Passing thought I had yesterday.
One of my uncles was in an accident many years ago, which resulted in him losing his spleen.
As such, he was immunocompromised.
If you were sick with something rather minor (like a cold or flu), then he had to avoid being around you, as it could be rather serious for him.
If ADE for the jabbed turns out to be as bad as some fear, then I wonder if this will eventually be the situation for many of us with friends/family who got jabbed.
Maybe not to the same extreme as with my spleen-less uncle, though, I suppose that would depend on a few factors, such as: (1) how many doses they had, (2) how serious the ADE is, (3) if the jabbed realize they're the ones at risk to ADE (and aren't taking things like Ivermectin to mitigate the risk).
Passing thought I had yesterday.
One of my uncles was in an accident many years ago, which resulted in him losing his spleen.
As such, he was immunocompromised.
If you were sick with something rather minor (like a cold or flu), then he had to avoid being around you, as it could be rather serious for him.
If ADE for the jabbed turns out to be as bad as some fear, then I wonder if this will eventually be the situation for many of us with friends/family who got jabbed.
Maybe not to the same extreme as with my spleen-less uncle, though, I suppose that would depend on a few factors, such as: (1) how many doses they had, (2) how serious the ADE is, (3) if the jabbed realize they're the ones at risk to ADE (and aren't taking thing like Ivermectin to mitigate the risk).