No matter that the CDC, the FDA, the AMA, the American Academy of Pediatrics all are in agreement when it comes to childhood vaccination recommendations. The training involved, and continual review of scientific findings, in the people who make up these groups is overwhelming. But no, they are probably less informed than Joe Blow internet informed or someone who has obvious anti-vaccination bias writing a book full of theoretical ''evidence''.
Well... I could say the same about breastfeeding. The AAP recommended breastfeeding until 1 year when I had Russ, and I think they increased it to two years recently? The WHO recommends two years. Yet there's plenty of people who will argue that formula is just fine* - there's formula in hospitals - and many pediatricians don't know the recommendations on breastfeeding. At Russ's four month appointment, I was told to go ahead and start cereal and other solids, even though the recommendation is not until six months.
I had a ER pediatrician tell me there was no way my son could be dehydrated because he still had saliva in his mouth, even though he hadn't eaten or drank in 24 hours. Even though he had been seen on base that morning and the doctors THERE were the ones who made the decision that Russ was going to the ER. They finally used a catheter to determine his hydration levels (guess what? dehydrated!) and two weeks later the poor guy got an ulcer on his wee-wee from the catheter. So no, sometimes I tend to go with my Mommy-gut instead of ALL doctors. And my Mommy-gut tells me that even a school full of vaccinated kids still get the chicken pox, maybe waiting to catch the real disease and getting full immunity is a better choice for us.
*I'm not anti-formula - just if we're going to talk about what the AAP recommends, well, guess what? It's not exactly formula!
You make decisions for your children (if you have them; I am sorry, I can't always remember who does), and I will make them for my child. Done and done, easy peasy! And we all live happily ever after.

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