Timsup2nothin
Deity
- Joined
- Apr 2, 2013
- Messages
- 46,737
"Personal freedoms" is the new states' rights.
I don't even care about personal freedoms in regards to this issue. I think both sides are ridiculous.
"Personal freedoms" is the new states' rights.
The only side that is ridiculous is the one putting the lives of other people at risk out of ignorance and selfishness.
Ah, another of the favored antivax gambits. "Measles isn't even that serious!"
Unfortunately, it's just not so. According to the World Health Organization, in 2013 there were more than 145,000 deaths globally from the measles. Measles is a serious disease. Of course there are risks with the vaccine. Nobody is claiming that vaccines are 100% safe. People do have rare allergic reactions and such from them. But those reactions are small relative to the danger of the disease itself. I compare it to seat belts. There is a small chance when involved in a major car crash that the seat belt itself will end up injuring or killing you. But the chances of that happening are a lot lower than the chances of injury or death if you don't have it on. When I say that vaccines are safe I mean that they are safe relative to the disease that they protect against.
The mortality rates are low because the vaccination rates are high
The mortality rates were low before the vaccines were invented.
The diseases in question are hugely contagious. They always were. But the mortality rates are just as negligible as the bad reaction rates from the vaccines.
In 1912, measles became a nationally notifiable disease in the United States, requiring U.S. healthcare providers and laboratories to report all diagnosed cases. In the first decade of reporting, an average of 6,000 measles-related deaths were reported each year.
In the decade before 1963 when a vaccine became available, nearly all children got measles by the time they were 15 years of age. It is estimated 3 to 4 million people in the United States were infected each year. Also each year an estimated 400 to 500 people died, 48,000 were hospitalized, and 4,000 suffered encephalitis (swelling of the brain) from measles.
"Personal freedoms" is the new states' rights.
No not really.
Is this an abortion thing? Because this thread has like, nothing to do with abortion.
How many people who "have a negative reaction" to the vaccine die, again?
Because, Tim, it seems to me that if you include anyone who has a negative reaction to the vaccine, you should include on the other side everyone who had to be hospitalized. Including only the death in the "negative effects" column for measle, but any and all negative reaction for vaccine is apples and oranges.
Literally everyone? Like 100% of the people?Between 1912 and 1963 health care and treatment had vastly improved, dropping mortality from 6000 per year into the 500-600 range. There was still no vaccine at all, and because measles is so contagious literally everyone got it. Everyone in the US got it, and only a few hundred died of it. That's reality. Health care and treatment has continued to improve, so it is highly probable that the mortality rate today would be even lower.
Adults get measles.If someone is hospitalized and leaves the hospital with no long term damage, how do they count? In either case? Measles affects children, which makes identification of the long term effects difficult. Am I less quick witted as a result of a measles induced fever in my very young days? I cannot say. But the ill effects of vaccination affect infants, often also producing fevers, so there it goes to an even deeper level of impossible to measure.
I will also mock those who attribute every ill framed thought or failure of grandeur in their offspring to that terrible day they were vaccinated. Or as stated in the reference of the opening post somehow needle raped. So no worries.
The rate of severe allergic reaction is around one to a million. That's not death, that's severe allergic reactions. The rate of death is, as far as I can find, is astronomically low even out of that one in a million.
Compared to that, the death rate of Measles - even in the sixties - was one to ten thousand case (400-500 to 4 000 000 cases). The rate of actual hospitalizations was around one in a hundred.
We're just talking about a reduction by, oh, two orders of magnitude or so for deaths vs severe allergic reactions. A lot more for actual deaths.
In refusing to vaccinate, and putting other childrens at risk of catching the disease, those parents massively increase the risk of serious consequences (hospitalization or death) for other children.
Literally everyone? Like 100% of the people?
Well, I don't live in the US, but we have modern medical practices here as well... and I have never had measles. I also haven't had chicken pox. I did have mumps as an adult, and it left me with lifelong health problems.