It would be difficult to do an entirely unbiased study because of the reasons that people choose not to vaccinate and the type of lifestyle than a majority of non-vaccinating parents live. At least any large meaningful study.
10/25/2011 1:46:24 PM
10/25/2011 1:47:10 PM
10/25/2011 1:48:50 PM
Won't it be funny one day if we find out that this obsession with everyone getting the flu shot yearly turns out to be speeding up the progression of a super-bug version of the flu, similar to how antibiotics are creating their own super bugs?There is certainly a whole lot of legitimate debate in this area about minor-vaccines and the desire to limit the medical chemicals we pump into our and our infant children's bodies. I just hate it that the moon-bat anti-everything vaccine people have such strong opinions that result in the other side taking just as strong an opinion of anyone that has any sort of reservation about vaccines. Just so you know, you sound as stupid as the moon-bats on the other side.
10/25/2011 1:50:15 PM
10/25/2011 1:52:52 PM
10/25/2011 1:54:57 PM
10/25/2011 1:55:57 PM
10/25/2011 1:57:36 PM
10/25/2011 1:58:30 PM
^ This. I'm pretty sure you have several thousand homeschooled children in the Triad/Triangle areas, but non-vaccinated homeschooled kids? I doubt even the more fringe parents on the left and right are going to go against medical science on this, especially because their children tend to do just as many extracurricular activities as the general public school population and will probably be entering a higher form of education at some point that requires it.
10/25/2011 2:00:19 PM
10/25/2011 2:00:25 PM
^x8 I see what you are trying to point out.However, gaining immunity to viruses through vaccine is very different than bacteria evolving to become resistant to antibiotics.[Edited on October 25, 2011 at 2:01 PM. Reason : ;]
10/25/2011 2:00:34 PM
10/25/2011 2:01:21 PM
10/25/2011 2:03:46 PM
You know, eating food that is grilled over charcoal contains carcinogens. So do burning candles that you get from Yankee Candle. Plastics used in discount water bottles also contain traces of chemicals that can result in forms of cancer down the road if the bottle is reused.The number of "can cause..." is large, but trying to prove that just because something exists that it is a statistically significant risk is a completely different matter. People don't seem to grasp that everything is a statistical game (if you're an engineering student on here, I hope you already understand that). What a lot of people forget is that just because a test shows something could happen, it doesn't mean it is worth-while to actually act on those findings.BTW, TULIP, you just stated an NC law as if it supported what you were saying, then made a wild claim. I'm not sure that flies in a lot of people's book. How do you figure that an NC law suggests that there are thousands in the triangle area that withhold vaccinations from their children? On what basis are you stating that just because you found a website with a hundred users that it proves there are thousands who agree?[Edited on October 25, 2011 at 2:23 PM. Reason : .]
10/25/2011 2:21:13 PM
10/25/2011 2:29:00 PM
Should probably compare to see how many of them get infected with measles and whooping cough outbreaks as well while we're at it.
10/25/2011 2:31:47 PM
^That rate is already known, because the diseases we vaccinate against are tracked whenever they appear, and we know how many people who got the disease were not vaccinated. We study that well.We know the probability and severity of contracting the disease without vaccination. That side of the cost-benefit analysis is done. But you can't make an informed decision with only one side of the CBA filled in. The probability and severity of adverse outcomes from vaccination is entirely unknown.
10/25/2011 2:34:36 PM
Alright, TULIP, you're over-thinking this way too much. The idea that you can "assume" that there are dozens or hundreds of people out there who agree with every one person online is just plain stupid. Ever seen an online-only poll and realized that the results didn't correlate with what comes out in polls taken through in-person interviews and telephone surveys? You can't say that the internet represents a balanced ratio to the outside world anymore than you can claim the population at Wal-Mart or Target is an appropriate cross-section of a community.Regardless, all you have is this "assumption" that there are thousands of people in the triangle that are withholding medical preventative treatments from their children. Pretty bold assertion, but that's your option to make it. Now prove it.BTW, as I stated twice, you could always try "researching" your local doctors and asking them instead of Googling. They probably know a lot more about the subject than you do. Claiming you are doing research without asking "subject matter experts" is just retarded.
10/25/2011 2:35:20 PM
I'm sure you could find someone at ECU, Duke, or UNC that would gladly talk with you about the research that has been done (or not done) on vaccinations as well. They're quite approachable when it comes to this sort of thing I've found.And again, why all the hubbub on things like vaccines and not on things like ultrasounds? I just don't get it.
10/25/2011 2:37:34 PM
Another thing that just dawned upon me: we have a biomedical engineering department that, at least when I was attending, did a lot of research on medical materials including hypodermic needles. Have you even thought to ask one of the people that your taxes and tuition money pays/paid for?
10/25/2011 2:43:10 PM
10/25/2011 2:44:48 PM
just got my flu shot.I might still get the flu this year, but my chances just improved on not getting it.If you don't get a flu shot, I hope you get lucky and avoid the flu-- I have no problem with your choice. I get them annually if I get around to it. Some years I don't. It's really not a big deal.I only take issue with those people who fall for, and perpetuate misinformation.
10/25/2011 2:46:18 PM
10/25/2011 2:46:26 PM
10/25/2011 2:48:08 PM
10/25/2011 2:49:32 PM
10/25/2011 2:51:05 PM
10/25/2011 2:54:07 PM
it's really pretty simple.What's the risk to your kid of something bad happening due to a vaccine?Compare that with what would happen if your kid contract the disease that they weren't vaccinated for.Hib meningitis is a horrible, nasty way to die. and preventable.
10/25/2011 2:56:02 PM
10/25/2011 2:57:20 PM
10/25/2011 2:58:55 PM
You do realize that studies on side-effects versus primary effects are performed by the parma companies and those results must be provided to the FDA, right? I mean, we can all b*tch about the government, but you can't just bring a medical product to market without understanding the side effects.I mean, if I didn't know better, I would think you were claiming that we might be causing more people to go autistic than would be afflicted of MMR or hepatitis if we simply didn't vaccinate.
10/25/2011 3:00:42 PM
10/25/2011 3:01:55 PM
10/25/2011 3:04:50 PM
"I don't believe the studies out there, but I do believe that MMR doesn't pose a greater risk than any other vaccine. I think that there are thousands out there who don't get vaccinated and there's a good chance they are just as protected as any of us...............but I'm going to get my child vaccinated. Don't worry, to prevent against autism and these other side-effects, I'm going to delay the schedule, but still pump my kid full of these autism-causing vaccinations."Alright, just want to make sure I understood the Cliffs Notes of your position.
10/25/2011 3:06:18 PM
10/25/2011 3:10:27 PM
10/25/2011 3:19:07 PM
I was referring to a study where you actually control the groups, experimentally deny vaccines to the same type of people. That is unethical. Polling large groups isn't unethical; it's pointless.It has already been done, they have already been published. You still are unconvinced, and for good reason.[Edited on October 25, 2011 at 3:30 PM. Reason : .]
10/25/2011 3:29:56 PM
10/25/2011 3:36:33 PM
Seems to me like you don't want to have any further words because you're not interested actually discovering a "truth"... you are just trying to have an argument and win it. Here is my proof. Your last statement was:
10/25/2011 3:46:31 PM
Unfortunately, unvaccinated children have a great deal of other things that make them a rather homogenous group and sets them apart from their vaccinated counterparts. That's why I believe that you'd have a difficult time doing a proper study. The kinds of people who decide not to vaccinate their children are also the kinds of parents who don't use products containing artificial dyes or preservatives, products with HFC, meats with hormones or antibiotics, produce with pesticides. . .they go organic, they go natural, they tend to seek out alternative education, they use homeopathic drugs and herbal supplements. . .the anti-vax community is just different from the general population. Now I'm not saying that you cannot find vaccinated children who lead the same lifestyle, but I am saying that you'd have a hard time finding a large enough population to do a sound study where you are able to control all of the variables. For all we know, it's not the vaccines but the arsenic in apple juice.
10/25/2011 5:16:53 PM
Actually, there have been studies showing vaccines don't play a role in autism.After The Lancet published the horrible paper, many people researched the subject.
10/25/2011 6:00:49 PM
re autism:
10/25/2011 6:55:25 PM
10/25/2011 8:06:06 PM
10/25/2011 8:31:54 PM
10/25/2011 8:58:34 PM
10/25/2011 11:36:45 PM
I haven't read anything after the first page, because all the posts seemed to be saying the same thing. One thing to consider.Newborn babies generally aren't that neat. I just had one a year ago. Once you get beyond the "miracle of birth" stuff, then they basically just lay there and sleep. So, when you go to see those babies, you are not really doing it for yourself, you are doing it for the parents of that baby. You are doing it because they (especially she) just went through an amazing experience. Although you weren't there to share it with them, and although "if you've seen one newborn baby you've seen them all", and although there baby(ies) are just the same as any other newborn(s).... you are there to make those parents (your friends) feel like they are awesome, and they just had the most amazing little babies that ever popped out of a woman. You are there to be a friend, and help out with whatever is needed. Maybe bring a meal, or let their dogs out, or scoop a litterbox, or water plants - but I can promise you, especially if this is their first children, than you will do nothing more than stress them out in this already stressful time if you try to fight them on this. Even if you are right (which I don't think you are), that mom and dad now have the two most important things in their lives laying in a little plastic box down the hall - any request, no matter how mundane or trivial it might seem to you, is anything but to them. Be a friend to these people. Stop being selfish and let this go - the worst thing that might happen to you is you get the flu. Big deal, we have all had it before and we'll all get it again. These parents now have something really important to worry about, and the last thing they need to do is have extra stuff like this to pile on.
10/26/2011 12:50:15 AM
^^ I always wanted to play in one of those as a kid
10/26/2011 8:20:29 AM
I'm against getting the flu shot personally...BUT if I had a baby with a weak immune system and the dr said I should get one...then I would get one.My best friend has a 6 month old. I'm going to visit this baby over Thanksgiving. If she told me that she would prefer for me to have the flu shot before I came to visit then I would get the flu shot. I wouldn't lie to her and tell her I got one just because I wanted to see her baby.
10/26/2011 9:00:37 AM