Monday, June 13, 2016

Vaccine Injuries

Sometimes, there are people who get sick and possibly die from vaccines. According to the website called http://www.nvic.org/Vaccines-and-Diseases.aspx, NVIC makes sure that you are safe for vaccinations. Although they can't force you not to vaccinate but they also can't force you to vaccinate. There have been families receiving $3,000,000,000 for vaccine injuries and deaths. The website tells people to be fully aware of the side effects. We are told to ask for more than one source to see if the vaccine is worth having.

Friday, March 18, 2016

Pro-Vaccine Law In California

    In the article California's Pro-Vaccination Law May be Working, describes about how more kindergartners are getting their vaccines for school. There was a law that passed recently that must vaccinate children. Looking at the statistics, of all kindergartners that are in school, they are in public schools. The exemptions for vaccinations have dropped since 2012. West Virginia and Mississippi have made nearly all students be vaccinated. The law in California isn't going in effect until July 2016, but the decline in exemptions have been dropping. Some diseases have seen reemergence because of a article that says it links vaccines to autism. Measles killed a woman because she was not vaccinated. The paper was later retracted due to the events that followed the publishing of the paper. The results for the 2016-2017 school year won't be up until around August or September 2016.

Tuesday, February 23, 2016

How Do We Convince Anti-Vaxxers to Vaccinate?

    How do we convince anti-vaxxers to vaccinate themselves and their children? That's a question that we want to know. But we can't get to them.

    One problem is that that the name "anti-vaxxer" is not politically correct. According to the website, Data Science Central, the Center of Disease Control (CDC), is technically a monopoly. Other monopolies don't necessarily care about the impact of their intentions. Another problem is that there is an inability to have a reason to doubt them. Most anti-vaxxers believe that vaccines will cause autism. There is no proof that vaccines can cause autism. People can believe in extreme things that vaccines are part of a government conspiracy. Since vaccines are mandatory for schools, parents can lie and say that their children are vaccinated when in reality, they aren't. People can go all natural and refuse to take medication. To pro-vaxxers, not vaccinating your children is a form of child abuse. It goes the same way for anti-vaxxers. They believe if you vaccinate your children, it is a form of child abuse.

    Sometimes, articles are posted that are controversial just to make more money. This angers both pro-vaxxers and anti-vaxxers in different ways. If the article supports vaccines slams anti-vaxxers, they will think that pro-vaxxers are judgmental people. The same way goes for an article that slams pro-vaxxers. Pro-vaxxers will think that anti-vaxxers are idiots. Sometimes statistics are not accurate. People who make statistics skew the results to favor a certain group or detest another group of people. There needs to be more truthful articles and statistics otherwise no one will believe that vaccines are good for you. Then there is the sad truth that you can't convince anti-vaxxers to vaccinate. They are sometimes stuck in their own ways. It won't help them to vaccinate themselves if pro-vaxxers bully them.