To avoid hijacking someone else's thread that they started, I'll post about it here:
@LadyMillil Can you explain to me why waiting until your children start school to have them vaccinated puts them at risk as well as the other children? Is there a time window after vaccination that I'm not aware of? If so, can you please provide your scientific source for that information? I didn't say they start school and then vaccinate them after the fact.
Also, I had the MMR vaccine and still got the Measles and so did my sister. I've also never had a flu shot or a pneumonia vaccine. I've never contracted either and I work in healthcare in direct patient care. I'm in isolation rooms all of the time and have never contracted anything. Maybe I fit into a small percentage of people, but I certainly did not say that I'm not going to vaccinate my kids at all but all of you are assuming that. Why?!
You are telling me to educate myself. I plan to do that. That's why I'm asking questions. Please don't make assumptions about me or call me selfish when you haven't asked me any questions about my line of thought and make an attempt to get to know me.
Since you and several others seem to know so much about vaccinations, I'm all ears. Educate me with scientific sources.
Re: Hash It Out Thread
Second, even if your kid isn't obviously sick they could be a carrier for diseases that they aren't vaccinated against. So every time you take that kid out in public (unless, again, they're a bubble kid) you risk exposing others to that disease - others who have compromised immune systems, who are unable to be vaccinated due to age or health reasons, etc. This was already mentioned by the posters in the other thread - again why it would make more sense to keep the discussion in one place.
I'm not by any means saying what should or shouldn't be done as that's not my place to say and I'm not one for debates but I just wanted to provide some information on the topic as explained from a healthcare organizations perspective
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http://www.fertilityfriend.com/home/396b04
As for other kids, some people can't be vaccinated--babies under 1 can't have the MMR (for no other reason that their body simply won't respond to it, not because it's dangerous) and some people have immune systems that won't allow them to be immunized. They rely on everyone else getting immunized so the diseases don't run rampant and they aren't exposed. It's called herd immunity. Some people don't like the term "herd," but it's the term for large groups of people.
If you got measles, it was probably not a strong strand of it because Of herd immunity or you got a milder case than it could have been because your vaccine worked to a certain degree just not fully.
I could go on, but I won't, for now.
ETA: totally missed the original post so sorry if I am repeating or missing something.
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I don't mean to sound mean, so I hope this comes out right, but I just don't understand why you wouldn't do it when medical and scientific professionals who have years of education and experience recommend. I assume if you get a BFP, you will take prenatals, avoid alcohol, limit caffeine etc. So...why question the pros on this? Genuinely curious.
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You're not around only the same people every day. Every time you leave the house your child would be at risk - the supermarket, the playground, starbucks, day care, anywhere. And every time you take your unvaccinated child into these places you put other people at risk, whether you know them or not.
When it comes to public spaces, it is socially responsible to be concerned both with contracting OR spreading diseases. Why would you want to risk infecting young children, elderly or immune-compromised people??
Some info on herd immunity. An example would be that since healthy children have the vaccine those who are immune compromised are protected due to the prevention is disease spread.
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Already did. And as far as It's rhetorical.
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What exactly am I assuming?
This is what you wrote in the other thread about waiting until school age:
"That's what my Mom did with us, she waited until right before we went to school for the first time to get us vaccinated."
So, if you want to wait until school age to vaccinate rather than earlier, this means you don't think it's necessary to vaccinate earlier than school age. That's not an assumption, it's literally what you said.
https://www2.aap.org/immunization/families/faq/vaccinestudies.pdf -A 21 page PDF from the American Academy of Pediatrics
https://www.nfid.org/about-vaccines/reasons
https://www.cdc.gov/features/ReasonsToVaccinate/
https://www.webmd.com/children/vaccines/news/20150129/vaccination-choice-measles?page=2
All of these links are from five minutes of spending time on Google....you can also try Google Scholar There is tons of information out there. As for why the MMR did not work on you...Look up "titers" Hep A & B, MMR, and such have what is called titers. If you have a positive titer then you have built up an immunity in your system to those particular diseases. MMR has three different titers in it because it is a combination vaccine, you can have a positive titer on one part, and a negative on another (Measles (AKA: Rubeola),Mumps, & Rubella). They will attempt to immunize you again if you have a negative titer, but sometimes it just doesn't work. I have a negative titer on one part of mine, and have had an MMR booster four times now in my lifetime. You could possibly have a negative titer as well. It should be part of your lab work up once you're pregnant. So you can ask specifically then....
The links above are just general information about vaccines and immunizations in general. The link below is an example of the MMR titer results that I was discussing above. It is a fake lab sheet that would help explain your results should you get your titers drawn at some point.
https://web.csulb.edu/colleges/chhs/departments/nursing/docs/TiterandVaccinationInformation_000.pdf
Lastly, we can't just ask to see people's immunity or titers to diseases, or disease history for our own personal agendas what ever good intentions we might have. It violates HIPAA....since you're in healthcare, I would assume that you know exactly what i'm talking about
DISCLAIMER: I did not read the original thread, and have no clue what the issue was.....just trying to be helpful
What do you think of when you think of an immune compromised person? Obviously babies, elderly, and the sick. But what you may not realize is that people whom are seemingly healthy may have a compromised immune system as well. My mom looks very healthy from the outside, but she has an autoimmune disorder which requires her to take immuno-suppressants every day, putting her at a huge risk of getting sick in public. She can't even be around her own granddaughter when she has a cold because she could contract it and it may take her 3 weeks to get over it.
If you genuinely want to learn more about vaccines and why they are important then you need to look at some published scientific journal articles, because I can guarantee you that they all say the same thing. Maybe look at an immunology book.
If I know that a family member or friend has not had their child vaccinated, I choose to not have DD around them. It is not worth finding out if my child can contract a disease from them (that they may not show any symptoms of) because their parents are too proud to get their children vaccinated. I'm not trying to sound mean, but preventing my child from dying from a completely preventable disease is actually kind of important to me.
You're in isolation rooms all the time, huh? I assume you have a cute little isolation kit hanging on the door with PPE ready for you before you walk in the door, right? You know a patient has the flu so you take droplet precautions. You know a patient has C-Diff, so you gown and glove and may wear a mask depending on what you're doing when you enter the room. You know a patient has TB so you gown, glove, mask, and put on eye shields. You know a patient has MRSA of the nares so you throw on a pair of gloves and a gown.
These are the reasons you haven't "contracted" anything. Do you plan on gowning and gloving your children every day?
Oh, boy. I'm getting ragey and I'm feeling a post it happening.