, reduced driving whenever possible, no getting on the roof to fix something, no getting falling-down drunk, no swallowing pencils, no cooking hash butter, no gatherings with small children, no going maskless in any public area inside or outside, no juggling chainsaws and anything else that carries a substantial risk of illness or injury. And be careful on stairs! My next shift starts Monday at noon, and I can only hope that I'm physically and mentally sufficiently recovered to deal with it.
You may think that your choices only affect you, but if something happens to you requiring medical attention, you have now put an even greater burden on the providers who will be involved in your care. Get the shot.
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