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The state of the antivaccine movement in the United States
PLOS Medicine ^
| 6/12/2018
| Jacqueline K. Olive, Peter J. Hotez , Ashish Damania, Melissa S. Nolan
Posted on 06/13/2018 5:10:04 PM PDT by spintreebob
A social movement of public health vaccine opposition has been growing in the United States in recent years; subsequently, measles outbreaks have also increased. Since 2009, the number of philosophical-belief vaccine nonmedical exemptions (NMEs) has risen in 12 of the 18 states that currently allow this policy:
Arkansas (AR), Arizona (AZ), Idaho (ID), Maine (ME), Minnesota (MN), North Dakota (ND), Ohio (OH), Oklahoma (OK), Oregon (OR), Pennsylvania (PA), Texas (TX), and Utah (UT).
Several US hotspot metropolitan areas stand out for their very large numbers of NMEs. They include Seattle, WA, Spokane, WA, and Portland, OR in the Northwest; Phoenix, AZ, Salt Lake City, UT, Provo, UT, Houston, TX, Fort Worth, TX, Plano, TX, and Austin, TX in the Southwest; Troy, MI, Warren, MI, Detroit, MI, and Kansas City, MO in the Midwest; and Pittsburgh, PA in the Northeast.
Additional smaller countiesespecially in ID, WI, and UTalso stand out for their high exemption rates.
(Excerpt) Read more at journals.plos.org ...
TOPICS: Business/Economy; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: imunization; kidshealth; vaccination
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To: Manuel OKelley
....1400 word vocabulary at 2, becoming mutilingial at 2,started learning violin at 2.5, and basically at kindergarten level at 28 months. And physically absolutely beautiful (thanks mom) to the point many of our friends dont believe that jr. Is NOT a CRISPR baby (they exist in our peer group)...
************************************************
LOL CRISPR babies in your peer group? Sure, we believe you. /sarc
41
posted on
06/13/2018 8:22:19 PM PDT
by
House Atreides
(BOYCOTT the NFL, its products and players 100% - PERMANENTLY)
To: piytar
There’s a huge difference between material objects and altering your immune system or cell structure.
42
posted on
06/13/2018 8:32:20 PM PDT
by
Bulwyf
To: Yaelle
Now that Ive had four, you will not be surprised to learn that only the vaccinated baby had constant ear infections and colds. The unvaccinated kids were never sick. Just anecdotal, but it was my anecdote so I see something to that.
You're not the only one with such anecdotes. My older kids were vaccinated until the schedule started becoming ridiculous. None of them had reactions that I remember. My 5th kid had a bad reaction to one of his first vaccinations and we stopped after that for all of them. My oldest boy, who got the most vaccinations, has asthma and allergies. The one who had the bad reaction has dyslexia and developmental/behavioral issues. The rest, who received few vaccinations/had no reactions, are all fine.
So again, these are just anecdotes. But the number of kids out there with asthma, serious food allergies, ASDs, and other neurological and gastrointestinal issues is staggering. Something we're doing is very, very wrong.
43
posted on
06/13/2018 8:42:48 PM PDT
by
Antoninus
("In Washington, swamp drain you.")
To: Mom MD
I appreciate that you are an MD. Thank Gd for all doctors who care about their patients. I personally am grateful to medicine and wouldnt be here without it.
But this is what I am talking about: you can prevent group strep b exposure in the baby, and at the same time increase babys and your health if he does get exposed somehow, so that he wont be in the tiny fraction of babies with strep b colonization with serious sequelae like meningitis.
https://www.naturalbirthandbabycare.com/prevent-group-b-strep/
Im sure not your cup of tea, but it is a way to maximize babys health.
44
posted on
06/13/2018 8:43:36 PM PDT
by
Yaelle
To: Antoninus
But the number of kids out there with asthma, serious food allergies, ASDs, and other neurological and gastrointestinal issues is staggering. Something we're doing is very, very wrong. Exactly. Best at this point to listen to a 4000 year old doctor and First, Do No Harm.
45
posted on
06/13/2018 8:45:15 PM PDT
by
Yaelle
To: Mom MD
Real science would let your child die of hemophilus meningitis at 6 mos old because they were waiting until what you scientists think is a safe age to vaccinate. Right
Until you geniuses in the medical community come up with a viable, testable, predictable reason why so many kids suddenly have dangerous allergies, asthma, autism, and other serious neurological conditions that weren't this common in past generations, you're going to have parents looking for other answers. The anti-vax thing didn't just spring out of thin air. It was built upon a basic distrust of the average person for medical and scientific professionals who don't have good answers for their kids' problems.
46
posted on
06/13/2018 8:51:37 PM PDT
by
Antoninus
("In Washington, swamp drain you.")
To: Antoninus
Until you geniuses in the medical community come up with a viable, testable, predictable reason why so many kids suddenly have dangerous allergies, asthma, autism, and other serious neurological conditions...
The geniuses in the medical community have come up with a way for kids to live long enough to get allergies, etc. It's called vaccines. Most kids in times past didn't live long enough to worry about allergies. Thankfully, they do now.
To: spintreebob
Today’s irony: If not for vaccines, most of the people arguing against vaccines would be dead now.
To: House Atreides
Laugh all you want but it’s not beyond the reach of most of the uppper middle class if you go to south Korea or Thailand
Couple hundred thousand ia nothing to a lot of people who waited until their forties to have children
If we have another that’s definitely part of the plan but it’s ok...your kids can work for mine
To: Manuel OKelley
Sorry Manuel, its CURRENTLY extant for humans only in your imagination. And you should know that Free Republic has many people with finely tuned Bullshit detectors.
50
posted on
06/13/2018 10:51:10 PM PDT
by
House Atreides
(BOYCOTT the NFL, its products and players 100% - PERMANENTLY)
To: Engraved-on-His-hands
The geniuses in the medical community have come up with a way for kids to live long enough to get allergies, etc. It's called vaccines. Most kids in times past didn't live long enough to worry about allergies. Thankfully, they do now.
Tell me, has life expectancy increased much since 1980s? At that point, kids were expected to less than a dozen childhood inoculations. Now, we're up to...what? 50? 60? And we're vaccinating against things are not life-threatening for those with healthy immune systems, or are difficult to get if you live a normal lifestyle. Sorry, but I don't believe that putting that many foreign agents into an otherwise healthy developing body is a good idea.
51
posted on
06/14/2018 6:36:21 AM PDT
by
Antoninus
("In Washington, swamp drain you.")
To: spintreebob
Also, these “hotbed” states mentioned are full of illegal aliens and their non citizen anchor baby children. But let’s just blame the anti-vax American parents who resist the poison.
SS1
52
posted on
06/14/2018 10:15:12 AM PDT
by
Spitzensparkin1
(Arrest and deport illegal aliens. Americans demand those jobs back! MAGA!)
To: spintreebob
This works for a while, until herd immunity goes down.
53
posted on
06/14/2018 10:17:00 AM PDT
by
HiTech RedNeck
(Tryin' hard to win the No-Bull Prize.)
To: Spitzensparkin1
But at the same time — are THOSE people anti-vaxxers? All the health care welfare spent on them, don’t they have the vaccinations?
54
posted on
06/14/2018 10:18:06 AM PDT
by
HiTech RedNeck
(Tryin' hard to win the No-Bull Prize.)
To: Antoninus
The agents still get there, it’s in a different manner.
There will always be tensions about vaccination programs. Enough people exempting themselves from the herd, and herd immunity goes down. Virtue signaling, however, never made a single virus go away.
55
posted on
06/14/2018 10:22:59 AM PDT
by
HiTech RedNeck
(Tryin' hard to win the No-Bull Prize.)
To: Antoninus
I wonder if high vaccination compliance is often tied to a super-sanitary mindset, in which kids are highly discouraged from playing around in dirt and doing other things by which they might see small doses of environmental pollutants sufficient to serve as natural inoculations against allergies.
56
posted on
06/14/2018 10:25:38 AM PDT
by
HiTech RedNeck
(Tryin' hard to win the No-Bull Prize.)
To: Mom MD
My mother told me that when they announced the polio vaccine, they rang the church bells.
57
posted on
06/14/2018 10:33:13 AM PDT
by
PLMerite
("They say that we were Cold Warriors. Yes, and a bloody good show, too." - Robert Conquest)
To: HiTech RedNeck
The agents still get there, its in a different manner.
True. But take the chicken pox vaccination as an example. If a child gets chicken pox naturally, he's got lifetime immunity, almost guaranteed. With the vaccine, he will need to get regular boosters or his immunity may wear off. In this case, at least, the immunity conferred by a natural infection ends up being better than that from the vaccine. One wonders if that's the case for some other vaccines as well.
That said, I do agree that for illnesses that have higher rates of death and disabilities associated with them, it's better to get the shot. No one would suggest it's better to get something like polio naturally.
58
posted on
06/14/2018 11:16:55 AM PDT
by
Antoninus
("In Washington, swamp drain you.")
To: Antoninus
Older methods of warding off smallpox involved inducing a mild chicken pox infection.
A major tenet of modern medicine is that it’s better to control something than not to control it. Controlling something automatically implies a science. But the option to get so much chicken pox “inoculation” that one comes down with a mild case, is ruled out by modern medicine as unethical. What to do, what to do. It’s a conundrum. Universal vaccination opponents have some great points to make. But I could also hope to be heard when I ask them please don’t take their natural chicken pox cases to me.
59
posted on
06/14/2018 11:25:14 AM PDT
by
HiTech RedNeck
(Tryin' hard to win the No-Bull Prize.)
To: Spitzensparkin1
Again supports my Public Health Thesis.
Those in the US of Mexican ancestry have the best/lowest birth mortality and maternal mortality rates at one end, the the best longevity at the other end, of any demographic group, better than whites, who are better than Asians, who are better than Blacks, who are better than Native Americans.
And they have the highest rate of uninsured of any demographic group.
And they have the highest rate and numbers of people who qualify for welfare, Medicaid/S-CHIP and reject it.
Don’t let these facts destroy the navigator’s fantasies of being needed.
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