There is also a delayed vaccine side effect that health experts want you to know.
As more and more people get inoculated in the United States, we begin to understand a lot more about how vaccines work. While the vaccine side effects are usually minimal and short term, similar to the ones you experience after a flu shot, such as swelling, redness and local pain at the injection site, fatigue, fever, chills, nausea, muscle pain, head and body aches, and swollen lymph nodes.
Usually, the symptoms occur within the first two days after vaccination, but in some cases, one side effect, in particular, could appear one week after vaccination, according to researchers. The researchers were surprised to discover that one week after their shot, some people experienced a severe skin reaction.
Read on for more info about the delayed vaccine side effect that takes one week to develop!
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1 thought on “Why Some People Have Stronger Vaccine Side Effects, According to the CDC”
Please advise… I had no reaction from either Pfizer vaccine. What should I do?