Hey, countrygirl12. With all due respect, I said people ought to stay at home but they don't always do that. I have been guilty of going to work sick but I took extra precautions against spreading it along. Staying home is ideal, but I know that people cannot always do that. It is just the ideal. You said yourself that all you employees plus the customers passed it back and forth, which kind of proves my point.
And your statement that most people who get the flu shot is patently untrue. It is a very common myth. The vaccine does not cause the illness. The virus in the vaccine is not active and an inactive virus cannot transmit disease. The people who sometimes feel sick after the vaccination may be feeling their immune response working. Also, if they have actually contracted the flu, it may be that they had it prior to the vaccination or they are experiencing flu from another strain of flu since they vaccinate with the current strain that is going around at the time. They also could be confusing a bad cold for the flu since sometimes the symptoms are similar.
Getting the vaccination and avoiding the flu can avoid any subsequent flu-related complications due to your body working hard to fight the flu and becoming weakened, such as pneumonia which can be deadly. And people with other compromised immune systems (older people, people on chemotherapy, young children) might experience those complications as well.
I personally get the vaccine because I live with someone with heart disease and I don't want to compromise his health if I should contract the flu. Otherwise, I might not get it.
I firmly believe that vaccinations are one of the reasons why we do not experience the horrible epidemics and pandemics that used be to be around. I don't think we should discourage people from getting them. Just my take on it. Don't mean to offend anyone.