A recent observational report looked at people in the United States who received a third dose of a COVID-19 vaccine. The report noted that these individuals experienced local reactions (like soreness at the injection site) and systemic reactions (like fatigue or headache). The report did not provide specific numbers on how many people had these reactions or how severe they were.
This was not a formal study with a control group for comparison. The report did not compare the frequency or severity of these reactions to what people experienced after their first or second vaccine doses. It also did not track serious adverse events or how many people stopped vaccination because of side effects.
Because this is just an observational report, it can only tell us that reactions were reported. It cannot prove that the third dose caused different or more severe reactions than earlier doses. The information is very limited and should not be used to make decisions about getting a booster shot.
Readers should understand this is a basic report, not a complete scientific study. It confirms that people can have reactions after a third dose, which is expected based on earlier vaccine experience. For clear information on vaccine side effects, people should rely on official health guidance from sources like the CDC.