Just that really; we're all being heavily encouraged to have a third jab but surely those of us who had COVID since getting the second jab have just as much immunity (if not more) as those who haven't recently been infected but have had their third jab?
I had AZ in April and July and would be happy enough to get a booster jab now if I hadn't had COVID in October. But surely that was my 'booster'? The third jab isn't specifically targeted at Omicron, so wild infection (presumably with Delta) has surely given me all the immune boost I need for the next few months?
Am still not 100% after actual COVID, I saw somewhere that it could be 12 weeks to fully recover (not including proper Long COVID of course). Not keen to have another jab yet because (a) I don't think it will give me any additional immunity at this point in time, (b) I'm worried about assaulting my immune system again while still getting over wild COVID, and (c) the first two jabs made me very ill and I selfishly don't fancy being bedridden again over Christmas.
Can it really be the case that having actually had COVID recently doesn't make the blindest bit of difference to immunity levels, but somehow a third jab (which isn't tailored specifically to Omicron, of course) will do what natural infection cannot?
Or is it just that if there is any deviation from the 'get your jab NOW' messaging, there is fear that the booster campaign will be harmed?