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The World Health Organization (WHO) and the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention, an agency of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, recommend that painkillers and antipyretics not be taken immediately before or after the COVID-19 vaccination.
The recommendation is in effect because taking painkillers early could reduce vaccine protection. Because the natural vaccine response could be suppressed, thereby lowering antibody titers in children and adults, the new findings of WHO experts apply.
The RKI’s educational leaflet, in which preventive use was even recommended, is thus no longer valid. The antibody titer is a measure of the number of certain antibodies in the blood. If the titer could be lowered by drugs such as those listed, this would mean that a weakened immune response is a result.
Researchers at the University of British Columbia, and other scientists who have published their findings in various journals, can prove the connection with studies. There may even be a general validity for all vaccinations, not only against the SARS-CoV-2 virus.
However, it is okay to take paracetamol, for example, six hours after vaccination if vaccination reactions occur as symptoms. However, experts do not recommend taking it prophylactically or too early, although there is not yet a clear case for it, and data from AstraZeneca, as an example, have not been published. Biontech/Pfizer has also not yet provided data on this.

Source: Heilpraxisnet