My fiancee is a nurse and was offered the vaccine a good while ago. She declined it based on the fact that we were trying for a baby and the data set isn't there to show the effects on pregnancy and newborns. Other nurses pressured her to have it so she went to have it. When at the vaccination centre a GP advised she did not have the vaccine. Another GP at her surgery advised she did. There was a big conference call and the unanimous advice was to NOT have the vaccine. This came from the most senior figure in community healthcare for her trust. After a bit of thinking our side, she decided to go for it (because she sees a lot of elderly patients, and homes are seeing another spike in cases). She has only had her first dose and is now pregnant.
The advice is all over the shop but largely a "no". Having the vaccine is a risk as we simply don't know (longer term) enough about potential side effects.
My own view is that Covid is just another seasonal virus. Vaccinating children sounds good, but again we don't know long-term enough about the vaccine. I've known several close family who died very prematurely last year by having their cancer treatment stopped (as a result of the Covid reaction). My own Grandmother also had Covid, but survived it and died of frailty and a very long-term heart condition at the age of 95. I could hardly see her in the home and she became very lonely. The reaction for me has been worse than the virus.