Marty Chinn
Member
Hmm, well do you have a reason why it would be a big deal?
True, general life experience tells us as humans that vomiting is usually because the body is trying to rid itself of some sort of bad material.
Consider that you have one data point that says "My baby vomited while receiving the vaccine." The professionals giving out these vaccines surely must have given it to thousands and thousands of babies. A baby vomiting is possibly uncommon, but it is likely that they've seen it before and so they would be in a situation where they could have fairly strong evidence that it's not a big deal.
I would lean towards trusting them, although I'm also curious as to if you asked further questions about how they knew it wasn't a big deal? Would be interesting to know.
I think you misunderstood where I was going with this. I don't think my baby is properly vaccinated because he vomited up the vaccine. I'm not worried about the act of vomiting but the fact that he may not have the vaccine properly inside him now as a result and the doctor and the injection technician both felt it was not a big deal if he didn't get it.