Females, Young Adults at Greater Risk for COVID-19 Vaccine Side Effects

A study published in Scientific Reports found that females and young adults had greater risks of “general fatigue, headache, joint pain, chills and axillary pain compared to males and elderly adults.”

The study also noted that people to have three COVID-19 vaccines versus two may have different side effects.

Between the second and third COVID-19 vaccines, “52% of subjects had a longer duration of side effects following the third vaccine compared to the second, and joint pain was the culprit symptom related to the prolonged duration of side effects,” the study said.

After the second dose, 25% of study participants “had a longer duration of side effects and asthma and ear fullness, which exacerbated the underlying allergic condition.”

The study’s findings are consistent with previous reports.

A JAMA Network Open study also revealed that females and young adults are likelier to report adverse vaccine effects from Moderna and Pfizer than older men.

American Faith reported that a peer-reviewed journal entry found in Clinical Reviews in Allergy & Immunology confirmed female genital ulcers were linked to both coronavirus and COVID-19 vaccines.

The researchers specified that vaccines were “more frequently” linked to the disease than the virus.

“Most cases of Lipschütz ulcer included in this analysis were induced by a vaccine against SARS-CoV-2,” the researchers stated.

The ulcers have “never been reported to be temporally associated with other vaccines,” according to the journal.

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