Menstruators have been saying since the vaccine came out that it affected their menstrual cycles — and we finally have the research to prove it.
, however, found that COVID-19 vaccines can indeed change the timing of your period by about one day, or by two days when people got two doses of the vaccine within the same menstrual cycle.
. And that their results"indicate no cause for concern for long-term physical or reproductive health," including fertility.about the study, the National Institutes of Health noted that changes in cycle length of fewer than eight days are considered within the normal range of variation. However, for people who are hoping to get pregnant — or avoid it —"any change in the length of a monthly cycle might be troubling," Dr. Edelman told OHSU.
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