as our descent back into the Middle Ages continuesRe: as our descent back into the Middle Ages continuesAnti-vaccination sentiment running high in private schools.
http://www.sfgate.com/news/article/AP-E ... 851495.php
Re: as our descent back into the Middle Ages continuesPrivate and home schooled kids are too special to get sick.
Re: as our descent back into the Middle Ages continues
Are the bookies running odds for when the first epidemic strikes?
Re: as our descent back into the Middle Ages continues
That's not first-in-the-nation, Washington state already requires this if you are taking a personal exemption (you don't have to do it if you claim a religious exemption). I had Eddie in daycare twice a week for a month while my husband started a new job several hours away, and I had to make a 45 minute trip to the pediatricians office to get the paperwork signed because we are delaying the Hep B vaccine. It was a pretty big PIA at the time.
Re: as our descent back into the Middle Ages continuesPretty insane. Back to the early 20th century, like when my father was born in 1910, when epidemic diseases, like whooping cough were common. Or even pre 1954, when I was born and the polio vaccine was not around.
Re: as our descent back into the Middle Ages continues
Not all vaccines are equal. I choose to do most vaccines on time. It's great that we have options, and it's great that diseases like polio have been almost eliminated. The latest whooping cough vaccine is not very effective. We're having a major epidemic of it up here is WA, and the vaccination rates for it are higher than ever. The vaccinated kids are getting it at the same, or worse, rates than the unvaccinated kids. They're also the ones spreading it around, because they get less sick when they get it, so they often don't know they have it, and keep showing up for school/work/daycare. The CDC is investigating whether or not improperly stored and expired vaccines are contributing to the outbreak here. FWIW we did all of the pertussis shots on time, even making a special appointment for the 15-month shot. I'm not anti-vaccine, but I also don't demonize parents who make an educated decision about delaying or skipping some shots. The vast majority of readers on this message board had only a fraction of the vaccines that kids today do. That's not a bad thing, but it's not all a good thing either. Most of us have a natural immunity to chicken pox. It's going to be interesting to see how well the chicken pox vaccine provides a lifetime of protection. Adults tend to be very bad about getting routine booster shots. I would rather my kid get a natural immunity to chicken pox, but if they don't by the time they are 10-12 we'll get the vaccine. No one in our family has ever had a bad reaction to chicken pox. How many of you are up to date on your Tdap? How many of you even know off the top of your head how often you are supposed to get it?
Re: as our descent back into the Middle Ages continuesUsually one equates private schools with better education. Obviously not so much. To allow your child to get immunized from a disease by contracting it naturally, rather than through vaccination, shows that the autism/vaccine paranoia still lives on. I just contracted Shingles. I was about to get vaccinated. Wish I had been, as I think the side effects would have been easier than the disease.
Re: as our descent back into the Middle Ages continues
My child has not had every vaccine they are supposed to at this age, and I am not the least bit concerned about autism. Not everyone who chooses to not blindly follow the AAP is blindly rejecting all vaccines, or doing it because of autism fears. I would suggest that the vaccination rate is lower _because_ the parents are more educated, but I don't actually know that. However, I don't think it majorly infringes on your personal liberty to have to consult with a doctor or nurse before opting out. You don't _have_ to send your child to daycare or school, and most pediatricians will just sign the form after making sure you are somewhat aware of the risks of opting out.
Re: as our descent back into the Middle Ages continuesAnd then there's fluoride:
<<....It's a dental story told so often it borders on cliche. When someone moves to Portland from another state - and that's most people you meet in this city of transplants - their new dentist takes one look at their excellent teeth and concludes they must have been raised elsewhere, a place that puts fluoride in its drinking water....>> Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/nation/article/Po ... z26Hu807p5
Re: as our descent back into the Middle Ages continuesI have heard some pretty wacko stuff about fluoride. My fave is that the nazis used fluoride to make their prisoners more docile, and that the government puts it in our water to make us more docile
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Chicken pox hardly ever represents a major problem. I could count on fingers of one hand all cases of chicken pox encephalitis I encountered in 1/2 century. The problem with your attitude of trying to cherry pick standards is that it may (perhaps, if you are lucky) work on an individual case, but as a herd immunity is concerned, the system breaks down when too many people think that way. You probably know more about the stats and problems with pertussis vaccination in Washington State, that is not something I would comment on, but I would still say that properly vaccinated population has a better chance of not getting massively infected than the one that is not. I have seen bad cases of pertussis, I have seen diphteria, it is not a pretty sight. Lastly a response to jeremyp. Too bad you did not get the shot early enough, zoster is a bitch. Hopefully it will not become neuralgic. BTW, I did get the shot once it became available.
That was bromide
Re: as our descent back into the Middle Ages continues
Here's a serious question about fluoride, though. The health benefit comes from teeth getting exposure to fluoride. And potential health concerns come from fluoride being digested. So wouldn't it make much more sense to just put the fluoride into toothpaste instead of into the drinking water?
Re: as our descent back into the Middle Ages continues
I am not anti-pertussis vaccine. It's a bitch to get pertussis at any age if you are not vaccinated. A friend my age recently got it and it was not fun. We all, everyone in my extended family plus the kid, got vaccinated. Generally the vaccinated get a milder form of the disease. I am anti-blaming those who chose not to get the vaccine for the latest outbreak, when the evidence (at least locally) says otherwise. I think the outbreak here is actually far worse than the CDC knows. Only the fairly bad cases are getting tested. I think a lot of kids are getting pertussis and no one realizes it. Heck, my kid had a cough off and on for months that we never got checked out. I think it was probably just allergies, but I can't say for sure that he did not have a mild case of pertussis.
Fluoride, bromide... they both end in "ide" so close enough, right
Re: as our descent back into the Middle Ages continues
"Opt-out" indicates that if parents don't get active one way or the other, then the child gets vaccinated. If that's correct, then out of those that get their children vaccinated, some do because they think it's the right decision, other because they don't make any decision at all. So if this is really "opt-out", then the actual number of vaccination supporters among parents may be significantly smaller than it initially seems.
Re: as our descent back into the Middle Ages continuesPeople in private schools usually are, but are these parents making these decisions because they are really educated about vaccines or because they follow the herd? Do we really want to see contagions again? Who is driving the "no vaccines" mantra anyway? It would be interesting to know. http://bigthink.com/age-of-engagement/t ... h?page=all
Re: as our descent back into the Middle Ages continueshaving had more years of school and "being educated" are, of course, two completely different things. If you close your mind to science, doesn't matter how many years you spend in school or hhow high your grade-point is.
Re: as our descent back into the Middle Ages continues
Interestingly, some of the best graduate students don't have great gpa's. We are so swamped with information now, the real skill required is to be able to separate the wheat from the chaff. From what I have seen in the news, the anti-vaccination camp perpetuate some of the flawed reasoning as 'truth'.
Re: as our descent back into the Middle Ages continues
Right now the evidence leads to the firm conclusion that vaccines do not cause autism. Yet, if history is any guide, the myth that they do cause autism will likely endure even in the face of increasing contradictory evidence. http://www.csicop.org/si/show/anti-vaccination_movement
Re: as our descent back into the Middle Ages continues
That's correct; and people closing their mind to science can be found on both sides of this issue.
Re: as our descent back into the Middle Ages continues
Both sides?
Re: as our descent back into the Middle Ages continuesMost people today who delay/decline vaccines are not citing autism as a reason. But if it makes you feel better to paint us all as uneducated hysterical idiots, go ahead.
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Exactly; just because a small group bases their decision on that autism nonsense shouldn't take away from the valid reasons that exist.
Re: as our descent back into the Middle Ages continuesI believe that the real issue here was the implication of some sort of even-handed division of opinion ("on both sides of the issue") by the scientific establishment. I don't believe that exists.
Re: as our descent back into the Middle Ages continuesWho knew? A 1986 federal law created a "vaccine court"
http://www.sfgate.com/default/article/P ... 894230.php
Re: as our descent back into the Middle Ages continues
I did viewtopic.php?p=626659#p626659
Re: as our descent back into the Middle Ages continuesshingles part of this discussion moved over to the geezer-shots thread, which was moving in that direction at the same time.
Re: as our descent back into the Middle Ages continueshttp://seattletimes.com/html/localnews/ ... gh30m.html
That's not 76% of parents are vaccinating against pertussis in WA, the % is much higher than that. That's 76% of kids with pertussis are fully up to date on their pertussis shots.
Re: as our descent back into the Middle Ages continues
The key here is that there are unvaccinated kids that have a far greater chance of contrating the disease and spreading it. The whole point of vaccination is to reduce the chance of this. As you get fewer kids vaccinated then there will be a greater chance of an outbreak. I have not been following this on the news. Just how large is the problem in Washington State? It's hard to judge from % figures. Edit: I just read the article and it says 10 times higher number of cases than normal. Is this a cluster of cases? Possibly a more virulent strain?
Re: as our descent back into the Middle Ages continuesVaccination rates in WA for pertussis are higher than they have ever been. The current vaccine is less effective than in the past. There are also reports that many doctors were storing it improperly.
Vaccinated kids who get pertussis are less sick than unvaccinated kids and sometimes it does not have the "whoop" sound to it. My hypothesis is that the vaccinated kids are the ones spreading it because they are less likely to stay home from school because the parents think they just have a cold, that it couldn't be whooping cough. I also strongly suspect that the number of cases is being under reported, that the mildest cases are not being treated/tested. I would have loved to see the CDC drop some $ to test everyone in hard hit areas who had cold symptoms. I'm not anti-vaccine. My kid and my whole extended family are up to date on pertussis shots. The outbreak is worse in some areas than others but it is a problem in almost every county in the state, and expected to get worse now that school has resumed, and the perpetual rain should return soon.
Re: as our descent back into the Middle Ages continues
Sounds like an interesting example. I expect we'll be hearing a lot of different expert opinions on what is happening soon enough.
Re: as our descent back into the Middle Ages continues
The eventual CDC summary should be most interesting.
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