Amen to that! --parent of a child who was born so medically fragile (not premature) that she couldn't have been vaccinated on a normal schedule. Have a heart and vaccinate your kids. Some kids have no option but to rely on the health of their community. |
I don't think you know what homeopathy is. Vaccines ARE homeopathic. |
THIS is what really gets to me. Why should a choice based on studies that aren't scientifically based or even worse, the opinion of a "celebrity" take precedence over the health of other people? I'm beginning to think that if you want to not vax or alter the schedule go ahead, but keep your own kid home! Your personal choice doesn't get to put others at risk. I know that isn't really the answer but sometimes I wish it was. |
The author of this column, Michael Hilzik, is a business columnist for the LA times. He won a Pulitzer for reporting on corruption in the music industry. He has no medical background of any kind, not even a science background. His assertions are subjective and sound hysterical, not clear, ordered or based on objective reading of fact. I disagree with every aspect of the original post, which is offensive to parents like me who have children who have been injured by vaccines. OP do you have a child injured by a vaccine? If you did, you would not post such a biased article by a person who has no qualifications to weigh on on vaccination. There are many good reasons not to vaccinate or to vaccinate selectively based on the needs of the individual. No other area of medicine is "one size fits all" except vaccination, which is applied uniformly to every child, regardless of family or medical history, which is clearly wrong. Calling someone "idiot" over and over again does not prove your points, pp(s). This thread is a tirade, nothing more, as is the LA Times article by Michael Hiltzik. Neither is well-reasoned or rational, and not likely to change any minds. |
Please explain how vaccines are homeopathic? |
I don't know, that is why I was asking! |
Could you expand on how your children were hurt by vaccines? That would be interesting information. |
...And four days later, no answer. (But no surprise.) |
| Vaccines are awesome. Without them, most of us would be dead. Why in the world would you not vaccine your children. that is neglect. |
Not quite, but "A" for effort. I fully vaccinate my kids (and I probably need to get some more boosters myself), but I don't think the mortality rates of most diseases for which there is a vaccine would be "most" of us. |
+1 It was pretty awful. |
You're right, probably not "most," but you might be surprised how pervasive the impact would be. The most significant impacts would be in children. See http://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/vac-gen/whatifstop.htm. |
I'm on my 8th week of whooping cough. In China they call it the 100-day cough so I guess I'm past the halfway mark - woo hoo, I mean Whoop Whoop. My 8th grader, who was vaccinated 2 1/2 years ago brought it home - he just had a cough, no whooping, and antibiotics cured him. My other (also vaccinated) kids didn't get it but DH and I did. Didn't even know I had whooping cough until I woke in the middle of the night unable to breathe. If you haven't had a Tdap booster, please get one. It works better than nothing. Trust me, whooping cough sucks. |
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Not the best written commentary, but certainly to the point:
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2014/03/13/thanks-anti-vaxxers-you-just-brought-back-measles-in-nyc.html |
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Older person here. I grew up in a very small town pre-measles vaccine and just at the time before the polio vaccine reached full penetration. In my first grade at school of the sixty to seventy children, two had permanently weakened legs from polio, one had permanently weakened eyesight from measles, and another was permanently severely spastic from measles.
There was no pneumonia vaccine. When I was three or four I was among 20 or so children of that age who came down with pneumonia and had to be hospitalized. We were all put in one room as a sort of quarantine; three of us died. Chicken pox was a rite of passage for all; I don't remember anyone had ill effects from it. When my two children were young the chicken pox vaccine had just come in and there were mixed views on it. As I was deciding, fate intervened and both got it--one suffered a post infection neuropsychiatric disorder, luckily transient. Vaccines are not just life saving; they can prevent life altering physical damage. That said, I sometimes wonder if vaccine proponents are having their case undermined a bit by advocacy of vaccines against HPV and maybe others down the road, whose merits are less clear cut. |