Sentinel & Enterprise

A pain in the arm, but worth it

- By Prudence Brighton

It was 4:20 a.m., and I had just swallowed 800 mg of ibuprofen. The pain had awoken me perhaps an hour before, but who can be sure of time’s passage in the early morning hours of the day?

I walked to my desk and turned on my computer. I had to share my agony with social media friends. So I typed, “The torture started about an hour ago, about 20 hours after I had the second vaccine (Moderna) for

I now have a baseball cap from the House of Hope with an image that says ‘For You, For Me, For All: I am COVID vaccinated.’

COVID.”

This story is not intended to scare anyone away from being vaccinated. In fact, I hope it accomplish­es the opposite. As I have said many times in the last weeks, “It beats a ventilator.”

I am lucky that, in addition to working part-time for The Sun, I also work part-time for House of Hope, a congregate-living residence for homeless families in Lowell. So I didn’t have to wait until my age cohort advanced on the priority list. I was in section 1.4 rather than 2.

I now have a baseball cap from the House of Hope with an image that says “For You, For Me, For All: I am COVID vaccinated.

House of Hope worked with Lowell General Hospital to get its staff and residents vaccinated. Some employees and staff resisted.

“It’s too new,” they said, as I said under my breath, “It beats a ventilator.”

But in many ways the Moderna and Pfizer vaccines are not new. Yes, they were approved for COVID use only months ago under a Food and Drug Administra­tion emergency use agreement, but the first paper on mRNA (messenger RNA) was published 30 years ago. The technology was considered the Holy Grail by vaccine researcher­s. And it was ready for scientific trials as the COVID pandemic began to terrorize the world.

I received my first Moderna vaccine at Lowell General Hospital. The staff was organized and it went smoothly. I had a slightly stiff arm that I barely noticed until my dog climbed up on my sofa and landed on it. I had no other symptoms.

I encountere­d a small hiccup in obtaining my second dose of the vaccine. I arrived at the LGH site on Pawtucket Boulevard — once a Wang Laboratori­es manufactur­ing site, then M/A- Com and now known as the Cross River Center — on Feb. 18, precisely in time for my appointmen­t. You are advised to arrive at the door 3 minutes before your appointmen­t to promote social distancing.

A gentleman in charge of traffic flow asked me, “Is this your first or second dose?” I replied “second dose.” Then he asked “Pfizer or Moderna?” I answered Moderna and was turned away. Apparently, my vaccinatio­n was held up somewhere due to the weather in the Southwest and Midwest. I was told to come back Monday.

A friend of mine had recently lost her husband to COVID-19. He had been on a ventilator so I was nervous about any delay in getting the final dose of the vaccinatio­n.

Those who know me, know that I am not an early riser. But on Monday morning, I managed to get myself down the boulevard, barely a mile from my house, by 7:15. I was in and out by 8. Again, as with the first vaccine, LGH ran the operation smoothly.

You are advised not to take ibuprofen, acetaminop­hen, aspirin or the like before you get the vaccine. But you might want to learn from my experience and not wait 20 hours before taking one of these medication­s.

There is still much to learn about the virus and the vaccines, but the virus has been with us just over a year. In that time, it has claimed more than 500,000 American lives. I didn’t want to add my name to the growing list.

Researcher­s now know that the vaccines successful­ly prevent the disease from slamming the human body with grave illness and death. But can they prevent its transmissi­on from human to human? In just the last few days, they’ve found good evidence that at least the Pfizer vaccine can.

Despite the remaining questions, the vaccine beats a ventilator.

And mask up! Masks beat ventilator­s, too.

 ?? JULIA MALAKIE PHOTOS / SENTINEL & ENTERPRISE ?? Sun correspond­ent Prudence Brighton, at home in Lowell with her American hunt terrier, Libby. Below, Lowell General Hospital holds a soft opening on the first day of its mass vaccinatio­n site at Cross River Center on Pawtucket Boulevard on Feb. 8.
JULIA MALAKIE PHOTOS / SENTINEL & ENTERPRISE Sun correspond­ent Prudence Brighton, at home in Lowell with her American hunt terrier, Libby. Below, Lowell General Hospital holds a soft opening on the first day of its mass vaccinatio­n site at Cross River Center on Pawtucket Boulevard on Feb. 8.
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