I donât think theyâre biased or deliberately lying like you keep saying. Itâs fucking annoying that the people making a good-faith effort to understand this disease get called liars at the drop of a hat by people who have no clue what theyâre talking about.
Umm, does this question even matter from a practical perspective? Like, if youâre close enough to someone to have sex with them you are also by implication close enough to breathe on themâŚ
I think this depends on what you mean by sexually transmitted. Generally if youâre having sex with someone the droplets are going to be flying, so in that sense youâll transmit it during sex. However, youâre probably not transmitting it because of the genital contact or fluids.
Would you say mononucleosis is sexually transmitted?
Yeah, that sucks. What I tell everyone in this situation is that the silver lining is that if you delay the second dose, you will probably* end up with more immunity after the second dose. Obviously in between the two doses, you will have less.
*I donât think this is proven but there is evidence from other vaccines (including one COVID vaccine) that this very likely the case.
With AZ the longest interval they studied was 12 wks, IIRC. And there was more immunity after the second dose than if you got the second dose at 6 wks. Of course, between the two doses, youâre less protected.
As a practical matter, Iâd hope you can get #2 within 12 wks.
Weâre (UK) are using 12 week gap for Pfizer. Iâm seem to recall immunity starting to fade after 8 weeks but still good til 12 weeks before top-up. And as Melk referred to, âreal lifeâ studies show youâre better waiting a longer for the 2nd dose
Likely all will need a booster 5 or 6 months after 2nd dose anyway, so Iâd prepare yourself for that
One problem you might run into (Iâve seen it posted in this thread) is some sites will in fact tell people itâs too long and you have to âstart overâ. Thatâs wrong as far as I can tell, but it doesnât matter. Go ahead and do it. Just make sure you get the same vaccine as the first. Since the doses are identical, what they consider your new first dose will actually be your second dose.
And if youâre really worried I suppose you can go ahead and get a third. There is no evidence that would do anything bad to you.
This is not true. Lots of things can transfer through sexual contact but arenât typically classified as STIs. Mono is spread primarily through oral secretions.