Guest guest Posted May 31, 2005 Report Share Posted May 31, 2005 , I read quite a bit on the subject and to be honest there is very compelling evidence on the pro-vax side, as well as on the anti-vax. For me it came down to the fact that every other kid i know these days has asthma, severe allergies, eczema, and so on and so on. These are all immune related diseases. I decided not to vax bc i feel in today's toxic environment kids' immune systems don't need anymore hits than they already get in day-to-day life. Elaine Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 31, 2005 Report Share Posted May 31, 2005 Hi - I am completely against vaccination as I don't see that it has any benefits. I do not believe vaccinations give immunity (they DO sometimes give your body a chronic case of the disease which your boday never gets to cope with so your immune system stays stressed). They've also been linked to a series of diseases and complications including asthma, arthritis, autism, etc. Please make sure you do all your research before you vaccinate (if you so decide). You can always give a shot at a later date but you may never be able to reverse the damage. There are a couple great on the subject, including this one: www./vaccinations Happy researching! On 5/31/05, <jessclaire@...> wrote: > As many of you know, I'm having a baby in December. Naturally, I need > some really well-researched and balanced information about > vaccinations. I'm not sure what to do, really. I know there are > major problems with vaccines, but everyone I know is vaccinated > (including myself) and we all seem fine. Does anyone on this list > feel that some vaccines are beneficial? Would you vaccinate again, if > given the choice? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 31, 2005 Report Share Posted May 31, 2005 I don't vax but i repeatedly read first-hand accounts of people doing medical work in impoverished villages and seeing death rates of children go down once vaxes are introduced and so on and so forth. I think they must provide immunity, even though they may rob the person of health in other areas. Elaine > I am completely against vaccination as I don't see that it has any > benefits. I do not believe vaccinations give immunity Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 31, 2005 Report Share Posted May 31, 2005 >> I do not believe vaccinations give immunity (they DO sometimes give your body a chronic case of the disease which your boday never gets to cope with so your immune system stays stressed). << I know that people talking about human vaccinations say this ALL THE TIME... because they don't do actual challenge studies in humans. But we not only do challenge studies in animals, they are REQUIRED for the licensing of animal vaccines, and they do indeed induce specific immunity, at least, within the confines of the label claim. Modified live virus vaccines for the common canine viruses, for instance, provide such good immunity that once immunized, you're immune for life to that virus. There are plenty of problems to consider with vaccination, but this myth that they don't induce immunity is not something we can maintain if we look at other species for ten seconds. Christie Caber Feidh ish Deerhounds Holistically Raising Our Dogs Since 1986 http://www.caberfeidh.com http://doggedblog.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 31, 2005 Report Share Posted May 31, 2005 > My kids were vaccinated before I even knew there was an issue! They are basically fine kids, though both are gluten intolerant (as are me and their Dad). I'm not sure what all the issues are. I'm really glad they have NOT had the diseases I had as a kid (like measles!). I have biases on both sides. My Mom grew up in an era when polio was epidemic, and she made sure we always got our flu shots (and we never got the flu, probably as a result). I've read the science too. My guess is that there is a link between some other autoimmune condition (like gluten intolerance, which causes the body to produce zonulin, which breaks down the blood/brain barrier) and the reactions to the shots. A similar situation exists with food poisoning: a HUGE number of people, for instance, ingested Odwalla juices which were contaminated with ecoli -- but 50 kids got sick. Why those 50 kids? Probably because they had no gut bacteria to protect them (just came off antibiotics) or because of some other condition they had. Heidi Jean Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 1, 2005 Report Share Posted June 1, 2005 : On circumcision. I'm Jewish and my husband is not (but is circumcised). When I had Teddy I still hadn't officially decided but in my heart I didn't want to do it. I was freaking out, calling rabbis etc trying to find a justification not to circumcise. To my visiting parents, I came up with every delay I could think of, without telling them it wasn't going to happen. (Finally I told them in email. They were devastated but we've moved on.) It marred my first days with my baby, so congratulations on dealing with this now. I decided not to circumcise but still consider him Jewish because he has a Jewish mother. I'm not a literalist and consider Judaism an ethnicity. I believe even among the Jews the custom is very, very slowly going to dissapear. The good news is CA is probably at the forefront of that (though there are Jews against it in Israel too!). But today most Jews won't accept it. The toughest part is him not looking like his cousins and the implication there's something wrong with my nephew (who is). I don't know how it will be for my son when he's older and getting bar mitzvahed etc. I do know I couldn't make the decision for him, to cut off part of his body. On vaccinations: Even tougher, believe it or not. He's had shots twice, at 2 months and 6 months before airplane travel. They were to protect against meningitis and also the dpt. I don't keep up with the boosters and he hasn't had polio shot. I take him to two docs: Dr. Landsman (somewhat alternative) and Dr. Cowan of WAPF. Dr. Cowan is against vaccinations (but not vehemently. I think he used to vaccinate.). Dr. Landsman recommends a limited course and delays the polio shot. I am confident she gets the best quality (no mercury). I am doing even less than Dr. Landsman recommends because as he gets bigger/stronger, and he's relatively sheltered, I don't feel a need. I do worry about polio even though according to Dr. Landsman that disease is almost completely erradicated. The book she recommends is " What your doctor may not tell you about children's vaccinations. " One thing I learned is there HAVE been improvements (due largely to anti-vac crucaders). No more mecury, and the dpt is a lot safer than it used to be. I am against chicken pox and flu and wish they'd keep those shots away from kids as it interferes with the natural ebb and flow. Hope this helps. Daphne > As many of you know, I'm having a baby in December. Naturally, I need > some really well-researched and balanced information about > vaccinations. I'm not sure what to do, really. I know there are > major problems with vaccines, but everyone I know is vaccinated > (including myself) and we all seem fine. Does anyone on this list > feel that some vaccines are beneficial? Would you vaccinate again, if > given the choice? I'll be living in CA and I think the law is > relatively flexible there, but any state-specific info would be great. > FYI--I will not be homeschooling. > > To put it all in context, I'm still discussing homebirth and > circumcision with my husband. I think he's almost on board with those > two issues (he's Jewish, so the circ. issue is complicated). I > haven't even mentioned vaccinations to him yet, so I want to get > educated myself before I go completely off the deep end...tee hee. > > TIA, > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 1, 2005 Report Share Posted June 1, 2005 >I know that people talking about human vaccinations say this ALL THE >TIME... >because they don't do actual challenge studies in humans. But we not only >do >challenge studies in animals, they are REQUIRED for the licensing of animal >vaccines, and they do indeed induce specific immunity, at least, within the >confines of the label claim. Modified live virus vaccines for the common >canine viruses, for instance, provide such good immunity that once >immunized, you're immune for life to that virus. > Are they immune to the actual disease, or to the vaccination, or to both? I remember reading that sometimes what is shown is immunity to the vaccination, which is not always the same as immunity to the live disease, but I have no idea if this is true or not. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 1, 2005 Report Share Posted June 1, 2005 > >I don't vax but i repeatedly read first-hand accounts of people doing >medical work in impoverished villages and seeing death rates of children go >down once vaxes are introduced and so on and so forth. Is this independent of other introductions, such as better nutrition and hygiene? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 1, 2005 Report Share Posted June 1, 2005 Hi , our son is 14, very bright and very healthy, thank God, to which i attribute nursing him til 4 and having a very low junk food household for 95% of his life. out of complete and total ignorance he had all his vaccinations til the most recent one when he was 12...the school really hassled me about it but finally they accepted the letter i wrote for a 'religious exemption', i think the only exemption that parents in NJ have without a doctor's note. about circumcision...i had it done and i'll tell you why. my dad had to be circumcised as an adult because of some kind of problem he had. ditto with one of my best friend's teenage sons. my husband is circumcised. so i had it done because of those three things; i didn't want him to have problems when he grew up (tho i know it's probably rare but i don't know) and i thought he should be like his dad. i almost didn't want to have it done; and it made me nervous, and sad, but i really thought it was the best decision. laura in nj > As many of you know, I'm having a baby in December. Naturally, I need > some really well-researched and balanced information about > vaccinations. I'm not sure what to do, really. I know there are > major problems with vaccines, but everyone I know is vaccinated > (including myself) and we all seem fine. Does anyone on this list > feel that some vaccines are beneficial? Would you vaccinate again, if > given the choice? I'll be living in CA and I think the law is > relatively flexible there, but any state-specific info would be great. > FYI--I will not be homeschooling. > > To put it all in context, I'm still discussing homebirth and > circumcision with my husband. I think he's almost on board with those > two issues (he's Jewish, so the circ. issue is complicated). I > haven't even mentioned vaccinations to him yet, so I want to get > educated myself before I go completely off the deep end...tee hee. > > TIA, > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 1, 2005 Report Share Posted June 1, 2005 > Re: Vaccinations: Where do I begin? > > >I don't vax but i repeatedly read first-hand accounts of people doing >medical work in impoverished villages and seeing death rates of children go >down once vaxes are introduced and so on and so forth. I think they must >provide immunity, even though they may rob the person of health in other >areas. >Elaine It's possible that the key here is that the children were *impoverished*. IOW, their nutritional status and resultant health were likely very poor so their immune systems probably wouldn't be able to stave of infections and viruses without help. This is not necessarily the case with a well-nourished WAP-raised baby. Suze Fisher Lapdog Design, Inc. Web Design & Development http://members.bellatlantic.net/~vze3shjg Weston A. Price Foundation Chapter Leader, Mid Coast Maine http://www.westonaprice.org ---------------------------- " The diet-heart idea (the idea that saturated fats and cholesterol cause heart disease) is the greatest scientific deception of our times. " -- Mann, MD, former Professor of Medicine and Biochemistry at Vanderbilt University, Tennessee; heart disease researcher. The International Network of Cholesterol Skeptics <http://www.thincs.org> ---------------------------- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 1, 2005 Report Share Posted June 1, 2005 Hi Elaine- I haven't read these studies that you're referring to and to be honest I don't want to start a debate about the value of vaccinations on this list. It's off topic here, but again I do welcome anyone who is interested in this subject to join the vaccinations group that I mentioned yesterday...or I would be happy to converse off list. I promise this will be my last post to this list regarding vaccs. I'm not sure what else was going on in these impoverished villages when children's death rates started dropping. I think we have to look at the whole system in place. Sanitation and access to clean water in and of itself is a huge component in reducing deaths from disease. And Christie, in response to your post-- I still do not believe that vaccinations equal immunity. I don't believe this to be true for dogs & cats or humans. I know plenty of people who have been vaccinated against certain diseases only to acquire that same disease, either later in life or immediately after the vaccination. I for one received the flu shot a few years ago (before I knew better) and came down with the flu about one month later. I also received all of my childhood vaccinations including the MMR as a baby, but still came down w/ measles when I was 5. I do not vaccinate my dogs but I have known dogs to die of parvo after they have been vaccinated against it. These dogs did not receive immunity from the shots. I think vaccinating animals or humans carry risks that far outweigh the potential benefits of *possibly* gaining immunity to diseases that healthy beings should be able to recover from without medical intervention...all the while gaining *natural* immunity from *natural* exposure. That said, everyone's choice to vaccinate is their own and I don't mean to criticize anyone who so chooses. I just hope that everyone will do their own research before blindly accepting vaccinations as *safe* and as guarantees (or even near-guarantees) of immunity. Kind regards, On 5/31/05, Elaine <itchyink@...> wrote: > I don't vax but i repeatedly read first-hand accounts of people doing > medical work in impoverished villages and seeing death rates of children go > down once vaxes are introduced and so on and so forth. I think they must > provide immunity, even though they may rob the person of health in other > areas. > Elaine Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 1, 2005 Report Share Posted June 1, 2005 On Wed, 1 Jun 2005 09:09:41 -0400 <jess426@...> wrote: > Hi Elaine- > > I haven't read these studies that you're referring to and to be honest > I don't want to start a debate about the value of vaccinations on this > list. It's off topic here, but again I do welcome anyone who is > interested in this subject to join the vaccinations group that I > mentioned yesterday...or I would be happy to converse off list. I > promise this will be my last post to this list regarding vaccs. Oh no. Vaccinations are not off-topic on this list. They specifically relate to health and nutrition. And even if they were the thread would still be allowed as long as you put Off-Topic (or OT) in the subject line. Keep posting away. " We are in the end talking about groups supporting the only thing that the state does: namely roughing people up through violence and threats of violence. That's what every line of every regulation comes down to. That's the meaning of every tax. That's the whole upshot of every tariff, expenditure, prohibition, and bomb. It all amounts to increased use of violence in society. Strip away the banners, songs, uniforms, and speeches: that's all that the state really is. " Lew Rockwell Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 1, 2005 Report Share Posted June 1, 2005 , We vaccinated our kids and have had no problems, ideologically nor physically. My dd does have food allergies, like me, but if this is due to vaccines, then why her and not my ds? They were both given shots at the same time and by the same doctor/clinic. We did the polio, DPT and MMR only although the school district requires others (we homeschool). I have kept up with my vaccines, even got a tetnus booster recently with no side effects. There have been many outbreaks of whooping cough and cases of polio are on the rise. Measles is always a problem here as we live in a city with a large major university that attracts many international unvaccinated students. One outbreak of whooping cough occured at a Waldorf daycare (I refuse to call them pre-schools). One person got ahold of a shot record, whited out the name, made copies and everyone filled in their child's name. The director knew what was going on. Then someone got whooping cough, then more and more. One child almost died, another's sibling did die and more than 20 were hospitalized. That's when the health department stepped in and discovered what was up. I wouldn't have wanted to take the chance on my child dying when I can prevent it. You can ask your pediatrician to spread the doses out. I know several people locally who have had the vaccines spread out over 3 years rather than several months. My dd didn't start her vaccines until she was almost 6 months old (by then, most babies have had at least 2 rounds). My son's weren't on time either because I would wait until I wanted her shots and then schedule both at the same time. We did NOT do the chicken pox vaccine and both of my kids have had it as well as Fifth Disease and we are all fine. I did have rubella as a child, but my food allergies were in place long before that and not affected by a subsequent vaccine for measles and mumps. Most of the literature I have seen is old, dates from the early 1970s. As recently as 3 years ago, some one was passing around a packet at a local homeschool function and none of it was current; the most recent was dated 1986. I wouldn't know where to direct you for good info. And, FWIW, my ds had a circumcision. No problems there either. I was told he made a face, but didn't cry (I was bedridden and unable to attend the bris). Lauri > As many of you know, I'm having a baby in December. Naturally, I need > some really well-researched and balanced information about > vaccinations. I'm not sure what to do, really. I know there are > major problems with vaccines, but everyone I know is vaccinated > (including myself) and we all seem fine. Does anyone on this list > feel that some vaccines are beneficial? Would you vaccinate again, if > given the choice? I'll be living in CA and I think the law is > relatively flexible there, but any state-specific info would be great. > FYI--I will not be homeschooling. > > To put it all in context, I'm still discussing homebirth and > circumcision with my husband. I think he's almost on board with those > two issues (he's Jewish, so the circ. issue is complicated). I > haven't even mentioned vaccinations to him yet, so I want to get > educated myself before I go completely off the deep end...tee hee. > > TIA, > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 1, 2005 Report Share Posted June 1, 2005 >> Are they immune to the actual disease, or to the vaccination, or to both? I remember reading that sometimes what is shown is immunity to the vaccination, which is not always the same as immunity to the live disease, but I have no idea if this is true or not. << To the disease itself. Christie Caber Feidh ish Deerhounds Holistically Raising Our Dogs Since 1986 http://www.caberfeidh.com http://doggedblog.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 1, 2005 Report Share Posted June 1, 2005 As many of you know, I'm having a baby in December. Naturally, I need some really well-researched and balanced information about vaccinations. I'm not sure what to do, really. I know there are major problems with vaccines, but everyone I know is vaccinated (including myself) and we all seem fine. Does anyone on this list feel that some vaccines are beneficial? Would you vaccinate again, if given the choice? I'll be living in CA and I think the law is relatively flexible there, but any state-specific info would be great. FYI--I will not be homeschooling. To put it all in context, I'm still discussing homebirth and circumcision with my husband. I think he's almost on board with those two issues (he's Jewish, so the circ. issue is complicated). I haven't even mentioned vaccinations to him yet, so I want to get educated myself before I go completely off the deep end...tee hee. TIA, We have 3 kids -- and how we vaccinated was like so -- 1 - In our state it is routine practice after hospital births to vaccinate immediately after birth for Hepatitis B. They also administer the Vit K shot(for clotting protection) and give eye drops/meds for possible Gonnorrhea contamination in the birth canal. I declined all 3 of these. I don't, nor does anyone in our home environment have Hep B. Our babies weren't going to be exposed to this as infants, so I saw no reason to administer this vaccine to a baby within moments of birth, when their immune defense mechanisms aren't established yet. I declined the Vit K because their body naturally and gradually builds up their clotting factors to peak after day 7 -- when, interestingly enough, most Jewish circumcisions occur. Finally, I don't have any STD's, so I declined the eye meds also. When given these meds, it causes increased blurred vision for the infant, and I wanted my baby to see me ! 2 - With Child #1 -- we followed the recommended pediatric schedule for vaccines, which begin at 1 month old. I wasn't into natural health at the time, and thankfully, she had no problems after the vacs. With Child #2 -- he had been given antibiotics in the hospital at birth for a " suspicious fever " and also was given vaccines starting at age 1 month. He has had numerous health problems, especially ear infections and now food allergies. Did the vaccines cause these illnesses/allergies? Probably not, but I think they weakened his already low-functioning immune system, so he has become more susceptible to illness. With Child #3 -- she too was given antibiotics at birth -- another " suspicious " fever -- and we allowed vaccines on a delayed schedule until 18 months. Between birth and 18 months she had numerous ear infections, bronchial infections and pneumonia. She also has food allergies. Finally at 18 months, I refused further vacs, because I began to notice a pattern; after every vac, she would get an upper respiratory infection/ear infection. Since stopping the vacs, no illnesses beyond head colds. If I did go back and do this over again with my kids, knowing what I know now, I'd do a home birth -- no interference from hospital protocols, forced antibiotics, etc. I did circumcise our son, as did my sister with her son, but opted to do so on day 8 after birth. We chose to do so because there seemed to be some small health benefit from circumcision, but little to no health benefits from not circumcising. (My other nephew, uncircumcised, has had several infections, despite being very hygiene conscious.) Finally, I wouldn't vaccinate at all, or I'd do a VERY delayed vaccine schedule, waiting until age 2 to begin. Keep in mind that children now get vaccinated for about 5 times the diseases we were vaxed for at their age. Their little developing immune systems can't keep up with the onslaught. If you want to do research, google vaccines, or check out the vaccine articles on mercola's site. He has a LOT of info on it. http://www.mercola.com/2004/dec/29/vaccination_schedule.htm Sorry to be so long, but hope that helps. Rebekah Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 1, 2005 Report Share Posted June 1, 2005 >> I have known dogs to die of parvo after they have been vaccinated against it. These dogs did not receive immunity from the shots. << That's because vaccination does not equal immunization. You are confusing the two things. Immunization is what occurs when immunity forms in response to a vaccination or natural infection. If that takes place, that vaccinal immunity to canine parvovirus is permanent and virtually perfect. Only by absolutely shoving your head in the sand and simply IGNORING the vast body of scientific research demonstrating the overwhelming effectiveness of modified live virus canine parvo vaccination can you make a statement that vaccination cannot produce immunity. The reasons that parvo vaccination can fail to produce immunity are well-known. CPV is a disease with an extremely persistent period of maternal antibody in puppies, and it's common for puppies to have too much maternal antibody to be immunized and yet not enough to protect against an actual infection. This is why so many vaccinated puppies are not immune to parvo - their vaccines did not work due to maternal antibody interference. New vaccines were invented designed to overcome maternal antibody, resulting in a much higher rate of successful immunization at a younger age. However, this is still a problem that breeders, rescue groups, and shelters contend with - the " window " of vulnerability of young puppies to parvo. Obviously dogs who do NOT seroconvert have not been immunized. It's just superstition to think that we are " injecting " immunity into a dog. We aren't. We are challenging their immune system with an antigen that has been altered so as not to cause acute disease, but to " look " enough like the one that does that the immune system forms antibodies and memory cells. When that immune system reaction is triggered and completed by a modified live viral vaccine for the four common canine viruses we vaccinate against (parvo, distemper, heptatitis, paraninfluenza), those animals are protected against direct challenge with the live viruses. There is no way to deny that fact other than to do just that... deny it. But that doesn't change it. Nor does accepting that vaccines produce immunity mean you can't also question their safety. We have got to stop mixing up efficacy and safety in the same thought process. I can believe parvo vaccine is effective and also believe it's harmful. I have managed to continue to question vaccination while still accepting that it is effective, at least for those four viruses in dogs. I've never had children and don't know as much about human vaccines as I do about canine vaccines. In fact, not too long ago I had to look up whether pertussis and diphtheria were viruses or bacteria. <G> But I have been questioning and writing about dog and cat vaccines for nearly 20 years now, and frankly, I'll go the mat with anyone, anytime, on this issue. Parvo vaccine for dogs is extremely effective. Immunity has been demonstrated by challenge with actual infection in dogs who seroconvert after vaccinations. That is why my main crusade has been to stop the idiotic, pointless, immunologically baseless REvaccination of dogs for viruses against which they are already immune due to earlier, successful immunization. To debunk the myth of " booster shots " for viruses. You cannot boost viral immunity. You cannot make an already-immune dog " more immune. " The pre-existing immunity acts JUST LIKE maternal antibody and wipes out the vaccine virus. You are getting all the risk of the vaccine with zero benefit to balance it out. As to initial vaccination, or puppy shots.... that is a personal decision. I have not vaccinated dogs and I have vaccinated them, and I have made certain observations about the results of each decision. I think there is something to be said for achieving immunity in a controlled way, and something to be said about the harm that can result from making that choice. I don't have a one-size-fits-all answer to the question of " should a breeder or should a breeder not vaccinate puppies? " . In children, what seems clear to me is that we are vaccinating them against diseases that are simply not serious enough to warrant the risk of the vaccines, and we are doing what we do in dogs - making up one-size-fits-all protocols to catch non-converters, instead of vaccinating judiciously and scientifically, only enough to get seroconversion, and no more. Another thing that confuses this picture is that people make sweeping statements about " vaccines " without realizing that vaccines vary a great deal from disease to disease and product to product. For example, there are bacterial vaccines we use in humans and in dogs, and bacterial vaccines absolutely suck. Bacterial immunity is always temporary, whether from natural infection or vaccination - that's why we can get strep throat over and over, but we only get measles once. We can't mix up bacterial vaccines and the immunity they might trigger with viral vaccines and the immunity THEY might trigger. The two things are not comparable, with vaccination OR natural infection. Anyway, I could go on, but my point is simply this: If your objection to vaccination rests on the foundation that vaccines don't work, you are only able to base that on HUMAN studies, which are epidemiological. It's not that you can't learn a lot from such studies, you can. It's just that there are always a lot of confounding factors muddying the water, such as nutritional status and other lifestyle issues. Mass vaccination often accompanies other social changes, and those are often the real cause of the improved health status of a population, not the vaccination that takes the credit. But in animal studies, we can tease out the vaccine part of the equation pretty easily, because they take special pathogen-free laboratory puppies, vaccinate one group and not another, keep them in pathogen-free laboratories, take blood tests to determine seroconversion in the vaccinated group, and then challenge all the puppies with disease. They compare the numbers of puppies in one group with the other. The rates of resistance to those challenges among the vaccinated puppies are typically nearly 100 percent (we're talking parvo here), and ARE 100 percent among those who seroconverted post-vaccine, and the death rate - not just the morbidity rate, but the MORTALITY rate - among unvaccinated puppies is typically 100 percent, or very close. Since we don't do these types of tests in humans (and frankly, I wish we didn't do them in dogs, even while part of me is glad for the data), we get to run around blithely making statements like " vaccines don't immunize. " We credit improved sanitation and other social changes with reduced rates of infectious disease, and in many cases, we quite rightly do so. But that other set of facts from the rest of the animal kingdom is also out there, and we really should keep it in mind when we think about, and talk about, this issue. Christie Caber Feidh ish Deerhounds Holistically Raising Our Dogs Since 1986 http://www.caberfeidh.com http://doggedblog.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 1, 2005 Report Share Posted June 1, 2005 I think Christie hit the nail on the head with some good back up. Vaccines can be effective, and,, as we know in humans, ,they can also be dangerous or deadly. I was recently the subject of a story on chicken pox vaccines that made it all the way to national NPR news (it was about moms who have chicken pox parties). I learned some things as a result of that experience that i didn't know. One, the rate of chicken pox has gone down considerably since the vaccine was introduced (or if children get it, it is much milder, same with measles, etc.). Two, children DO die from chicken pox. I know bc i was interviewed on a radio show by a talk host whose two year old died from chicken pox. She ended up with lesions on her heart. I still won't vax for chicken pox though. The whooping cough story posted here is not the first i have heard and it is one disease i am really scared of my kids getting. It is still going around. Sure, if you eat the perfect diet, etc. your chances of not getting sick or not getting that sick are much better. But you have to be honest with yourself -- how perfect is your kid's diet going to be? Will they not get cake and ice cream at the many bday parties they attend? Have you seen the kid at bday parties who doesn't get any? I have. It is pretty depressing. Will they not get a few Goldfish crackers that inevitably get passed around at play dates? Will you not put them in preschool bc the food will inevitably be sub par? Will you not let them play at friends' houses bc you can't control what they will eat there? Will you rush out in a panic bc the neighbor brought over a cold Hi-C juice box for them? Even Sally says it in NT: unless you raise them in a closet or in isolation from ordinary American life, you are going to have a hard time keeping them on a perfect diet if they have friends, play dates, school, etc. (we will homeschool but imperfect foods abound). Again, I don't vax, but i am frankly sick and tired of the knee-jerk anti-vax rhetoric. I want some honest, non-dogmatic, unemotional discussion of the realities of this topic. Not vaxing scares me bc my kids, esp. my extremely picky 5-year-old do not have a perfect diet. She is pretty healthy but i'm not sure how well she'd fare with a bad case of whooping cough and i don't even want to be in the hospital with her for that. My two-year-old is breastfed still and that gives her a fighting chance, but then she's so young. In fact, i am considering selective vaxing when they both hit six years old, which is when i've read their immune system is more developed. But the injury rates and deaths from vaxes (and i personally know people affected) scare me to death too. Tough business having children. We will do ANYTHING to protect them and with the vax issue i feel we are potentially damned either way. Elaine Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 1, 2005 Report Share Posted June 1, 2005 I want thank everyone for the really great discussion so far. I obviously need to do my homework and will come to an informed, albeit difficult, decision--luckily I have some time to mull it over. Elaine, you really hit home with this comment: > Again, I don't vax, but i am frankly sick and tired of the knee-jerk > anti-vax rhetoric. I want some honest, non-dogmatic, unemotional discussion > of the realities of this topic. This reminds me of discussing nutrition with vegans! Thanks, and keep the comments coming. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 1, 2005 Report Share Posted June 1, 2005 Hi Christie-- Listen, I never intended to create a huge controversy about vaccinations on this list. My intention was to respond to a post about whether or not to vaccinate, and I threw in my 2 cents. I do not believe I am blindly tossing out anti-vax rhetoric. Your experiences and your research have led you to believe one way about this subject, and mine have led me to believe differently. I do not think I have stuck my head in the sand at all. I think I've done more research by far than the average person. But I am not willing to go " the mat with anyone, anytime " so in that respect you " win. " There are several parts of your post that I have always been in agreement with, and other parts that I disagree with. I don't think either of us is going to change the other's mind, and so we're going to have to agree to disagree. I really enjoy this list and I do not care to make enemies with anyone. With that said, I respectfully bow out of this conversation. Wishing you the best, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 1, 2005 Report Share Posted June 1, 2005 >> Your experiences and your research have led you to believe one way about this subject, and mine have led me to believe differently. << , a belief is: Vaccines can be harmful out of proportion to any benefit they might offer. A statement of fact is: Vaccines do not result in immunity. The first statement is something any of us can have an opinion on, discuss, disagree... people of good will and with good information can certainly have different opinions on. But the second statement is provably false. Belief doesn't come into it. This isn't about opinions. Christie Caber Feidh ish Deerhounds Holistically Raising Our Dogs Since 1986 http://www.caberfeidh.com http://doggedblog.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 1, 2005 Report Share Posted June 1, 2005 There are also a couple of things to consider. Although there are no studies showing whether or not this is true as far as I know, I have heard several doctors say that from their observation their unvaccinated patients are overall much healthier than the vaccinated when measured by the number of colds and flu and ear infections. But this is anecdotal. Even more worrisome is that it has been suggested that getting childhood diseases is important for proper development of the immune system so that they are less likely to develop cancer and other serious diseases later on. Of course in the absence of good studies it is hard to know. Irene At 09:12 AM 6/1/05, you wrote: >I think Christie hit the nail on the head with some good back up. Vaccines >can be effective, and,, as we know in humans, ,they can also be dangerous or >deadly. I was recently the subject of a story on chicken pox vaccines that >made it all the way to national NPR news (it was about moms who have chicken >pox parties). I learned some things as a result of that experience that i >didn't know. One, the rate of chicken pox has gone down considerably since >the vaccine was introduced (or if children get it, it is much milder, same >with measles, etc.). Two, children DO die from chicken pox. I know bc i was >interviewed on a radio show by a talk host whose two year old died from >chicken pox. She ended up with lesions on her heart. I still won't vax for >chicken pox though. > >The whooping cough story posted here is not the first i have heard and it is >one disease i am really scared of my kids getting. It is still going around. > >Sure, if you eat the perfect diet, etc. your chances of not getting sick or >not getting that sick are much better. But you have to be honest with >yourself -- how perfect is your kid's diet going to be? Will they not get >cake and ice cream at the many bday parties they attend? Have you seen the >kid at bday parties who doesn't get any? I have. It is pretty depressing. >Will they not get a few Goldfish crackers that inevitably get passed around >at play dates? Will you not put them in preschool bc the food will >inevitably be sub par? Will you not let them play at friends' houses bc you >can't control what they will eat there? Will you rush out in a panic bc the >neighbor brought over a cold Hi-C juice box for them? Even Sally says it in >NT: unless you raise them in a closet or in isolation from ordinary American >life, you are going to have a hard time keeping them on a perfect diet if >they have friends, play dates, school, etc. (we will homeschool but >imperfect foods abound). > >Again, I don't vax, but i am frankly sick and tired of the knee-jerk >anti-vax rhetoric. I want some honest, non-dogmatic, unemotional discussion >of the realities of this topic. Not vaxing scares me bc my kids, esp. my >extremely picky 5-year-old do not have a perfect diet. She is pretty healthy >but i'm not sure how well she'd fare with a bad case of whooping cough and i >don't even want to be in the hospital with her for that. My two-year-old is >breastfed still and that gives her a fighting chance, but then she's so >young. > >In fact, i am considering selective vaxing when they both hit six years old, >which is when i've read their immune system is more developed. But the >injury rates and deaths from vaxes (and i personally know people affected) >scare me to death too. Tough business having children. We will do ANYTHING >to protect them and with the vax issue i feel we are potentially damned >either way. >Elaine > > > > >IMPORTANT ADDRESSES > * < />NATIVE > NUTRITION online > * <http://onibasu.com/>SEARCH the entire message archive with Onibasu > > ><mailto: -owner >LIST OWNER: Idol >MODERATORS: Heidi Schuppenhauer > Wanita Sears > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 1, 2005 Report Share Posted June 1, 2005 Elaine, this post was very thoughtful and well put. It is so hard being an nt mom in this society! I feel the pressure to conform already, people offering my son cookies and candy and the like - and he's only 14 months. All my local friends with kids feed soy milk and low fat stuff. On the playground I worry kids are meaner because they don't get enough butter. And how will that affect my son -- both my perception and the reality of kiddie social life -- when I consider most kids malnourished? Maybe we with young kids should all move to one place. Daphne > I think Christie hit the nail on the head with some good back up. Vaccines > can be effective, and,, as we know in humans, ,they can also be dangerous or > deadly. I was recently the subject of a story on chicken pox vaccines that > made it all the way to national NPR news (it was about moms who have chicken > pox parties). I learned some things as a result of that experience that i > didn't know. One, the rate of chicken pox has gone down considerably since > the vaccine was introduced (or if children get it, it is much milder, same > with measles, etc.). Two, children DO die from chicken pox. I know bc i was > interviewed on a radio show by a talk host whose two year old died from > chicken pox. She ended up with lesions on her heart. I still won't vax for > chicken pox though. > > The whooping cough story posted here is not the first i have heard and it is > one disease i am really scared of my kids getting. It is still going around. > > Sure, if you eat the perfect diet, etc. your chances of not getting sick or > not getting that sick are much better. But you have to be honest with > yourself -- how perfect is your kid's diet going to be? Will they not get > cake and ice cream at the many bday parties they attend? Have you seen the > kid at bday parties who doesn't get any? I have. It is pretty depressing. > Will they not get a few Goldfish crackers that inevitably get passed around > at play dates? Will you not put them in preschool bc the food will > inevitably be sub par? Will you not let them play at friends' houses bc you > can't control what they will eat there? Will you rush out in a panic bc the > neighbor brought over a cold Hi-C juice box for them? Even Sally says it in > NT: unless you raise them in a closet or in isolation from ordinary American > life, you are going to have a hard time keeping them on a perfect diet if > they have friends, play dates, school, etc. (we will homeschool but > imperfect foods abound). > > Again, I don't vax, but i am frankly sick and tired of the knee-jerk > anti-vax rhetoric. I want some honest, non-dogmatic, unemotional discussion > of the realities of this topic. Not vaxing scares me bc my kids, esp. my > extremely picky 5-year-old do not have a perfect diet. She is pretty healthy > but i'm not sure how well she'd fare with a bad case of whooping cough and i > don't even want to be in the hospital with her for that. My two-year-old is > breastfed still and that gives her a fighting chance, but then she's so > young. > > In fact, i am considering selective vaxing when they both hit six years old, > which is when i've read their immune system is more developed. But the > injury rates and deaths from vaxes (and i personally know people affected) > scare me to death too. Tough business having children. We will do ANYTHING > to protect them and with the vax issue i feel we are potentially damned > either way. > Elaine Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 1, 2005 Report Share Posted June 1, 2005 On Wed, 1 Jun 2005 08:38:30 -0700 " Christie " <christiekeith@...> wrote: > Anyway, I could go on, but my point is simply this: If your objection to > vaccination rests on the foundation that vaccines don't work, you are only > able to base that on HUMAN studies, which are epidemiological. It's not that > you can't learn a lot from such studies, you can. It's just that there are > always a lot of confounding factors muddying the water, such as nutritional > status and other lifestyle issues. Mass vaccination often accompanies other > social changes, and those are often the real cause of the improved health > status of a population, not the vaccination that takes the credit. I agree with this wholeheartedly. The same diseases in humans <g> that we were vaccinating for in America disappeared or declined at the same time in Europe, without the accompanying mass vaccinations. I think with some serious study it becomes fairly obvious that in HUMANS mass vaccination is not only problematic but even dangerous. " We are in the end talking about groups supporting the only thing that the state does: namely roughing people up through violence and threats of violence. That's what every line of every regulation comes down to. That's the meaning of every tax. That's the whole upshot of every tariff, expenditure, prohibition, and bomb. It all amounts to increased use of violence in society. Strip away the banners, songs, uniforms, and speeches: that's all that the state really is. " Lew Rockwell Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 1, 2005 Report Share Posted June 1, 2005 --- In , Irene Musiol <Irene.M@a...> wrote: > There are also a couple of things to consider. Although there are no > studies showing whether or not this is true as far as I know, I have heard > several doctors say that from their observation their unvaccinated patients > are overall much healthier than the vaccinated when measured by the number > of colds and flu and ear infections. But this is anecdotal. > > Even more worrisome is that it has been suggested that getting childhood > diseases is important for proper development of the immune system so that > they are less likely to develop cancer and other serious diseases later on. > Of course in the absence of good studies it is hard to know. > > Irene Hi Irene, very interesting what you said; i've heard a physician (all natural type) say that on the radio; that the immune system, like other systems in the body, needs to be exercised or it doesn't work properly. so if you're always giving it vaccinations and antibiotics, your immune system won't learn to work properly on its own. very interesting. laura Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 1, 2005 Report Share Posted June 1, 2005 --- In , " daphneb10 " <biophile410@y...> wrote: > Elaine, this post was very thoughtful and well put. It is so hard > being an nt mom in this society! I feel the pressure to conform > already, people offering my son cookies and candy and the like - and > he's only 14 months. All my local friends with kids feed soy milk and > low fat stuff. On the playground I worry kids are meaner because they > don't get enough butter. And how will that affect my son -- both my > perception and the reality of kiddie social life -- when I consider > most kids malnourished? Maybe we with young kids should all move to > one place. Daphne > Daphne, we moved to a new neighborhood in our town last year. we are invited to a neighborhood block party...and i was asked to bring soda and dessert!!! LOLOLOL!!!! i called the woman in charge and asked if i could bring a case of seltzer with lemon and lime wedges instead....and if i could bring a whole watermelon cut up instead of dessert. she said it's a very casual block party and that would be great.... it's just very sad to me how entrenched these foods are, and that people really have no idea what they're doing to themselves and their families. laura in nj Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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