pgwenthold
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Sep 19, 2001
- Messages
- 21,821
Sometimes there aren't enough face-palms.
I am old enough that I remember REAL "chickenpox parties" in the 60's. Yes, if someone in the neighborhood caught one of the "standard childhood diseases" your Mom--this was when Moms were at home--would send you to visit that kid. And the sick kids would rotate between houses as a bunch of us would be in the milder, recovery phases at the same time.
The thing is, once you were over, say, four then your likely course of the disease was milder (or that was the folk wisdom, anyway) than if you caught it as a teenager. So it was in your kid's best interest to catch these things sooner. I had mumps, chicken pox, and possibly the "German Measles" (rubella) before I was in 4th grade, and I caught every one of them from a kid we went to visit on purpose.
So these idiots--and I use the term with full intent--are basically replaying the method used when we HAD NO VACCINES. Because somehow, in their myth-filled minds, it is better to expose your child to a wild disease, with full strength and of unknown severity of results, than to have your child's immune system face the SAME ORGANISM that has been weakened or killed. Because....???
Vaccines do sometimes have side-effects, and they sometimes are severe. However, the only way a vaccine can be approved is if the bad outcomes of the vaccine are much lesser, and much rarer, than bad outcomes of the disease itself!
Those poor children...
I've said this in a few places in response to this topic: I don't get it. They are all so worried about the vaccine, which leads to mild soreness at the injection site for maybe a day in some cases, and where serious reaction is on the order of 1 in million, so they intentionally give the kid the disease, which typically involves more than a week of miserable torture. Moreover, I saw the other day that when the chicken pox was common, that 2 million kids a year would get it, and 100 would die from it. That means that 1/20K DIED from the chicken pox, but apparently more than a week with a miserable child and a 1/20K chance of death is preferable to a day of a sore thigh and a 1/million chance of severe reaction (although I don't believe there have been any deaths associated with the vaccine).
They're not even going the "I'll forego the risk of the vaccine and take my chances on not getting the disease" route. They are deliberately getting sick!
FWIW, the MonkeyBoy didn't even have redness at the injection site on his vaccination last month, and any soreness he might have had was not apparent an hour after the shot. But oh, a case of the chicken pox would have been so much better...