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02 November 2010

Do Vaccines Prevent Diseases?

In some cases people find that vaccinations to a poor job in protecting the body from colds and other serious diseases.  In Germany hospitals stopped requiring pertussis (whooping cough) vaccination. Today less than 10 % of German children are vaccinated against pertussis. The number of cases of pertussis has decreased even though less children are receiving pertussis vaccine.
Meanwhile, measles outbreaks have occurred in schools with vaccination rates over 98 % in all parts of the U.S. including areas that had reported no cases of measles for years. As measles immunization rates rise to high levels measles becomes a disease seen only in people who has been vaccinated. Can you believe? In 1986 there were 1300 cases of pertussis in Kansas and 90 % of these cases occurred in children who had been vaccinated. Similar vaccine failures have been reported from Nova Scotia where pertussis continues to be occurring despite universal vaccination. Pertussis remains endemic in the Netherlands where 96 % of children have received 3 pertussis shots between the 3 months and 12 months of age.
 

   
   According to Walene James, the author of Immunization: the Reality Behind The Myth, "Vaccines trick the body so it does not complete inflammatory response to the injected virus."
In my opinion vaccines do help some diseases, but I do feel that vaccines are not the first solution to protect someone from getting an infection. People have to be aware of how to treat their body as well.
For example, I know a few people who would wear tank tops with shorts on a 47 degree weather day, that can get you severely sick. What some people don't know is that, you can catch a cold that way and sometimes colds lead to ammonia. I have a friend who would never wear her jacket during the winter time and I always encouraged her to wear, but she insisted that she never gets sick. A few months later my friend got ammonia and she couldn't attend school for a few weeks. Situations like that, shows that we can't put all the blame on vaccinations, but we as people need to know how to treat our bodies appropriately.

01 November 2010

Can You Deal With An Autistic Child?????


                                                                                                 
     As a parent, I can't imagine myself dealing with an autistic child. I just don't think I would have the patience to deal with an autistic child. How about you? Since there is a possible link between vaccinations and autism, I don't I'm going to want my child to have any vaccinations. This way both my child and I can avoid any kind of diseases or infections that comes from vaccines.
     Some people might think to themselves,"why avoid vaccinations, they protect children from outside infections?" But what some people fail to understand is that vaccines nowadays are full with harmful chemicals that is beneficial for an adult's immune system but dangerous for a child's immune system. By the way, not all vaccinations are necessary but people just take them because doctors recommend them. Do you think that everything a doctor recommends is beneficial? I know some people who literally do every single thing that a doctor tells them to do. Are you that person? The doctor may say that a patient needs about five vaccinations in order to be safe from swine flu or a simple cold. I guarantee you that the patient will make sure he or she takes those five vaccinations to stay away from those risks.
 

After all of the potential diseases and infections out there, should we as people get vaccinations? It is possible that vaccines can cause any kind of disease or speical condition?

This Is Interesting: