COVID-19: 0.54% of hospital staff became infected with the virus 1-10 days after vaccination



Medical personnel should not rush to cancel post-vaccination-related symptoms and always check for Covid-1 for if the symptoms are obvious, according to a study released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Sunday.

The study, written by a group of Israeli doctors and scientists at Sheba Medical Center in Tel Heshomer, has been an active player in the fight against the spread of the Israeli virus and the treatment of its victims.

It focuses on the occurrence of Covid-19 symptoms, and in particular, their occurrence after vaccination, with the aim of mistakenly preventing cases of symptomatic disease for vaccine side effects. These types of mistakes are more common than expected.

“The co-occurrence of vaccination deployments with the rapidly rising COVID-19 in many parts of the world is a confusing period in which hope blends with much weakness,” the study reads. Therefore, “every physical complaint after vaccination has an adverse reaction that also confuses the correct diagnosis of whether there is a new COVID-19 infection. In Israel, 22 (0.54%) of vaccinated health care workers, one to 10 days after inoculation. COVID-19 developed.
Of those, 13 healthcare workers were examined simply because they presented symptoms such as sore throat, cough, headache and fever, which are common for diseases such as influenza, which can be easily ignored or dismissed, in particular. When the country’s hospitals do no deal. Huge number of patients on a daily basis.

Nine other healthcare workers who tested positive after being vaccinated were examined as they came up with a confirmed or suspected COVID-19 case.

Given the fact that healthcare workers are vaccinated in Israel and many other parts of the world, the study emphasized the importance of detecting post-vaccination infections in this group, taking into account the fatal chain-reaction that may be caused by strangers. Infected hospital staff.

Thus, the study concludes that high levels of suspicion should be observed whenever symptoms are reported in health clinics and hospitals. However, it should be noted that the authors stressed that there is no question that “large-scale vaccination of risk groups and later the general population is the single most effective public health measure for the prevention of coronavirus disease.”