Having one dose each of two different Covid-19 vaccines is safe - and early research suggests it may even prompt a better immune response.
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The science is clear: the risk of Covid-19 far outweighs the risk of the vaccine
The threat of serious illness or death due to Covid-19 varies across the population. But for nearly everyone, the risk of vaccination is much smaller than the risk posed by an infection, even among groups that do well against Covid-19.
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I’m fully vaccinated. Can I still get Covid-19, and pass it on?
How vaccination helps prevent the spread of Covid-19.
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Why the second Covid-19 vaccine packs a bigger punch
The Whole Truth: Covid-19 Vaccination | By Stuff reporter Brittney Deguara.
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Vaccination reduces the likelihood of new variants emerging
If 90 per cent of the eligible population is vaccinated, mutations of the coronavirus are much less likely
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‘Long-term’ side-effects of Covid vaccination are not a thing
Any side effects from the vaccine happen within days and weeks, not years (and it’s already been 18 months).
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Confirmation bias: what is it?
Why some people struggle to change their minds about vaccination, even when the evidence is against them.
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Kids and the Covid-19 vaccine
Experience and research show that most young children aren’t at risk of serious illness from Covid-19 — so should we be vaccinating them?
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Covid-19 vaccination and breastfeeding
If you’re breastfeeding, getting the Covid-19 vaccine can also help protect your baby.
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Almost everyone can have the Pfizer Covid-19 vaccine
Fewer than 100 people in Aotearoa cannot have the Pfizer vaccine for medical reasons.