JonesBeene <jone...@pacbell.net> wrote:

> It is not clear if this category (~3 percent) is anything more than a
> passing phenomenon
>

Other sources say the problems went away in one day or less. There have
been no reports of longer-term problems.

Other vaccines have stronger, more common effects, yet they are safe.




> After all, the injection is stored at  *extremely low temperature* and
> the human body is not accustomed to being injected with super cold fluid.
>

It is room temperature when injected.

A nurse I talked to described other low temperature injections. She said
most are in powder form, and are mixed with an all-purpose injectable
liquid. (She mentioned the name of the liquid but I forgot it.) I think the
COVID vaccines are frozen liquid. After the Pfizer one is warmed to an
ordinary refrigerator temperature it keeps for 5 days:

https://www.pfizer.com/news/hot-topics/covid_19_vaccine_u_s_distribution_fact_sheet#:~:text=After%20storage%20for%20up%20to,or%20stored%20under%20frozen%20conditions
.

The ingredients are listed here. I think they are liquid at room
temperature, not powder:

https://www.health.com/condition/infectious-diseases/coronavirus/pfizer-covid-19-vaccine-ingredient-list

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