What You Need to Know About COVID Shots and HIV
There is misinformation on social media. There is a myth that COVID-19 boosters cause HIV.
According to a 2022 Reuters article, some people are sharing a quote they claim came from Dr. Luc Montagnier, a Nobel Prize-winning scientist, known for his role in the discovery of HIV.
If you have taken the third dose, you should take a test for AIDS. The results may surprise you. Then you can file a lawsuit against your government.
There is no evidence that Dr. Montagnier has ever said this. There is no scientific way to make a vaccine cause HIV unless a person has used a needle before. The United States has single-use syringes for COVID-19 vaccine.
There are two reasons why it is important for people with HIV to be fully vaccined.
Almost 600 million vaccine doses, including 106.3 million first booster doses, have been administered in the United States. Researchers have found
There is no scientific mechanism where COVID-19 vaccines could cause HIV. A viral disease causes HIV. The only way to get HIV is to be exposed to the virus.
Unprotected anal or vaginal sex and sharing drug injection equipment are the
Sputnik V and Convidecia
Neither the Sputnik V nor Convidecia vaccines are approved for use in the United States. But the Convidecia vaccine has been granted emergency use by the
These viruses are viral vector vaccines. That means researchers hide instructions for your immune system on how to defend against COVID-19 inside the shell of a virus that doesn’t cause disease in humans. These two vaccines use a viral vector called adenovirus vectors of human serotype 5 (HAdV-5).
Some
Later HIV vaccine and COVID-19 vaccine trials did not find an increased risk of HIV infection following the use of HAdV vector vaccines. At present,
COVID-19 vaccines are
In theory, people with HIV who have low CD4 counts may have a weaker immune response to vaccines. However, according to the
People with HIV respond to vaccines.
COVID-19 vaccines are highly recommended for everybody, including people with HIV, regardless of CD4 count. Most people only have mild or no side effects after vaccination.
Three types of vaccines are approved for use in the United States:
Pfizer-bioNTech and Moderna.
The Pfizer and Moderna. vaccines are called
The most common side effects of these vaccines are mild symptoms such as:
- There are pain, redness, and swelling at the injection site.
- It is a problem of tiredness.
- There is a throbbing head.
- There is pain in the muscles.
- “It’s cold.”
- There is a high degree of fever.
- nausea
Although rare, there have been reports of potentially serious side effects such as myocarditis and pericarditis after mRNA vaccination. Myocarditis is inflammation of your heart muscle. Pericarditis is inflammation of the lining of your heart.
Myocarditis and pericarditis
- Within a week of being vaccined.
- The second dose is more often used.
- In males or young adults.
Heart conditions are rare after vaccination, and
Johnson & Johnson Janssen
The Johnson & Johnson vaccine is a vector vaccine, meaning that it contains a modified virus. This modified virus contains the genetic information of the virus that causes COVID-19 inside the shell of an adenovirus.
The most common side effects of this vaccine are mild and similar to those of mRNA vaccines. There is a plausible relationship between this vaccine and a serious type of blood clot called thrombosis with thrombocytopenia syndrome (TTS). It occurs at a rate of
Due to safety concerns regarding TTS, on May 5, 2022, the FDA
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommends that everybody over the age of 5, including people with HIV, get a booster dose if they’re eligible.
Adults over the age of 50 and people over the age of 12 who are moderately to severely immunosuppressed should get a second booster at least 4 months after their first. People with advanced or untreated HIV are included in this category.
Nearly half of people diagnosed with HIV are over the age of 50, and people with HIV also have higher rates of underlying health conditions that may weaken their immune systems. It’s particularly important for people vulnerable to infection to be vaccinated.
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There is no way that a COVID-19 vaccine could cause HIV. There is no evidence that COVID-19 vaccines increase your susceptibility to contracting HIV.
People with HIV or other conditions that weaken their immune system are at an increased risk of developing COVID-19 or severe illness. If you or your loved one have HIV, you should get your recommended COVID-19 vaccines.