Interesting information according to this article: 1. If youre - TopicsExpress



          

Interesting information according to this article: 1. If youre surprised that the measles-containing MMR shot has such a high rate of failure, dont be. Most Americans born before 1957 experienced measles and have naturally acquired immunity, which allowed women to pass antibodies on to their babies to protect them from measles during the first year of life. Things have definitely changed in the past 60 years. Because vaccine antibodies are different from naturally acquired measles antibodies, young vaccinated moms today cannot give longer lasting naturally acquired measles antibodies to their newborns.5 Vaccines simply do not confer the same kind of long lasting immunity that is obtained from experiencing and recovering from the natural disease. 2. Most physicians dont know or share this information with their patients. A documented serious side effect of vaccination, including smallpox, rabies, pertussis and MMR vaccine, is encephalitis (inflammation of the brain), which can lead to permanent brain damage. In 2012, the Italian Health Ministry conceded that the MMR vaccine caused autism in a now 11-year-old boy. The judge ruled the boy had been damaged by irreversible complications due to vaccination (prophylaxis trivalent MMR). Serious, permanent, and sometimes fatal reactions can and do occur, with more frequency than you might think. 3. Many are also under the mistaken impression that appropriate safety studies have been conducted, which is not the case. There are biological, genetic, and environmental differences among us, and that is why some of us get an MMR shot or experience measles and do not suffer complications while others do suffer complications and are brain injured or die. Doctors cannot predict ahead of time who will be harmed by a vaccine or an infectious disease -- and they cannot guarantee that those who have been vaccinated are incapable of being infected or transmitting infection, points that are not being shared with parents in the decision-making process regarding vaccination. Even the studies that have been done are not nearly long enough to show what the long-term implications of vaccinations might be. As board-certified pediatrician Dr. Lawrence Palevsky said: …they are not following children long enough to know whether in three months, six months, three years, six years, or 10 years, there could be some autoimmune antibody or some immune challenge that happens to the body that lingers or that just sits there as a genotypic effect. Theres a change in the genetics, theres a change in the DNA, that doesnt necessarily manifest itself until years later because of other stressors, perhaps even from another vaccine that comes years later. None of those studies have been done, so I dont know how you can say that vaccines are safe.
Posted on: Wed, 18 Jun 2014 05:24:24 +0000

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