It was my first time with this particular doctor, and we went over all sorts of stuff. The subject of covid vaccination came up. I said no, I didn't receive any vaccination for it. She said I don't pass judgement and we moved on. Then she asked about the last tetanus shot I received, and since it was 10 years ago, said she'd recommend getting that. She said "the one I have here also has whooping cough, but don't worry, it doesn't have any microchips in it" and winked. I found it funny, but I'm happy she didn't try to push the covid vaxx on me. I didn't get the tetanus shot but I might, if it's just the TTD and not the whooping cough combo too. Btw, every single person in the entire building was masked but me. Signs posted everywhere, you must wear a mask etc, but I didn't wear one at all and nobody said anything about it. This was my first experience at a doctors office since maybe 2020.
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I'm very curious about how the Tetanus vaccine works. The Tetanus "vaccine" is to protect you from Clostridium Tetani bacteria. The bacteria is not actually the direct cause of "lockjaw", but it is actually the waste product of the bacteria called something like spasmodim or some such. So the issue is a toxin. So either the tetanus vaccine is protecting us from a bacteria or a toxin. I didn't really know that vaccines did that. I guess it must be the same as the Anthrax vaccine. Any medical experts here that can shed some light on this?
https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/medicine-and-dentistry/clostridium-tetani
Tetanospasmin is the toxin name that is produced by the bacterium Clostridium Tetani. Knowing that we can produce vaccines for toxins, why don't we have vaccines for every toxin known to man? I'm curious to what your doctor would answer to this question. First, I would be curious if she knows what lockjaw is and what causes it. More importantly, does she know how the vaccine works against Tetanus.