“When you deal with a situation – with an intervention, as rare as it may be, you can never assure someone that they would not have an allergic reaction,” said Dr. ‘People who are prone to an allergic reaction, especially anaphylactic reaction, are more likely to have an allergic reaction to a vaccine. But if you look at the allergic reactions that have just been reported in the scientific literature, there are between four and five per million vaccinations with the Pfizer and between two and three per million vaccinations with the Moderna. If you have a history of allergic reaction – if it’s an allergic reaction to something you definitely contain in the vaccine, you may want to wait for another vaccine, but if you only have one allergic person to food and other things, you can be vaccinated, but you should do it in a situation where you are in a place where someone can handle and treat an allergic reaction, rather than having it in a place where there was no way to to get an allergic reaction. for it must be treated, but it is an unusual, not uncommon event, based on the numbers I just told you. ‘