Were you not aware of the left's attempt to extend Medicaid to offer more comprehensive care for babies in the south, and what happened to that? |
I don’t consider “erudite” or “probative” to be particularly sophisticated words. (Tbh, given the tenor of this discussion, it’s sort of funny that you do.) In any event, I really am interesting to know (assuming this is indeed what you’re saying) why you consider (ethics aside) a longitudinal double-blind placebo-controlled study of autism diagnoses in the vaccinated and unvaccinated uninformative. Again, I totally understand the arguments for why this study would be unwise from a policy perspective or harmful to public health. But you seem to be carrying it a step further and also arguing that it would shed no incremental light on the extent (or non-extent) of any association, and I’m genuinely interested to hear why that is. And if that’s not what you’re saying, that’s fine, but you should clarify. |
They're not, but they are not being used correctly.
See above.
Okay, I'll bite. What do you use for yourself or your children, in your own everyday life, that has been passed through a longitudinal double-blind placebo-controlled study for safety? |
Despite saying you’d bite, you actually didn’t answer the question: do you consider a longitudinal double-blind placebo-controlled study of autism diagnoses in the vaccinated and unvaccinated uninformative? If so, why? If not, can you clarify what you’re saying? To be clear, I’m not trying to debate you or prove a point; I’m just interested in your honest answer to these questions. |
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So there is nothing in your life you use which has undergone a longitudinal double-blind placebo-controlled study to see whether it causes autism. Not your other medications or supplements (if any), not your toaster, not your cell phone, not the cooking pans you use, not the water bottles in your fridge, not anything at all? Nothing you can name? You have never ever asked for anything else in your life to jump though that hoop? Lady, this isn't about the science for you at all -- it's about conclusions you already drew about vaccines. |
I accept this as a concession. My point was not about vaccines; my point was about the condescension in guffawing about parents doing their own research. There is a difference between (1) telling a parent that they are incapable of doing research and (2) telling a parent that the demand they’ve formed on the basis of their research is unreasonable. |
I know. Doing my genealogy I saw so many children who died of diptheria before they were 10 years old in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. It is also a horrible death. |
| I guess if you believe in the risk of autism from vaccines, you should know that your kids risk death from other diseases. That's just what you're willing to risk. You don't get autism perhaps but you might get something else. If that's what you accept, so be it. Some survive these diseases and some don't. |
| I'm sure that taking Tylenol when you are pregnant carries risks, but I suspect that autism is a social disease. |
I think we can absolutely agree on that. I suspect we can also agree that informed consent is often approached as a checklist and not actually supported with time or attention, that the ability of providers and parents or patients to actually talk to each other is horribly constrained (especially by time, but also in other ways), that parents often are feeling (justifiably) that they are not treated with respect, and many other things. There are so many reasons for the fractures in healthcare today. Anyone laughing at anyone else with a mocking tone in this venue is making light of some very serious things. |
Have you heard about the risks of untreated fevers during pregnancy, or the risks of using aspirin or ibuprofen? |
NP... whatever it is you think you did to research vaccines and autism... I'll pretty much guarantee is not legitimate research. More likely, you read something claiming there was a link between them and followed confirmation bias rejecting anything that canceled your belief. |
I agree, although I personally have never felt a lack of respect from a doctor. I suspect some of this has a class overlay though, which is its own discussion. Anyway, thanks again for engaging. |
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Absolutely. May your week go well. |