My daughter used to work in a medical clinic and a doctor told her that they are supposed to document any deaths of children that died within a certain time span of receiving a vaccination. She was told that most doctors never bother because they would end up doing much more paperwork. They usually chalk the death up to natural causes.
According to one WEB site, zero have died from measles in 10 years but 108 died from the vaccine. Given these numbers, if we are generous and quadruple this number to appease your daughter’s concerns. Heck, let us make it 400 a year, even 1000 a year, it is unlikely that her clinic experienced one death, given the number of clinics nationwide, resulting in any paper work.
Consider the other numbers as per the oracle wikipedia:
Between roughly 1855 and 2005, measles has been estimated to have killed about 200 million people worldwide.[73] Measles killed 20 percent of Hawaii’s population in the 1850s.[74] In 1875, measles killed over 40,000 Fijians, approximately one-third of the population.[75] In the 19th century, the disease killed 50% of the Andamanese population.[76] Seven to eight million children are thought to have died from measles each year before the vaccine was introduced.[11]
Seems like considerably more paper work. Heck, screw the paperwork and fire up the bulldozer and start burying them quick.
False statistics cover-up.
Stats
http://deathbyvaccination.com/
don’t forget what immunizations and meds have done to the mental health in addition to the physical health of our military.
The chart of deaths attributed to SIDS spikes at 2, 4 and 6 months of age. The ages when most receive their vaccinations.
I’m pretty ambivalent. My kids have had most of their vaccinations, but the youngest had a reaction that was listed as severe at 4 months, so she hasn’t had any since then. I’m not sure what is the best thing for her.