Would you say you have a risk-adverse personality?
Have you still not bought that Kevlar vest for your son?
My level of anxiety is higher when I'm in a car (driving or otherwise) than when I'm not.
A dead person does not require medical treatment for 75+ years either. I think the savings of not having to treat them for 75+ years probably balances out the costs in saving their life at age 1.
From the CDC website:
So up to 1 in 1000 will have a seizure from the fever caused by the vaccine?
Hmmm. I'm sure there's no days off work for that (and other) side-effects of the vaccine
Generally the NHS does not pay for complimentary or alternative medicine. Where it does I agree that it should be stopped and the money put to better use.
Appeal to authority, anyone? Don't think, don't ask questions, just DO AS YOUR TOLD! If you don't, your kids is going to be excluded from school. Then how much time off work are you going to have to take, eh?
Parents have a choice: they can let their children get chickenpox which has a low to moderate risk of serious complications, but give their children life-long immunity to the disease, or they can have them vaccinated, which will require future vaccinations every 10-20 years and, if enough children are vaccinated, increase the incidence of shingles for 60-80 years in those who have already had chickenpox.
Personally, I think the best policy would be to vaccinate 16 year-olds who have not had chickenpox, which amounts to about a 1/10th of the number of vaccinations compared to routine vaccination of all children. This would cut the number of deaths from chickenpox by about 75%, not increase the number of shingles cases and require less booster vaccinations. It would also cost about 1/10th to 1/30th of vaccinating all children against the disease, once the cost of 10-20 year booster vaccinations has been taken into account.