Anonymous wrote:^^https://medlineplus.gov/ency/article/001419.htm
Otherwise, the death rate for measles is about 1-3 per 1000. We've already had a few dead children, PP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why not research autism seriously instead of just going on feelings about vaccines? Or would that get too close to researching female health? Wouldn't want to do that!!!
Scientists are getting closer in identifying the genetic defects that can cause Autism, Schizophrenia, and / or Bipolar. Why isn’t this this being discussed more and making this research a priority?
Anonymous wrote:Why not research autism seriously instead of just going on feelings about vaccines? Or would that get too close to researching female health? Wouldn't want to do that!!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no need for a Hep B vax for newborns unless the mother is positive. None at all.
Another stupid American.
The abundance is shocking.
It is shocking.
And they are taking us all down with them.
Anonymous wrote:Welp, this is absolutely horrifying. They seem to want to remove all vaccine recommendations:
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/feb/01/vaccine-recommendations-acip
The take over by idiots in the US is complete. Everyone is losing their minds over Epstein and ICE raids, but they've lost all attention on the ongoing public health disaster RFK is cooking up. It is going to get a huge number of Americans, especially kids, killed or permanently injured from entirely preventable disease.
The rest of then world should not allow Americans to enter their countries without proof of vaccination.
Subacute sclerosing panencephalitis (SSPE) is a progressive, disabling, and deadly brain disorder related to measles (rubeola) infection.
The disease develops many years after the measles infection.
Normally, the measles virus does not cause brain damage. However, an abnormal immune response to measles or, possibly, certain variant forms of the virus may cause severe illness and death. This response leads to brain inflammation (swelling and irritation) that may last for years.
SSPE has been reported in all parts of the world, but in western countries it is a rare disease.
Very few cases are seen in the United States since the nationwide measles vaccination program began. SSPE tends to occur several years after a person has measles, even though the person seems to have fully recovered from the illness. Males are more often affected than females. The disease generally occurs in children and adolescents.
Symptoms of SSPE occur in four general stages. With each stage, the symptoms are worse than the stage before:
Stage I: There may be personality changes, mood swings, or depression. Fever and headache may also be present. This stage may last up to 6 months.
Stage II: There may be uncontrolled movement problems including jerking and muscle spasms. Other symptoms that may occur in this stage are loss of vision, dementia, and seizures.
Stage III: Jerking movements are replaced by writhing (twisting) movements and rigidity. Death may occur from complications.
Stage IV: Areas of the brain that regulate breathing, heart rate, and blood pressure are damaged. This leads to coma and then death.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why not research autism seriously instead of just going on feelings about vaccines? Or would that get too close to researching female health? Wouldn't want to do that!!!
It's not coming from vaccines. Inducing immune response in young children simply doesn't do it otherwise we would see autism rates increase in different countries based on when they started vaccinating their kids. And it doesn't line up that way. It lines up with improvements in diagnosis.
Kids that we used to think were just dumb turned out to be autistic. Like Forrest Gump.
I am not a doctor but I have a dozen doctors in the family and they all vaccinate their kids.
This is well intentioned, but it is borderline disinformation in my opinion.
You can say that vaccines don’t cause autism, and I’d agree with that. But you’re insinuating (1) that doctors keep up with the medical research—they mostly don’t, and lots of good research never gets done—and (2) that any hypothesized link between the immune system and autism is bunk. That proposition is wrong. As a few datapoints:
• some emerging research suggests that autism can result where maternal autoantibodies attack proteins in the mom that are needed for fetal neural development (e.g., CRMP1 and CRMP2).
• mice models of autism are sometimes approximated by taking genetically modified mice and activating the mother mouse’s immune system.
• research suggests that people with autism have higher circulating levels of interleukine 6, a protein used in immune response.
• even controlling for confounding variables like antibiotic administration, ear infections in infancy are associated with an elevated risk of autism later in life. One plausible connection is that infections obviously involve an immune response.
• machine learning models have recently found patterns of altered species of bacteria, fungi, viruses, and archaea in the gut of people with autism. Gut composition influences immune response.
Again, I agree that vaccines do not cause autism. But there is a public health danger in stigmatizing legitimate discourse around the relationship between immunology and autism. Keyboard warriors who think they’re quasi-scientists simply because they hate RFK and who paint with too broad a brushstroke risk creating a culture where researchers will conclude it’s simply too fraught to look into the relationship between autism and the immune system.