Aaron Rodgers confirms he's unvaccinated
Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers, who tested positive for COVID-19 this week, said on the Pat McAfee Show Friday that his team knew he wasn't vaccinated and that he wasn't hiding it.
Rodgers said he's tested every morning and "every other protocol I followed to the T."
He said he's allergic to an ingredient in mRNA vaccines.
"I believe strongly in bodily autonomy and the ability to make choices for your body," he added.
He said he had some symptoms on Tuesday but is now feeling much better.
"I feel really good, and if this were the flu, there's no reason why I wouldn't play on Sunday," Rodgers said.
Dr. David Dowdy, an epidemiologist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, told ABC News in September that data so far at that point showed a severe allergy to the vaccine is extremely uncommon, experienced by less than one in 1 million people.
The CDC said: "If you have had a severe allergic reaction or an immediate allergic reaction -- even if it was not severe -- to any ingredient in an mRNA COVID-19 vaccine, you should not get either of the currently available mRNA COVID-19 vaccines. ... If you aren’t able to get one type of COVID-19 vaccine because you are allergic to an ingredient in that vaccine, ask your doctor if you should get a different type of COVID-19 vaccine."
Dr. Jeff Linder, chief of general internal medicine and geriatrics at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, told ABC News in September that research so far shows that those who have a severe allergic reaction are likely triggered by polyethylene glycol, or PEG, a component of the vaccines.
"An allergy to that is pretty rare," Linder added. "It would have to be documented, as a moderate or severe allergy, before I would consider giving a medical exemption."