The doctor seemed to be promoting it so I thought to ask him, "have you gotten it?". He said, "not yet, good question". and we laughed.
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The doctor seemed to be promoting it so I thought to ask him, "have you gotten it?". He said, "not yet, good question". and we laughed.
It needs a better name though.I was thinking about it because if it you still get the shingles after being vaccinated it might not be as bad; I've known some people who have gotten horrible painful cases of shingles.
Shingles was something commonly afflicting AIDS patients, back in the day.But I've seen that shingles can be miserable.
Herpes. Like chickenpox.Isn't shingles a type of measles?
Sorry, I wasn't trying to downplay it. I have a friend who suffers from it.Herpes. Like chickenpox.
But it can be ghastly in rare cases. I once spent some days in the Oral and Plastic (don't laugh) ward of Roehampton hospital (for a small op on my tongue), in which there was a man who was having his entire face rebuilt after shingles. He looked like something out of a horror movie. But then they rearranged the pieces on his face and he just looked ugly. Apparently he was going to need several more sessions of surgery to get him back to near normal.
Because?I wouldn’t have a shingles vaccination or another flu jab after the last and only time that I’ve had one.
Oh no I wasn't thinking you were making of light of it. It was simply a worst case example from my own experience - one I think is extremely rare. A vaccine against it would be a great blessing, if it really works.Sorry, I wasn't trying to downplay it. I have a friend who suffers from it.
But my logic was if there was a successful vacine for measles, then one for shingles would seem possible.
I see it is available on the NHS to people over 70. I wonder why. Presumably it must be that reactivation of the virus is more likely in the old. Ah well, another treat in store.......Some info from Oxford University Vaccine Knowledge project:
In December 2017 Public Health England published an evaluation of the first three years of the shingles vaccination programme in England (up to August 2016). This showed that the shingles vaccine was 62% effective against shingles and 70 to 88% effective against post-herpetic neuralgia (PHN) in this period. Public Health England estimates that there were 17000 fewer GP consultations for shingles than expected in this 3-year period.