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Question for those have done research on vaccinations?
So we all know that dangers of getting to many vaccines in one day.. and hopefully most of us know that some like gardasil do more damage then good.
What vaccines would you opt out of giving your infants/children?
Or if you wouldn't opt of, how would you change the cdc's ridiculous suggested schedule?
OBVIOUSLY if you don't agree with what I said thus far, this question isn't for you, so there is no reason to waste my time with your response.
I'm at six months and luckily i'm about to take the rest of my pregnancy off and my doctor suggested looking into this during my spare time.
I will do research of my own as well but I want some opinions from people who have already done research.
4 réponses
- il y a 6 ansRéponse favorite
That seems like a discussion to have with your doctor. Nobody (or almost nobody) on this site is a medical expert and therefore should not be giving you medical advice about your child. That seems incredibly dangerous to base the medical decisions about your child on the advice on this site.
- il y a 6 ans
You should give your kid immunizations, especially when they are young. Of course, do the ones required for school, but ou can skip Gardacil/Ceravix. You can also skip the flu shot. DO get meningitis- this is very important! Your child won't be able to live in a dorm or go to most camps if they don't have this. You can talk to your doctor about what vaccines are required andwhich aren't. I would generally suggest all vaccines to protect your child and others from any and all diseases, but I understand if you don't agree. I hope I helped, but if I didn't, you can probably get research off Googleing trusted health sites. :)
- Katrina E.Lv 7il y a 6 ans
Personally, I have done research myself on both sides - including arguments anti-vax people make as well as the response. My husband is a research scientist as well. All three of our children and ourselves are vaccinated on schedule. We did not opt out of any vaccines. And since my mother has only 1 lung and the flu could devastate her - we get our annual flu shots as well. All of us are in very good health.
Be careful about doing research. It's one thing to look up and pay attention to things that validate your existing bias. It's another thing to actually evaluate the information logically and reasonably. Human beings naturally have certain biases that lead to poor reasoning - things like confirmation bias, confusing correlation and causation, and many other things. You should be aware of these things when making decisions. And recognize that it's because of vaccines that you don't have personal experience with some of these diseases, so it's easy to ignore just how dangerous there were in the past (and could be again). As part of your research you should read this: http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/trust-me... "Trust Me, I'm a Scientist: Why so many people choose not to believe what scientists say"
For example, comments like "gardasil do more damage then good" is simply wrong. And there's nothing ridiculous about the CDC schedule.
It seems like you've fallen for the "too many, too soon" fallacy. Personalizing a vaccination schedule and skipping/delaying vaccines for your child is not safer or better for your child. It does put your child at an increased risk for vaccine-preventable diseases. Most physicians I know that tolerate a spread-out vaccine schedule do so not because it's healthier/better for the child but more to reduce the parent's anxiety.
So one thing to consider is how do you want to make medical decisions for your child - not just with vaccines but other things in the future. It's not like you should really "go with your gut" with medical treatments. You don't have the in-depth medical training and understanding that your gut would be a good source and there's the whole Dunning-Kruger effect (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Krug... ). Are you really open to both sides - or are you looking to validate your fears about vaccines?
Good luck with your research.
- eriLv 7il y a 6 ans
There is no danger in taking multiple vaccines in one day. HPV and cancer are far, far more dangerous to anyone than the vaccine that prevents them. When you speak of doing research, it's clear you do not understand the basics of how science works. I also suggest you switch doctors. Doctors are not scientists, but most understand it (apparently yours does not).
Source(s) : actual scientist and researcher - that's my job