What If They Gave a COVID-19 Vaccine and Nobody Came?
Public acceptance of a COVID-19 vaccine is far from a lock. A nurse who participated in a trial for one of the vaccines up for FDA approval worries that side-effects will diminish uptake.
A nurse who participated in the trial for Pfizer/BioNTech’s vaccine for coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) sounds a cautionary note about whether the public will be lining up or running away. Kristen R. Choi, PhD, RN, writes about her experience in a perspective in
Like many people, Choi places a lot of hope in a COVID vaccine, but after her experience in the trial—and again like many people—she also has some misgivings. As the Pfizer/BioNTech version moves
Kevin Kavanagh, MD, a member of Infection Control Today®’s Editorial Advisory Board said in a recent
Turns out that Choi worries about the same thing. She got the first shot of the COVID vaccine and felt fine. As for the second shot? “My arm quickly became painful at the injection site, much more than the first time,” Choi writes in her JAMA Network article. “By the end of the day, I felt light-headed, chilled, nauseous, and had a splitting headache. I went to bed early and fell asleep immediately. Around midnight, I woke up feeling worse—feverish and chilled, nauseated, dizzy, and hardly able to lift my arm from muscle pain at the injection site. My temperature was 99.4 °F (37.4 °C). I tossed and turned, sleeping little during the rest of the night.”
The next morning her temperature was 104.9 °F (40.5 °C). She took acetaminophen and the fever subsided. A research nurse told her that “a lot of people have reactions after the second injection.” Choi rebounded by the next day.
As is the case with double-blind trials, Choi doesn’t know if she in fact got the experimental vaccine, but her physical reaction suggests to her that she did. She believes that most people will have at least one of the adverse reactions to the vaccine that she experienced.
“The adverse effects of the vaccine—even if, at worst, they all happen at once—are transient and a normal sign of reactogenicity signaling an effective immune response,” Choi writes. “But I worry that they could be a major barrier to vaccine uptake. Clinicians will need to be prepared to discuss with patients why they should trust the vaccine and that its adverse effects could look a lot like COVID-19. They will need to explain that fatigue, headache, chills, muscle pain, and fever are normal, reactogenic immune responses and a sign that the vaccine is working, despite the unfortunate similarities with the disease’s symptoms.”
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