I suspect that Rolfe, like me, is a net contributor to the state. I am certainly grateful for the NHS and I think Rolfe is too.I live in a very happy world. It is one in which my neighbors and I provide for our selfs without the need for a Father figure in the form of government taking from other people to provide us with things. Do you understand that which is provided for you by government was taken from another person? I find those that rely on the government for their needs are nothing more than parasitic and ungrateful.
Children will be banned from starting school until they receive the MMR jab, under new Labour party proposals.
Parents will have to provide proof their offspring have had a full range of vaccinations when they put in applications for primary schools.
The plan, designed to increase the take-up of the measles, mumps and rubella triple jab, has been drawn up by Mary Creagh, the Labour MP in charge of the party’s health manifesto for the next general election.
“Parents need to protect their children and science gives them a way to do that,” said Creagh. “We need to get that message across.”
...I don't know why no-one around our area seemed to have dangerous reactions to the diseases, I never felt that bad with most of them. A possible reason might be (total speculation alert!) that we were all pretty healthy; it was a working class, but not deprived, area and it was soon after rationing was finally finished and, apparently, that was one of the most healthy periods in recent history.
Having re-read this post, I'm not totally sure what my point is. Oh well.
Did any of the UK sceptics on the board catch this little bit of news on Sunday?:
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/health/article3909515.ece
Where could the government possibly of got this idea from?![]()
Okay, I'm wicked scum. No problem. I agree that my behavior was dishonest, inappropriate and sneaky. You are right to call me on it. Now, how about dealing with the problem of serotype replacement?
The right response is to drown folks like that with science based arguments, complete with citations. It won't shut them up, but it will make them look stupid. This is the whole concept behind this web-site:
Inside Vaccines and it has worked, in that so far no one has been able to prove our science wrong. All we've gotten is a few people nit-picking about minor side-shows.
I forgot to also mention that the idea was likely coming from the current worldwide measles epidemic which began in Switzerland and has spread to Europe and the USA due in a large part to a growing % of unvaccinated children.Did any of the UK sceptics on the board catch this little bit of news on Sunday?:
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/health/article3909515.ece
Where could the government possibly of got this idea from?...
Your data source claiming 500 measles deaths a year (in the UK alone, I presume) fails to take into account that such records were not accurate at the time. Surveillance, case reporting, and accuracy of the listed cause of death in various record archives affect the reliability of such data.Some of us in the UK (and probably elsewhere) are old enough to have grown up before most of the vaccines were routinely used.
I was born in 1953 and so was only immunized against diphtheria and polio (I had both injections and sugar lumps - I remember loads of 10 year olds pretending to be out of there heads on LSD, so must have been early '60s). This means that I actually contracted measles, rubella, mumps and chicken-pox. I also managed to contract whooping-cough (pertussis) as a baby, presumably before they managed to innoculate me.
According to what I can find on the net, there were 500 deaths (approx) per year from measles in the '50s. However, I remember times when I had the assorted diseases (barring WC) that other kids who hadn't would be brought around specifically to catch them and get them out of the way.
I don't know why no-one around our area seemed to have dangerous reactions to the diseases, I never felt that bad with most of them. A possible reason might be (total speculation alert!) that we were all pretty healthy; it was a working class, but not deprived, area and it was soon after rationing was finally finished and, apparently, that was one of the most healthy periods in recent history.
Having re-read this post, I'm not totally sure what my point is. Oh well.
Vaccination has had a major impact on measles deaths. Overall, global measles mortality decreased by 68% between 2000 and 2006. The largest gains occurred in Africa where measles cases and deaths fell by 91%....
Children usually do not die directly of measles, but from its complications. Complications are more common in children under the age of five or adults over the age of 20.
The most serious complications include blindness, encephalitis (a dangerous infection of the brain causing inflammation), severe diarrhoea (possibly leading to dehydration), ear infections and severe respiratory infections such as pneumonia, which is the most common cause of death associated with measles. Encephalitis is estimated to occur in one out of 1000 cases, while otitis media (middle ear infection) is reported in 5-15% of cases and pneumonia in 5-10% of cases. The case fatality rate in developing countries is generally in the range of 1 to 5%, but may be as high as 25% in populations with high levels of malnutrition and poor access to health care.
Global measles deaths have plummeted by 39%, from 873 000 in 1999 to an estimated 530 000 in 2003....