Ivor the Engineer
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Feb 18, 2006
- Messages
- 10,642
Nah Deetee, we should insist everyone drives three-wheelers
Last edited:
Check out how lethal garden ponds are!
http://www.nationalwatersafety.org.uk/watersafetyathome/gardenponds.htm
Get rid of your pond now! Don't you care about your kids?!
Only if spending the money on prevention or treatment for 'that some other way' would not save more lives using a similar amount of money. MMR is probably worth it. Varicella vaccine, no way! E.g, let's save 100's of kid's lives in the third world before we save 7 in the UK.
It's not the harm to 'these children's lives', it's all the other kids (and adults) who don't get treated (as well as they could) because there's less money and resources left to spend and use on them. Try explaining to a mother's children that she's going to die soon because we spent all the money vaccinating them against chickenpox, meningitis and flu.
Many people have natural immunity to bacteria that cause meningitis. In fact, no one knows why the few who do get it, get it. Currently, it's considered just extremely bad luck.
If you worry enough about your kids getting meningitis to do something about reducing their risk of contracting it by a small amount, you must be in a state of constant fear, given all the much more likely risks to their life they face every single day. Talk about ignoring the elephant(s) in the room.
Why not think of having childhood chickenpox as a very safe one-off medical treatment?
There are several abstracts here that discuss various cost benefit studies of chickenpox vaccination.
Two predicted in America $5-7 savings per $ spent on vaccination.
One predicted in England and Wales that it wasn't economic.
A literature review claimed generally large savings.
It looks as if a straight hospital cost vs vaccination shows a loss but including costs incurred by the care-giver (parents) in time of work etc, there is an overall benefit.
Oh and it prevents kids getting ill and dying, a purely emotional response I know, but there you are.
Looks like a win-win situation except for the increase in shingles in adult populations.
Direct medical costs accounted for 10% of the total costs in both groups. The largest cost driver in patient care was caregiver productivity losses, which amounted to $316.5 in the younger age group and to $182.7 in the older age group.
<snip>
The costs associated with varicella infection in normal persons without a varicella vaccination program have been estimated to be approximately $400 million, 95% of which is the cost of caring for a child at home.
Despite variability in data and model assumptions, the studies suggest that universal vaccination of infants is attractive to society because large savings occur from averted unproductive days for parents. For the healthcare payer, universal vaccination of infants does not generate savings.
Adolescent vaccination is estimated to cost approximately 18 000 pounds sterling per QALY gained from the NHS perspective.
BACKGROUND: The influence of providing information about complications of disease and vaccine cost on parental decision to vaccinate against varicella was assessed. METHOD: During telephone interviews of 330 parents of infants aged 9 months, parents were asked if they would agree to have their child vaccinated and were presented information first about varicella complications and then about cost of the vaccine. RESULTS: When complications were explained but information about cost was not, 94% of parents were favourable toward having their child vaccinated. When complications were not explained but cost was presented, this percentage was only 34%. When both cost and complications were presented, 60% of parents were favourable toward the vaccine. INTERPRETATION: In improving receptivity towards varicella vaccine, parents should always be presented data regarding varicella complications by their health care provider.
Doesn't that strike you as fudging figures to justify a decision that has already been made?
Those are just a made-up numbers.
So the only way they can justify it is by making up figures for the cost of a parent looking after the child for a few days. Ever heard of paid holiday? Don't many parents stay at home anyway during the years their child is likely to get chickenpox?
And this is just disgraceful:
The more I read about these types of tactics public health bodies are using to get compliance, the more I distrust their "advice". They appear to have been reduced to little more than pushers for drug companies' products. By behaving in this way they are bolstering the anti-vaxers claims:
"They are lying to / misleading you about this, so what else are they lying to / misleading you about?"
Doesn't that strike you as fudging figures to justify a decision that has already been made?
Let's not forget that the varicella vaccination wares off after less than 20 years, meaning that more than one shot is needed to avoid cases of breakthrough chickenpox in adulthood.
Why not think of having childhood chickenpox as a very safe one-off medical treatment?
<snip>
http://www.direct.gov.uk/en/Employment/Employees/WorkAndFamilies/DG_10026555[/url]
There is no legal requirement for paid compassionate leave. As for parents staying at home, mine certainly weren't, and I come from a fairly well-off, dual income family, not, for example, a single parent struggling to pay the bills in a minimum wage job.
You think it's disgraceful that they say parents should be given all the facts?
Seriously, what the hell are you talking about? You quote a report which says parents should be told about complications, specifically highlight that part, and then complain that they are lying about things.
Engage brain, then post.
These were predictions made prior to the decision in the US. And it strikes me that they are trying, in peer reviewed journals, to arrive at a real cost benefit ratio including societal costs. I must admit it surprises me because my back of the envelope calculation for the UK was a cost of £40,000 vaccine cost per hospitilisation and I found it hard to see the hospital average charges and care giver costs at anywhere near this figure. Rather than accuse people who are more experienced, better qualified and have more data of simply fudging their figures, it prompts me to delve deeper into their data and methodology.
During telephone interviews 330 parents were asked if they would agree to stop driving their 4x4s to school. They were presented with information about the damage 4x4s can do both to the environment and to children they collide with en route, and information about the costs of sending their own children to school by bus.
RESULTS: When 4x4 risks were explained but information about bus cost was not, 94% of parents were favourable toward sending their child by bus. When 4x4 risks were not explained but bus cost was presented, this percentage was only 34%. When both bus cost and 4x4 risks were presented, 60% of parents were favourable toward sending their children by bus.
INTERPRETATION: In improving receptivity towards school bus utilisation, parents should always be presented with data regarding the risks of alternative transport by their local education authority.
...
PISANI
So she's had all the normal immunisations as a baby and Men C and the MMR. Have you heard about the new pneumococcal vaccine, have you seen it advertised on…?
MOTHER
Yeah I've heard an advertisement on the telly but I don't actually know the actual name of the injection.
PISANI
Well we've now discovered that if we give this vaccine it will prevent pneumococcal meningitis and there's an awful lot of deaths as children from this, so we're offering this to all children. What I'll do today is I'm going to do the pre-school booster today and I'm going to give you a leaflet on the pneumococcal if you like or we can do it all today, but if you like we can wait.
...

I agree, quite disgraceful. If they can lie like this, what else are they lying about?
INTERPRETATION: In improving receptivity towards varicella vaccine, parents should always be presented data regarding varicella complications by their health care provider.
Perhaps I have a better developed BS detector than you?
Again, read what it actually states:
It says NOTHING about informing the likelihood of those complications, only that the list of complications should be presented to improve "receptivity". I.e. scare the parents and they'll have their kid "protected".
I did read it again. It merely says, and I quote, that parents were presented with "information first about varicella complications"
Now that may well have included information about the likelihood of their occurence. Where does it say that it didn't, and that only a "list of complications be presented to improve receptivity"?
(SNIP)...they are most likely misleading parents without emphasizing the remoteness of those complications actually occurring.
It is not a ridiculous statement, it just goes against your totally screwed-up perception of risk.
1 in a 1000 (at most in the US) unvaccinated children die of measles. Once you have had measles you are immune for life. Vaccination has nothing to do with it. There is a 1 in 345 chance you will be killed with a firearm if you live in the US your entire lifetime.
And to answer your second post, no, I'm not anti-vax at all. I'm anti-scaring-people-with mis-information-and-sanctions-if-they-don't-comply.
Let's try again:
If 1000 children get measles in the US, one dies.
The issue is with coercing parents to have their children vaccinated using lies, mis-information and (in the US) sanctions for non-compliance for what amount to pretty small risks to the children's health.
998 deaths a year. Heck, we manage to kill over 3 times that many on the roads in the UK each year.