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    1. Sportsfanno1 on

      Between 2015 and 2024, the FAMHP received 553 reports of suspected adverse reactions following vaccination of children under 18 years of age according to the basic vaccination schedule. That number, according to the FAGG, is low compared to the number of children who received a vaccine in the past 10 years. Exactly how many is unknown.

      In doing so, the reported side effects are in line with the known safety profile, the agency said. “The benefits of vaccines outweigh the risks,” the FAMHP concludes.

      Nearly 60 percent of the reports involve general disorders (such as fever and fatigue) and reactions at the injection site. The most commonly reported side effects are fever (17 percent of cases), vomiting (14 percent of cases), headache (8 percent), diarrhea (8 percent) and pallor (5 percent). **Serious side effects such as convulsions and anaphylactic shock (a severe allergic reaction) were reported less frequently. These were 14 and 7 cases respectively over the past 10 years.**

      Translated with DeepL.com (free version)

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      So opinions on the framing of this article?

      All technically true, but the title suggests (imo) that this is bad with that quote added to it.

      We’re talking about *only* 21 severe cases in 10 years (also, convulsions are usually not life threatening, so only 7 real bad ones imo).

    2. Isotheis on

      I guess I’m no longer a kid, but I was one of these with a very adverse reaction : I seem to be terribly allergic to a component of the whooping cough vaccine. Just that one, I have all the other vaccines, but I can’t have that one.

      I’ve never got it, though. Thanks to collective immunity, I figure. So thanks, y’all.

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