Suspected measles in St. Mary's

Chris0nllyn

Well-Known Member
More stuff that is coming out about the reverse/adverse effects of vaccines, but I will refrain for now.

No it's not.

They are why the Americas were polio-free by the 90s.
They are why hundreds of Americans per year no longer die from Measles.

The World Health Organization, American Academy of Pediatrics, CDC, American Academy of Family Physicians, and a number of international health organizations all agree that vaccines are necessary and not dangerous. Vaccines are not why your daughter has MS. It sucks, but please, for the sake of their own kids, talk to them about getting their kids vaccinated. They risk not only their own health, but the health of young kids who aren't vaccinated yet.

This anti-vaxxer's son was hospitalized with measles.
Nerius doesn't blame his parents for not vaccinating him. He says they were believers in alternativemedicine, and in the 1980s, there was no Internet where they could double-check what they were being told by anti-vaxxers.

But today's parents have no excuse, he said. They can go to the American Academy of Pediatrics' website or a multitude of other sites to learn that vaccines are safe and keep children healthy.

"The science on this has been settled. It's been solved. When I look at where we are today, with people who are willfully deciding to ignore the facts, it really frustrates me," Nerius said. "I just don't understand the mindset of people who want to spread fear."

This 6 year old spent 8 weeks in the hospital after getting tetnus because his parents didn't want to give him the vaccine.
The boy’s parents reportedly cleaned and stitched his cut at home. Roughly a week later, the boy began to cry as his limbs involuntarily spasmed and his jaw began to clench tight.

After his neck and back began to arch and he started to experience spasms across his entire body, his parents then sought medical help for the child.
Excluding the costs of air transportation, inpatient rehabilitation and ambulatory follow-ups, inpatient charges for the boy totaled $811,929.
But despite “extensive review of the risks and benefits of tetanus vaccination by physicians,” the boy’s parents declined a second dose of the tetanus-fighting medication and “any other recommended immunizations.”
 
I'm sure all of us born in the 50s and 60s have this vaccine circle/mark on our upper arm. I can't remember what it was for? Anyone remember?
I think that was smallpox vaccine.

I remember back in the 50s when the polio vaccine came out. The entire town came to a mass inoculation at the local school. We were given sugar cubes with a drop of med on it.

Had a friend growing up that had polio. It was tough for him, but he did ok. He liked nice cars and trucks, but was a terrible driver. He got the nickname "Crash".
 

mitzi

Well-Known Member
I think that was smallpox vaccine.

I remember back in the 50s when the polio vaccine came out. The entire town came to a mass inoculation at the local school. We were given sugar cubes with a drop of med on it.

Had a friend growing up that had polio. It was tough for him, but he did ok. He liked nice cars and trucks, but was a terrible driver. He got the nickname "Crash".

Yes, I remember that about the polio vaccine too.
 
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