I seriously doubt anyone will be willing to donate money to a stranger on the internet. Try going to a bank with your proposed business ideas and asking for a loan. - written 2 years, 5 months ago
Anxiety such as you are describing there is a serious medical condition that does need treatment, as im sure your doctor has pointed out. If you are very strongly against medication, which can be very effective, talk to your doctor about cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT). This is ‘healing through talking and understanding’ and aims to help you understand your anxiety and identify ways of keeping it under control.
http://panicdisorder.about.com/od/therapycbt/CognitiveBehavioral_Therapy.htm - written 2 years, 5 months ago
The first time you are immunised your body has never seen that particular virus before, and so a weak primary immune response occurs and many ‘memory’ immune cells are created. The second time you are exposed to that particular virus a much stronger immune response occurs. THis may possibly lead to mild inflammation around the injection site or a mild fever caused by the release of immune mediators, but none of these will do you any real harm. Giving the injection twice will not cause you any real harm, afterall the point of immunisation is to protect you if your body does encounter the real virus, which as far as your body is concerned is identical to the attenuated version given during immunisation.
Re: amebaid’s post, attenuated viruses are normally incapable of reproducing, as it is a viruses ability to reproduce which makes them harmful in the first place. Also, your body does not produce antibiotics, and antibiotics are only usefull against bacteria. you probably ment antibodies :-) - written 2 years, 5 months ago