Satori Rae wrote: » I'm not sure why you would want to believe a doctor who steals the blood of children and may I add got fired, or trust people with no knowledge of medical knowledge or made up sites people put up online saying it's things are true with no facts at all...... I don't understand any of you. You claim its for the interest of your children I worked a year as part of my training on a children's wards......heart breaking is seeing a child in a coma from brain swelling from a accident ......do you know how some children can die from meseals? ??One of the symptoms is brain swelling something that you can help prevent via vaccination ......I just don't know how you can risk your lives.....your kids and others. ...you also put old people,babies and pregnant mothers at risk.Also if people did research about vaccines they would know how they work.......they don't stop you from getting something 100% but if you do get it....it will be easier to fight it off.
mulbot wrote: » Brain swelling can also occur from administering vaccines-i'm sure as a nurse you know what encephalitis is-i'll provide links now to keep you happy,you will need to look them up(M Blennow,Pediatrics 1989;84, p 62-67)
Satori Rae wrote: » I think from what I gleamed its being appealed also I read a few articles and that never came up in it. Also the evidence they relied on Wakefields scribblings was tossed out. Again a genetic disorder has nothing to do with vaccinations
Satori Rae wrote: » I do know what that is, side effects like that are extremely extremely rare if it happens 1 out of every 1 hundred thousand children might get a severe reaction none of them autism related. Also it can be a symptom of measles I just used a layman's term is all to make my point.
mulbot wrote: » I thought you had researched this? because all vaccines vaccines registered with the FDA have to carry a full script,do i need to put up more links- the Tripedia vaccine has a very clear warning about being aware of the patient's medical history before administering, and a genetic disorder is a very clear example of a situation where vaccination should be fully researched before being administered!!
gar32 wrote: » I would not go with Babies as I have now but when they are older off course. I think most of the vaccines are great but just not for a baby that is just getting the systems up to speed with all the usual bacteria around.
mulbot wrote: » Maybe you can explain the recent case in Italy where a court deemed that a vaccine made by GSK,was linked to autism.
mulbot wrote: » Actually Judge Nicola Di Leo determined that yes, the child had a genetic predisposition which made him more susceptible to the condition post-vaccination-
gar32 wrote: » This is a quote from the HTaP Vaccine hand out which is received when its given. In the Swedish efficacy trial where 1,419 recipients received the pertussis components in Tripedia vaccine, three deaths due to invasive bacterial infections occurred. Further investigation revealed no evidence for a causal relation between vaccination and altered resistance to invasive disease caused by encapsulated bacteria.33 While the hypothesis that the two variables are related cannot be ruled out in the Swedish trial, deaths due to invasive bacterial infections have been monitored in other trials. In contrast to the Swedish trial, in the German case-control study and US open-label safety study, 14,971 infants received Tripedia vaccine and no deaths due to invasive bacterial infections were reported.
mulbot wrote: » I'm sure you can find that yourself
ThisRegard wrote: » It may be a bit personal, but I'm sure those who don't vaccinate their children also don't use tampons as there's been definitive confirmation that they have lead to the death of people ?
ThisRegard wrote: » It's sorta my point. There's a focus on avoiding vaccines because of perceived dangers when in fact the very parents who do so partake in risks, some obvious, some less so, on a daily basis, that could result in the deaths of themselves or family.
Das Kitty wrote: » I could have saved my children that ordeal they suffered. That still feels very very wrong.
Jerrica wrote: » The judge, someone with scant scientific experience, over-ruled the Italian Ministry of Health in this case. So if you're prepared to believe the opinion of a judge (who, if you look at this case critically willingly ignored the medical testimonies of experts) over scientists then there's really going to be quite an impasse in this discussion. The judge has no proof of a causal relationship, they weighed up the evidence and made a(n alarmingly incorrect) judgement. Again, there is no proof of a vaccine causing autism in this case.
lazygal wrote: » I think GPs should recommend the chicken pox vaccine. I got it for mine because there are immune system issues in my family and when I was a child someone ended up in ICU because of it. Plus, why would you want a child to get a horrible illness that causes them so much difficulty and can scar them for life? For the price we paid it was worth it many times over, on the fact that we've not had to take leave or miss out on a pre-booked holiday which happened to someone I know. Then more importantly, they are safe. I would also recommend looking into the MenB vaccine. It is quite expensive but for peace of mind it is worth it.
Satori Rae wrote: » If this vaccine was available years upon years ago you can rest assured the lady this happened to and every other mother would be queuing up getting it.
Das Kitty wrote: » I think there's a lot about distrust of authority figures at the moment. Doctors and scientists and faceless pharmaceutical companies. Added to that that inoculations require needles to be passed through small babies' skin, causing them pain and discomfort. Even as someone who is staunchly pro-vaccine, it felt very very wrong to hold my baby down while someone pierced his legs with needles. My logical and emotional sides were in conflict. I cried. But it was over in a jiff and they were fine. On the other hand, both of my kids had chicken pox last year. The baby was only a few months old. The pain he was in was horrific. The temperature, the itching, the pock mark on his eardrum that perforated it, causing some hearing loss. That still hurts. I still feel wretched about it. Not least because I didn't know that the vaccine could be got in Ireland when they contracted the disease, and only found out after. I could have saved my children that ordeal they suffered. That still feels very very wrong.
Neyite wrote: » About 10% of children vaccinated for Chicken Pox still get a dose of it doing the rounds. I know someone who's child got it. Now, it seems that it was a dose that was slightly milder than other kids by the sounds of it which might be down to the vaccine, but then, CP can vary in severity depending on the child. That 10% was what my friend stated, so don't know where she got that figure from.
sleepyheadh wrote: » I wonder how many people who are staunch anti-vaxxers, had an epidural, whilst delivering their precious bundles of joy?