Guest guest Posted June 17, 2011 Report Share Posted June 17, 2011 I would ask her then how come she hasn't gotten the diseases yet (and which ones did she not have immunity to?). Something must have been preventing it all these years. It sure wasn't the vaccine. I would add they don't work anyway so no reason to get it. That always gets lost in the shuffle. People worry about side effects, but the first reason not to get them is they don't work. Even the manufacturers won't guarantee that. And so what if she was to get any of the diseases? That doesn't mean instant death or any death. I had rubella and never even knew it! It's not really a matter of telling her she will be fine. She IS fine. Winnie MMR vaxVaccinations > I have a 35 year old daughter (first born)who had the MMR when > she was middle school age and then I stopped vaccinating for all > children after that (24 years ago). She has never had any > children and her husband and her are ready. She visited a > midwife and the midwife told her that she has no immunity and > should be vaccinated. What should she do? She is asking me for > advice. I just said no but she needs some reassurance. Any > thoughts or reasons to say she will be fine?> Vicki > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 17, 2011 Report Share Posted June 17, 2011 Tell the midwife that vaccines don’t work, they give nothing for immunity and she’ll be fine b/c she has been fine. 35 and just starting on kids.. heaven help her! But good!!! Better late than never. The midwife ran a titre test? She can get vaxxed up the wazoo and it might never show up. My mom has had repeated vaccines of something.. I can’t recall and still supposedly shows no immunity… so why keep getting the shots? That is just dumb. She should do NO shots! She doesn’t need all that crap freshly injected into her body just before conceiving a helpless little baby! Nita, mom to: 18, Jon 16, 14, 12, 9, Christian (7/16/03 to 8/22/04), 5, Isaac 3 and , born 3/1/11http://momof6.dotphoto.com for possibly current pictures and http://nitasspot.blogspot.comLearn from the mistakes of others. Trust me... you can't live long enough to make them all yourself. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 17, 2011 Report Share Posted June 17, 2011 This is a big question and no one has the answer. Even provaxers know that it is a problem...http://www.medbroadcast.com/health_news_details_pf.asp?news_id=15245 & news_channel_id=2046 & rot=3This is from May 5, 2008 medbroadcast by Helen Branswell~ Maureen R. Gradvohl ~ From: Vicki <vicki.geraci@...>Subject: MMR vaxVaccinations Date: Tuesday, June 14, 2011, 6:30 PM I have a 35 year old daughter (first born)who had the MMR when she was middle school age and then I stopped vaccinating for all children after that (24 years ago). She has never had any children and her husband and her are ready. She visited a midwife and the midwife told her that she has no immunity and should be vaccinated. What should she do? She is asking me for advice. I just said no but she needs some reassurance. Any thoughts or reasons to say she will be fine? Vicki Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 17, 2011 Report Share Posted June 17, 2011 The MMR vaccine package insert says that adult females have a high (12-26%) chance of getting arthritis or arthralgia from the shot. http://www.fda.gov/downloads/BiologicsBloodVaccines/Vaccines/ApprovedProducts/UC\ M123789.pdf (page 7) She should read the CDC's Pink Book chapter on rubella, which says that congenital rubella syndrome is extremely rare. " CRS surveillance is maintained through the National Congenital Rubella Registry, which is managed by the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases. The largest annual total of reported CRS cases to the registry was in 1970 (67 cases). An average of 5-6 CRS cases have been reported annually since 1980. " " Since 1997, the mothers of the majority of infants with CRS were Hispanic women, many of whom were born in Latin American or Caribbean countries where rubella vaccine is routinely not used or has only recently begun to be used. " http://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/pubs/pinkbook/downloads/rubella.pdf (p. 279-280) > > I have a 35 year old daughter (first born)who had the MMR when she was middle school age and then I stopped vaccinating for all children after that (24 years ago). She has never had any children and her husband and her are ready. She visited a midwife and the midwife told her that she has no immunity and should be vaccinated. What should she do? She is asking me for advice. I just said no but she needs some reassurance. Any thoughts or reasons to say she will be fine? > Vicki > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 17, 2011 Report Share Posted June 17, 2011 And even if rubella was extremely common, that wouldn't make the vaccine work. Winnie Re: MMR vaxVaccinations > The MMR vaccine package insert says that adult females have a > high (12-26%) chance of getting arthritis or arthralgia from the shot.> http://www.fda.gov/downloads/BiologicsBloodVaccines/Vaccines/ApprovedProducts/UCM123789.pdf (page 7)> > She should read the CDC's Pink Book chapter on rubella, which > says that congenital rubella syndrome is extremely rare.> > "CRS surveillance is maintained through the National Congenital > Rubella Registry, which is managed by the National Center for > Immunization and Respiratory Diseases. The largest annual total > of reported CRS cases to the registry was in 1970 (67 cases). An > average of 5-6 CRS cases have been reported annually since 1980."> > "Since 1997, the mothers of the majority of infants with CRS > were Hispanic women, many of whom were born in Latin American or > Caribbean countries where rubella vaccine is routinely not used > or has only recently begun to be used."> http://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/pubs/pinkbook/downloads/rubella.pdf > (p. 279-280)> > > > >> > I have a 35 year old daughter (first born)who had the MMR when > she was middle school age and then I stopped vaccinating for all > children after that (24 years ago). She has never had any > children and her husband and her are ready. She visited a > midwife and the midwife told her that she has no immunity and > should be vaccinated. What should she do? She is asking me for > advice. I just said no but she needs some reassurance. Any > thoughts or reasons to say she will be fine?> > Vicki> >> > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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