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State health, education leaders urge COVID vaccinations, masks as start of school approaches

Created: August 04, 2021 05:28 PM With fear over the COVID-19 delta variant rising, there are renewed concerns over sending kids back to classrooms this fall. Nathan, 17, will start his senior year at Washington Technology Magnet School in St. Paul in a matter of weeks. He spent the entire last school year learning virtually and said he doesn t want to do that again. It was harder than usual because I wasn t used to it, he said. That s why he s getting his COVID-19 vaccine. It was good to get vaccinated just in case, so I don t catch it, but it just felt pretty normal, Nathan added.

Second shot of COVID-19 vaccine has unpleasant side effects, but works

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said the percentages reporting various side effects in the first seven days after receiving the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine rose from the first shot to the second shot. Reports of pain rose from 67.7% to 74.8%; fatigue from 28.6% to 50%; headache from 25.6% to 41.9%; chills from 7% to 26.7%; fever from 7.4% to 25.2%; joint pain from 7.1% to 21.2%; and nausea from 7% to 13.9%.   So, why do some vaccine recipients experience a strong reaction to the second shot, while others undergo mild or no side effects at all? The first shot primes the immune system, teaching it to recognize the invader, in this case the Spike protein on the new coronavirus. The Spike protein is what allows the virus to attach and penetrate human cells.

That second shot of COVID-19 vaccine can cause a headache and then some, but it works

That second shot of COVID-19 vaccine can cause a headache and then some, but it works Mark Johnson, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel © Ebony Cox / Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Tilly Bieganek, 17, closes her eyes as she gets her first Pfizer vaccine on Monday, April 5, 2021, at the Wisconsin Center in Milwaukee. Starting today, everybody in Wisconsin above the age of 16 is eligible to receive the COVID-19 vaccine. The vaccines by Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech have earned rave reviews for their 95% effectiveness against COVID-19 and 100% effectiveness against severe illness and death caused by the disease. But both vaccines require two shots, and for some recipients, that second shot can be a doozy.

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