on 26-05-2013 09:09 PM
on 27-05-2013 09:06 AM
the comment made by the Melbourne based doctor 'vaccination was the trigger' was of much interest to me.
on 27-05-2013 10:06 AM
on 27-05-2013 10:15 AM
well wow....fancy you seeing it that way. Guess you needed an open mind to understand how bias it was. No surprises though
on 27-05-2013 10:24 AM
cherples......stories such as that are going on by both sides. You think the lro vaccination don't hound the parents of non vaccinated children? The more informed you are the better...and by formed I mean truly informed on all issues by both sides. Testing prior would be my choice.
I didn't say I think the pro vaccinated parents don't hound other parents, although I doubt there is much of that going on. I commented on an article. The article about parents being attacked by anti vaccer's. That is not acceptable regardless of the excuses you can invent.
Truly informed on both sides. One side is peddling scientific research while the other is peddling old wives tales and myths.
on 27-05-2013 10:27 AM
on 27-05-2013 11:10 AM
TS: "interesting that some societies have little illness and rely on non conventional medicine with a high sucess rate. While others seem to have continued out breaks despite vaccination....."
So TS, provide the relevant information concerning these "societies", studies as well, then I might consider you comments other than "anti".
on 27-05-2013 11:51 AM
The inclusion of the man who contracted polio from the polio vaccine (and probably much more, I only saw a couple of snippets) demonstrates quite nicely that it wasn't biased.
Why do you say it was biased? Because they didn't air and take seriously the views of the people involved in groups such as the Australian Vaccination Network?
You need to elaborate your allegations. Not just say "Oh of course you can't see why it was biased". It's illustrative of the (lack of) logic and level of critical thinking that is shared by the anti vaccination types.
on 27-05-2013 12:19 PM
The man who caught polio from the vaccine had part of his immune system missing.
So would that not be genetic?
The connection between vaccine and autism has been found to be untrue. The research was false.
on 27-05-2013 12:35 PM
several children who contracted illnesses had immune problems one a missing spleen. The debate re vaccine and autism is on going with good indication that vaccines may trigger itin SOME. Some are having issues following the newish cervical cancer vaccine......SOME not all. Same as SOME vaccinated are not immune at all. what works for one may not work for another. Not so long ago alternative medicine was thought to be hog wash but is now readily accepted by the same medical experts 🙂 Freedom to chose is the issue.
on 27-05-2013 12:39 PM