TinkInPink
<font color=darkorchid>I once hurt myself eating a
- Joined
- Jan 23, 2006
- Messages
- 1,053
I think you misunderstood what I was trying to say. I for vaccinations. What I was pointing is that I would understand the hesitation if scientific studies were all saying different things but the bottom line is they're all in agreement that vaccines don't cause autism and do save lives. That's where my comment about not understanding where the confusion lies. Basically I'm not understanding why so many parents are hesitant.
Look at it this way, studies have shown that seatbelts save lives but you'll still hear of the odd case of a person actually being saved because he/she wasn't wearing a seatbelt. Are you going to hope you're that odd case and not wear one?
I understand some children have bad reactions to immunizations and that can make parents hesitant to continue immunizing that child or to allow future children to be immunized but the benefits still far outweigh the risks.
no i was agreeing with you
the idea that vaccines have been used over and over again with out high numbers of reactions is the scientific method (doing an experiment over and over and getting reproduce able results), sorry if that was confusing.
We are really taking a step backwards and basing our scientific info on a few outliers.
. I for vaccinations. What I was pointing is that I would understand the hesitation if scientific studies were all saying different things but the bottom line is they're all in agreement that vaccines don't cause autism and do save lives. That's where my comment about not understanding where the confusion lies. Basically I'm not understanding why so many parents are hesitant.
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) that would have a disease we don't experience often in the US due to vaccinations?
my apologies
Friend's child dead. Cousin in law's child a polio victim. From the immunization. These aren't just random statistics. These were/are real people in my immediate circle.