Vaccine/autism CT discussion

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Good for you. Whatever. SMH.

Nothing to say about the fact that two of the MMR studies I cited (including one of the biggest) involved comparing children who had the MMR jab vs those who hadn't? And TSRs point about MMR never containing thimerosal?
 
What is super scary is that you cannot figure out why this is so.

Yeah sure. But it's okay to require the less healthy children to get the vaccine.

Isn't likely that the less healthy 60% of the children would be more susceptible to negative reactions when given vaccines?

Shouldn't the threshold of requiring vaccines be that they are at least as healthy as the study group?


Maybe the less healthy 60% of the children are more prone to be stricken with autism.

What is that, some sort of upside down control group policy? We're not allowing 60% of the children participate
in the study because it make the results worse?
Would allowing only the healthiest 50% participate in the survey make the results worse?
Would allowing only the healthiest 60% participate in the survey make the results worse?
Would allowing only the healthiest 70% participate in the survey make the results worse?
Would allowing only the healthiest 80% participate in the survey make the results worse?
Would allowing only the healthiest 90% participate in the survey make the results worse?

I wonder at which threshold the instances of negative responses might begin spiking?

I wonder if parents are ever informed that their children, when getting a vaccine, are not healthy enough to participate in a vaccine study?
 
Yeah sure. But it's okay to require the less healthy children to get the vaccine.
After the trial is over and the vaccine is approved for use.

Isn't likely that the less healthy 60% of the children would be more susceptible to negative reactions when given vaccines?
Sounds like someone has absolutely no clue how or why experimental trials work. It's likely that their reactions during the test will not actually be because of the medication being tested. Hence why healthy test subjects are chosen. Is the concept of controlling your variables in an experimental study too difficult for you to comprehend?

Shouldn't the threshold of requiring vaccines be that they are at least as healthy as the study group?
No, because that makes no sense.

What is that, some sort of upside down control group policy? We're not allowing 60% of the children participate
in the study because it make the results worse?
Would allowing only the healthiest 50% participate in the survey make the results worse?
Would allowing only the healthiest 60% participate in the survey make the results worse?
Would allowing only the healthiest 70% participate in the survey make the results worse?
Would allowing only the healthiest 80% participate in the survey make the results worse?
Would allowing only the healthiest 90% participate in the survey make the results worse?
It has nothing to do with 'better' or 'worse.' It has to do with being able to establish the cause for whatever negative result may come up. If you've got a subject who isn't healthy and has some sort of reaction, you have no idea if it's the result of the medication or because of a pre-existing ailment. This would invalidate any of the conclusions of the experiment, or at the very least make the results questionable and the medication likely wouldn't be approved.

I wonder if parents are ever informed that their children, when getting a vaccine, are not healthy enough to participate in a vaccine study?
I'm not sure why you think it should matter.
 
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Also ignoring the fact that the Sweden study:

From page 4 here.


Page 2
AUTISM RESEARCH AT THE NICHD
2
Why do people think
that vaccines can
cause autism?
Some parents and families of children with
autism believe that the Measles/Mumps/
Rubella (MMR) vaccine caused their children’s
autism. These parents report that their
children were “normal” until they received the
MMR vaccine. Then, after getting the vaccine,
their children started showing symptoms of
autism. Because the symptoms of autism begin
to occur around the same time as the child’s
MMR vaccination, parents and families see the
vaccine as the cause of the autism. However,
just because the events happen around the
same time does not mean that one caused the
other. Although children receive many other
vaccines in addition to the MMR vaccine,
these other vaccines have not been identified as
possible causes of autism.
These parents’ beliefs and observations were
reinforced by a small study of bowel disease
and autism, published by Wakefield and his
colleagues in 1998 (Wakefield et al 1998).

reinforced reinforced reinforced

Understand that parents noticed their children had a negative reaction to the MMR vaccine prior to Wakefield/1998. And that it likely took many, many parents NOTICING long before 1998 to make Wakefield become concerned enough to take on a study of a possible connection between MMR and autism.
 
Ummm. So? Stupid people trying to find something to blame got their wish via a corrupt study. The parents were in no way being scientific, they just latched onto something to blame besides their own genetics.
 
reinforced reinforced reinforced

Understand that parents noticed their children had a negative reaction to the MMR vaccine prior to Wakefield/1998. And that it likely took many, many parents NOTICING long before 1998 to make Wakefield become concerned enough to take on a study of a possible connection between MMR and autism.

This is a horrendously dishonest cherrypick. You completely fail to take note of the other statements made in the text you've quoted.

These parents report that their children were “normal” until they received the MMR vaccine. Then, after getting the vaccine, their children started showing symptoms of autism. Because the symptoms of autism begin to occur around the same time as the child’s MMR vaccination, parents and families see the vaccine as the cause of the autism.
derp.
 
After the trial is over and the vaccine is approved for use.


Sounds like someone has absolutely no clue how or why experimental trials work. It's likely that their reactions during the test will not actually be because of the medication being tested. Hence why healthy test subjects are chosen. Is the concept of controlling your variables in an experimental study too difficult for you to comprehend?


No, because that makes no sense.


It has nothing to do with 'better' or 'worse.' It has to do with being able to establish the cause for whatever negative result may come up. If you've got a subject who isn't healthy and has some sort of reaction, you have no idea if it's the result of the medication or because of a pre-existing ailment. This would invalidate any of the conclusions of the experiment, or at the very least make the results questionable and the medication likely wouldn't be approved.


I'm not sure why you think it should matter.

Being unhealthy doesn't necessarily mean you have an ailment. I just believe excluding 60% hides a lot of potential negative reactions that would have nothing to do with pre-existing ailments.
 
Being unhealthy doesn't necessarily mean you have an ailment.
I'm not going to play semantic games with you.

I just believe
Fortunately, your belief is not fact.

excluding 60% hides a lot of potential negative reactions that would have nothing to do with pre-existing ailments.
And including those 60% would also introduce a whole boatload of effects that have nothing to do with the drug. That is the reason why experimental trials are set up the way they are. It's really not a difficult concept, but apparently it's one you're not getting.
 
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This is a horrendously dishonest cherrypick. You completely fail to take note of the other statements made in the text you've quoted.


derp.

Originally Posted by Clayton Moore View Post
reinforced reinforced reinforced

Understand that parents noticed their children had a negative reaction to the MMR vaccine prior to Wakefield/1998. And that it likely took many, many parents NOTICING long before 1998 to make Wakefield become concerned enough to take on a study of a possible connection between MMR and autism.


This is a horrendously dishonest cherrypick. You completely fail to take note of the other statements made in the text you've quoted.

Quote:
These parents report that their children were “normal” until they received the MMR vaccine. Then, after getting the vaccine, their children started showing symptoms of autism. Because the symptoms of autism begin to occur around the same time as the child’s MMR vaccination, parents and families see the vaccine as the cause of the autism.

The fact that it took until 1998 for a study to be done is kind of a reverse cherry pick.

Why do all you name callers think many thousands of parents are incorrect when they connect MMR shots with an onset of autism symptoms?
 
Why do all you name callers think many thousands of parents are incorrect when they connect MMR shots with an onset of autism symptoms?

(1) Because autism is most commonly first detected at about the same age that MMR vaccination is delivered, leading to a false association, and,
(2) Because multiple statistical studies have shown no significant difference in the prevalence of autism between populations who have and have not received the MMR vaccination.

In case you need clarification, (1) is why parents make the connection, and (2) is what proves them incorrect.

Mind you, since I haven't been calling anybody names, maybe you weren't asking me.

Dave
 
Oh. I was especially impressed by how you turned up the surly. That will surely make everyone come to your 'save the killer virii' campaign.

Indeed, vaccines were oh-so profitable that the number of pharma companies producing them dropped from two dozen to 2-3 over the last few decades. After all, there was money to be not made.

That's what you said. You said nothing about vaccines for children.
 
Also ignoring the fact that the Sweden study:

From page 4 here.




reinforced reinforced reinforced

Understand that parents noticed their children had a negative reaction to the MMR vaccine prior to Wakefield/1998. And that it likely took many, many parents NOTICING long before 1998 to make Wakefield become concerned enough to take on a study of a possible connection between MMR and autism.

First you cherry pick by ignoring the Sweden and Danish studies (both larger than Wakefield, and the latter by several orders of magnitude), then you cherry pick that quote.

Two can play at that game:
These parents’ beliefs and observations were
reinforced by a small study of bowel disease
and autism, published by Wakefield and his
colleagues in 1998 (Wakefield et al 1998).
small small small

See?

Or, put another way, a study of 500,000 trumps a study involving 12.
 
(1) Because autism is most commonly first detected at about the same age that MMR vaccination is delivered, leading to a false association, and,
(2) Because multiple statistical studies have shown no significant difference in the prevalence of autism between populations who have and have not received the MMR vaccination.

In case you need clarification, (1) is why parents make the connection, and (2) is what proves them incorrect.

Mind you, since I haven't been calling anybody names, maybe you weren't asking me.

Dave

I'll answer, since I called him a scaremongering arse.
What Dave said...

And (2) is what is shown quite clearly in the Danish study.
 
Ummm. So? Stupid people trying to find something to blame got their wish via a corrupt study. The parents were in no way being scientific, they just latched onto something to blame besides their own genetics.

You mean parents are stupid if they noticed that their child had a negative reaction to a vaccination and spoke up/out about it?

And you're saying millions of children world wide, at age of 1 or 2, are genetically disposed to become autistic no matter their lineage?
 
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You mean parents are stupid if they noticed that their child had a negative reaction to a vaccination and spoke up/out about it?
.
And these parents determined that it was the vaccine and nothing else ... how?
.
And you're saying millions of children world wide, at age of 1 or 2, are genetically disposed to become autistic no matter their lineage?
.
Yes, that's exactly what we are saying.

One notes that you continue to run from your gaff about thimerosal in MMR vaccine, and what happened to autism rates after the former was removed altogether...
.
 
Why do all you name callers think many thousands of parents are incorrect when they connect MMR shots with an onset of autism symptoms?
Because a.) they're not doctors, and b.)
Because the symptoms of autism begin to occur around the same time as the child’s MMR vaccination, parents and families see the vaccine as the cause of the autism.
Perhaps you should read that over and over again until it sinks in and you stop repeatedly asking the same stupid question.
 
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