Dr. Nabil El Sanadi, Chief of Emergency Medicine at Broward Health, says the H1N1 flu is not as severe as expected and is much like any other flu. In Broward County, there has only been a slightly larger number of cases than normal.
The H1N1 vaccine is no different than any other flu vaccination and is safe to receive. Talk to your primary care physician to see if you should get it. Those at risk are encouraged to get the H1N1 vaccine.
The vaccine should be available mid November in limited quantities.
How the hell do you know when you dont have it.I got it 5 days ago.Swelling is the only thing that happened followed by weakness on the 2nd day.The 5th day swelling goes down and strong.Got stronger on 3rd day.
clubbythe 2 years ago
ROFL... he move his arms around alot... hes probly italian.
JAMSproductions00 2 years ago
Dr. Sanadi does not know the truth. Let him get the vaccine. It is not safe, and will cause harm now or in the future, because it is made with viruses, bacteria, and has the animal DNA from the African Green Monkey. AIDs was a creation in a laboratory, and so was the H1N1 Virus. Do your homework.
MsValley28 2 years ago
No offence Dr. Sanadi...but, please answer me this: If what you say is true, how did Baxter ship a live H1N1 vax to the Ukraine earlier this year which was tested on ferrets(by chance) before using on public and the ferrets all died.Why is the WHO and CDC trusting this company to manufacture a "safe" vaccine and give them full immunity when they've already risked peoples lives just months ago? Please answer this!
missonetoo 2 years ago