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Monday, February 09, 2015

How did discredited study create US anti-vaccine madness?

A discredited British study helped create today's anti-vaccine movement

Jodi Krawitt holds her son Rhett, 6, in their home in Corte Madera, California. Rhett is recovering from leukemia and his father is concerned his child could succumb to an outbreak of measles at his Northern California school. Krawitt is asking officials to bar entry to any student not vaccinated because of a family's personal beliefs.
The measles outbreak at Disneyland has reignited the debate over whether parents should be required to vaccinate their kids.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

let's ask the same question about man-made global warming
ever wonder why the Vaccine Court that you have never heard of does not publish its hearings?

Anonymous said...

People are programmable drones.They honestly believe what they are told & do accordingly.

Anonymous said...

There is a great deal of evidence showing problems with vaccines, not just 'one study'.
There is also a concerted effort underway to demonize those who refuse vaccines.
Follow the money.. who is responsible for that?

Anonymous said...

7:51 yes like getting God knows what stuck in their veins because a government bureaucrat says you should. How about people are given all information available including negative results that the government covers up and then make an informed decision on whether you want the crap stuck in you. This is a different day from the benign inoculations the baby boomer generation got. It pays to be very skeptical.