Resources about PENBRAYA™
(Meningococcal Groups A, B, C, W, and Y Vaccine)
Meet 2 meningitis survivors
Jamie and Rayna weren’t concerned when their symptoms started, but it quickly became clear that it wasn’t a cold or the flu. Their parents then got the call—their daughters were seriously ill.
Listen as Jamie and Rayna share what it was like to survive meningitis as young adults. Then talk to your teen's doctor about getting vaccinated against all 5 leading types of meningococcal meningitis.
BEFORE
Rayna
I was 17 years old when I entered into Virginia Tech, and I went there because I had a full ride scholarship to play basketball.
Jamie
Before I got sick, I was a student at the University of Texas. I worked really, really hard to get there.
Rayna
I was just thrilled and excited to be on my own. Out of mom and dad's house, no more curfew checks.
FIRST SYMPTOMS
Jamie
When I first got sick, my first symptoms were very minimal, and I didn't think too much of it.
Rayna
I really thought I had the flu.
One of the coaches came into the locker room to check with me: "Hey, Ray, you know, I noticed you weren't feeling too good."
And I was like, "I can't make it to practice. Can you help me?"
14 HOURS LATER
Jamie
My sister drove me to the hospital. There were, like, 10 nurses around me, putting IVs in me, getting me ready for I don't know what.
I was put in a semi-medicated coma for about 4 weeks.
Rayna
I was in a coma for 3 weeks.
Jamie
I would wake up from time to time and I would see my limbs go from red rash to purple to black.
Everyone showed up…. Like, “Do I come now? Is she going to die?”
26 HOURS LATER
Rayna
My parents found out from a phone call about 4 o’clock in the morning.
Absolutely terrifying.
Jamie
My mom stuck with me the whole time. She made all the toughest decisions ever.
Like, the day when she got the paperwork to sign off: “Your daughter's legs are going to be amputated.”
Rayna
My parents basically moved into the waiting room.
Like most parents, when their kids are hurting, they're hurting ten times worse.
WEEKS LATER
Rayna
All the blood circulation had stopped flowing to my fingers and my toes, my liver, my kidneys had stopped functioning properly.
Jamie
The doctors were saying, “Oh, it's going to be one foot; oh, it's going to be a couple of fingers. Oh, it's going to be all your fingers. Oh, it's going to be both feet.” It just kept getting worse and worse.
3 MONTHS LATER
Rayna
And when I finally was able to get my voice back and talk, asking my parents, “How did this happen? I was vaccinated.”
And then I remember my doctor, who was also in the room saying, “You were vaccinated for everything except for what you contracted.”
Because there was no vaccine for meningitis B at the time.
Jamie
I found out later that I had meningitis C, and that was a type of meningitis that was vaccine preventable
I didn't have any information about the vaccines out there.
TODAY
Jamie
And there's reasons. And so my reason is right now. I'm just telling my story and making sure people are aware of it.
Rayna
For the last 15 years, I would travel the country encouraging people to get vaccinated.
Jamie
I'm one of the lucky ones. I survived. And I'm here today to encourage all parents to talk to their teens’ doctors about vaccinating them against meningitis.
PENBRAYA discussion guide
You want to help protect your teen. PENBRAYA can help.
Talking to your teen’s doctor about vaccination is the best next step to helping protect your teen against all 5 leading types of meningococcal meningitis—A, B, C, W, and Y. Our discussion guide can help get that conversation started.
Sign up to learn more about Pfizer’s PENBRAYA. It’s the only FDA-approved vaccine that helps protect your teen from all 5 leading types of meningococcal meningitis—A, B, C, W, and Y—which cause nearly all meningococcal meningitis cases.
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