COVID-19 cases are again on the rise, fueled by the new BA.5 variant that typically produces mild symptoms or, in some cases like previous variants, none at all.
So what happens if you get the vaccine when you have COVID-19? Could that increase or decrease your chances of becoming seriously ill?
According to , you shouldn't get the vaccine or a booster while you have symptoms. It is better to wait until your isolation period is over. Additionally, if you do get COVID-19 you should consider delaying your next shot by three months from when your symptoms started or when you tested positive.
But it won鈥檛 make you sicker or less sick if you have COVID-19 and get the vaccine, said Dr. Thad Stappenbeck, chair of the Cleveland Clinic Lerner Research Institute, but it could make the vaccine less effective if you get the shot when you have symptoms of any virus, he said.
That's why health care workers ask if you鈥檙e feeling sick before getting the COVID-19 vaccine, Dr. Stappenbeck said.
鈥淭hey鈥檒l wait until you鈥檙e feeling better for like a week or so, and then you can get vaccinated,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 all about the vaccine working. That鈥檚 really what this is all about.鈥
It is also best not to get other vaccines, like the flu shot, if you鈥檙e feeling sick, because it can impact the vaccine鈥檚 effectiveness, Stappenbeck said.
Dr. David Margolius, the city of Cleveland's director of public health, agreed that it shouldn鈥檛 make a difference if you get the vaccine when you have COVID.
鈥淭he reason we ask people to wait until they have recovered from COVID before getting the vaccine is to keep all the health care workers and others safe during the process,鈥 Dr. Margolius said in an email.
海角破解版's health team is answering as many questions as possible about COVID-19, with help from local experts. You can send us your questions with our online form, or call us at 216-916-6476. We'll keep the answers coming on our website and on the air.