I always wondered if it was really a good idea to swoop in with all vaccines at once for newborns. Seems to me it’d be a better idea to wait a couple weeks between each shot.
Docs seem to think, unless you’re “immune compromised”, that the immune system is a sort of perpetual motion machine, that it responds without variance regardless of input.
My brother and his wife are actual anti-vaxers. SIL has been involved with RFK for many years regarding this.
They have three sons, ages 21,16, and 12, and I don’t think they’re ever sick. (One conveniently has a stomach ache on Sundays just before church, which miraculously disappears at noon. Dad called it “Sundayitis”.)
“I always wondered if it was really a good idea to swoop in with all vaccines at once for newborns. Seems to me it’d be a better idea to wait a couple weeks between each shot.”
Exactly.
It has been 50 years, but I did take a course in proper vaccine administration. IIRC, the body needs some time to react to the vaccine, it is a month, or so. The body ramps up interferon and blocks any reaction to additional challenges, and this takes a while to wear off.
Of course, your “vaccines” are not given by doctors these days, more like a HS dropout, so none of this applies any more.......
“I always wondered if it was really a good idea to swoop in with all vaccines at once for newborns. Seems to me it’d be a better idea to wait a couple weeks between each shot.”
you’re 100% correct: it’s completely insane to inject dozens of different antigens all at once into infants whose immune systems are in the early stages of development ...