Eve here. Articles like this make me crazy. The discrediting efforts of medical orthodox with vaccines demonstrate that of pets’ Peeve cognitive bias, black and white thinking.
RFK, Jr. It cannot be denied that he will gain a much larger platform thanks to his presidential campaign and now his role as head of HHS. But RFK, Jr. The fact that it is dangerously wrong for HISASLES vaccine alarm disease does not mean that all vaccines are being pushed into patients…
In general, American medicine has a powerful, money-driven prpence for overtesting and overtreating. Vaccines are one example. And that’s before we reached a huge debate about Covid vaccine injuries. This is a legitimate cause of anger, not just because of the harm done, but also because of the lack of proper disclosure and the lack of enforcement of many as a condition of employment. It was the elephant in the room, which greatly increased distrust of what would pass for the medical facility.
The exhibit is a childhood vaccine schedule. Have a Gander (or visit the CDC site):
We will see the HEP B vaccines begin soon… Prayer tells us how babies and toddlers contract HEP B. By stepping on a needle with a live virus? It’s literally a kind of scenario used to justify it.
This view is confirmed from Mayo Clinic:
Here are some common ways HBV can sprawl:
Sexual contact. If you give infected smon and condoms, you may have hepatitis B. Once a person’s blood, saliva, smoking, or vaginal fluid enters the body, the virus can pass it on to you.
Sharing needles. HBV spreads easily to needles and syringes that are tolerated with infected blood. Sharing the equipment used to inject illegal drugs increases the risk of hepatitis B.
An accidental needle. Hepatitis B is a concern for the healthcare world and for others who come into contact with human blood.
Pregnant to a newborn. Pregnant people infected with HBV can pass the virus to their baby during childbirth. However, newborns can be vaccinated in almost all cases to prevent infection. If you are pregnant or want to get pregnant, consult a medical professional about whether you are being tested for hepatitis B.
From IM doc:
When the boys were born, and they took the shots on the first day of their lives.
She cried out to the pediatrician – her NE (milk) is being bought from her chi – and she is donating her children her Vray Life Stream to protect them – there will be no shots until the milk stops – and if you raise it again, I will fire you. It is from Buddhism.
All children’s vaccines were delayed until about 11 months after breastfeeding stopped – if I remember correctly. There was no denial. She has her children at home with attempts to force a COVID vaccine. She is a variety of bright people – she is an alumni of [XYZ University] – The version of MIT – But the way it is done with our kids is not on Earth. Trust me what I think is fine. If we vaccinate children, she will take them home to China and imitate them. “I don’t dream of injecting my kids into these scum companies – they lie every day – if they lie about the vaccine.”
And slow:
It’s absolutely true – my wife and I were the literal human shield of nurses along with twins –
They were not out of our view –
It’s here – all nurses visit the room – every time – we were always asked about HEP B VAXX. The same cannot be said about peeing poop. Mom’s healthy sleep explodes with anything – they’ve all been shortened – when we found out we weren’t going through – pressure on Hep B created.
Take care, I get the vaccine and even ask for my tetanus booster. But I reject the low efficacy you like shots of flu and you like Hep B, who doesn’t engage in behaviors that I am at risk of transmission. The fact that we feel we need to discriminate speaks volume about our system.
Senior contributor Elizabeth Rosenthal joined KFF Health News as editor-in-chief in 2016 as correspondent for the New York Times 22 years later. Originally published on KFF Health News
President Donald Trump’s administration is notorious for its array of “alternative facts” that lead to threats to American democracy, such as those who actually won the 2020 election.
And for the past six months, the interests have been life and death. Trump’s health officials have supported alternative facts to science to impose polys that contradict modern medical knowledge.
It’s an undeniable fact – the true science – that vaccines are miraculous in preventing terrible diseases ranging from polio to tetanus to measles. Number studies have shown that it does not cause autism. It is accessed by the scientific community.
But Robert F. Kennedy Jr. of the Department of Health and Human Services, who has no medical background or scientific training, doesn’t believe it all. The imagination of such misinformation is already fatal.
For decades, the majority of Americans were willing to score shots – even if a considerable number of parents were uneasy. A 2015 survey found that 25% of parents believed that measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccines could cause autism. (A 1998 study suggesting that connections are fully trusted.) A concern is that only 2% of children entering kindergarten were exempt from vaccination for religious or philosophical objections. The kids got the shots.
But recently, the online providers of poor government science communication and Mi-Jong Form have been cultivating alternative facts to grow like weeds. From 2024-25, the full vaccination rate for those entering kindergarten was just over 92%. In more than a dozen states, the rate was below 90%, and in Idaho it was below 80%. And now we have a stream of over 1,300 measles cases from a declared disease that was extinct in the US quarter ago.
It’s easy to see how both the push and pull factors have led to the acceptance of bad science for vaccines.
The number of recommended vaccines that have been hit by overwhelming patients and parents this century. So, for the most part, it’s because the clinical science of vaccinology is booming (that’s a good thing). And some of the vaccines that were historically sold at Penny now sell for hundreds of dollars, making them a huge source of profit for drugmakers.
In 1986, a typical child was recommended to chant 11 vaccine doses – seven injections and four oral. Today, that number has risen to 50-54 doses by the age of 18.
The Advisory Committee on Vaccination Practices, which provides vaccine decisions, conducts a scientific risk-benefit assessment. This means that the harm of getting sick is greater than the risk of side effects. That doesn’t mean that all vaccines are equally effective, and health officials have done it for the inactive work of promoting public underestimation of that fact.
Old vaccines – Thinking about polio and yesul – clearly 100% effective. The illnesses parents feared were wiped off the map. Many new vaccines are recommended and useful (and Offen highly promoted), but don’t carry the same emotional or medical punch.
Parents of the current generation have not experienced how ill their children can become when they have measles or cough. Mothers actually didn’t care much about hepatitis B about viruses that commonly infected via drug use or intravenous viruses.
The shortage of minors has created skeptics. For example, the influenza vaccine, which has been around for decades since 2010, is recommended annually across the United States for at least six months. During the 2024-25 season, flu vaccination rates were between 36% and 54% of adults. In other years it’s lower than that. “I got the flu vaccine, but I still got the flue” was the general reserve of skeptics.
“Previously before Covid, there were people taking everything except the flu,” said Lepali Limay, an associate professor at the Bloomberg School of Public Health at Johns Hopkins University, studying the demand and acceptance of vaccines. “It’s become everything but Covid. Now it’s everything including MMR and polio.”
Even if the speed of the first Trump administration’s operational speed helped develop the covid vaccine, conservative media outlets have created doubts that shots were needed. Suspicion that Covid-19 is bad enough to deserve a shot. More concern than vaccines can cause infection and autism.
Trump did little to correct the nerves of his supporters when he said he was vaccinated. There were 11 vaccine orders, and Trump strongly opposed them and reconstructed his belief in the vaccine as a matter of personal freedom. And if the government could not mandate joint shooting for the schools, it could not – not – be able to mandate other people.
Therefore, 100 years of research to prove the virtue of vaccination fell into alternative fact stews. You were Aisher, or anti-vaccine, and that was indicating your politics. Suddenly, the anti-Vax crowd is not a small margin of liberal parents, but a larger group of conservative stubborns who believed they were forced to vaccinate their children to enroll in school.
Even within the Trump administration, there were submarines who declared a trend (at least in part). Food and Drug Director Marty McCurry defends Kennedy’s decision to roll back the recommendation that all America get their annual Covid booster — no proven profit — he has shown that it’s not a signal to stop him from taking other shots.
“The public’s trust in general vaccinations has been abolished,” he wrote, “essential vaccination programs like measles – Mumps -Rubella (MMR) vaccinations are clearly established as safe and highly effective,” he wrote.
Nevertheless, McCurry’s boss Kennedy continues to promote the bad science of vaccines widely, even if he recognizes the eSe, which is grumpy in cases like the outbreak of measles. We melted new research into already play between MMR shots and autism. There is a $500 million grant to develop vaccines using mRNA technology, a new production method used in the first covid vaccine, and a technology scientists believe to be huge promise to prevent deaths from other infectious diseases.
During my decades of practice as a doctor, I had never seen a case of measles. It is currently in 40 states. More than 150 people were hospitalized, and three, all vaccinated, died.
Another fact forms what David Scales, a physician and sociologist at Weill Cornell Medical College, who studies misinformation, calls “unhealthy information systems.” This is an alternative scientific universe that is inhabited by too many Americans. subd die.