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![]() N2EY wrote: In article , "Dee D. Flint" writes: I don't know when this started but I know that this was the case in Ohio in 1987 when my younger daughter was born. The fact that states require the immunizations for school is why the county boards of health were required to make the shots available to all at cost. While they were actually cheaper via the county board of health, there was often no physician on hand in case of problems. Amazing. Yes many people are unaware of the death rates from some of these diseases. For example, the death rate among children who caught whooping cough was 50%. I didn't know it was that bad. There is also a lot of bad science out there involving immunizations. For example, there are still folks trying to sell the idea that immunizations are somehow a cause of autism, even though repeated scientific studies have shown no causality. There *is* a sort of correlation in that the first definitive signs of autism are usually observed about the age of many common immunizations. The very success of immunizations has been a big part of the controversy sround their continued use. "After all, no one gets these diseases anymore, so why should we immunize for them?" Stupid logic, but there are some pretty stupid people out there. If they think immunizations are bad, they should see how bad not immunization is. - Mike KB3EIA - |
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