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One of the things that happened this weekend was I got to listen to two people, one a parent of a very small child, discuss the relative merits of vaccination. The parent had joined up a mailing list of local parents in the area, the purpose of which was to alert the entire list if any one child caught a common childhood disease such as chickenpox or the measles, so that all of the children could be assembled into a big party and allowed to catch the disease.

The other man immediately commended him for his decision and started to deride all vaccinations as unnecessary and even dangerous, started ranting about mecury in vaccines, and went on for ten minutes in this vein. It seems the other conversant had stepped on one of his favorite subjects.

I held my tongue. I shouldn't have. There are three reasons why I think the father's decision is madness. First, there's no thimeresol (the mercury formulation used as a preservative) in the chickenpox vaccine. None. Pediatric vaccines are packaged in single-use preloads these days; the only vaccines in the US that contain thimersol are influenza vaccines, and that's mostly a function of the necessitated speed with which they're produced. Secondly, the risk of injury or illness from the chickenpox vaccine is less than one percent the risk of injury or illness from chickenpox itself. Chickenpox has a death rate, and it's surprisingly high for children under the age of 9, over 50 deaths a year. The vaccine, so far as we know, hasn't killed anyone.

More to the point, the anti-vaccination nuts put my kids at risk. At some point, when enough kids aren't immunized, you hit a tipping point where epidemics can rattle through an entire community and the viral impact load can be enough to make even the immunized kids sick.

If you want more of this, go read Respectful Insolence and in his search column type "vaccines". He deals with these people on a pretty frequent basis, and I must say he puts up a better fight than I do.

Date: 2007-05-05 07:58 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
http://www.news-medical.net/?id=12896

Date: 2007-05-05 08:19 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] elfs.livejournal.com
Interesting. So, I did some research into this. So far, Goldman is the only one claiming this; there is no other researcher who's backing up his claims.

More to the point, Goldman has a terrible track record. He's one of the "all vaccinations are bad" quacks who's also in the "flouridation is unnecessary and poisonous" camp. (We can discuss the appropriateness of state-mandated flouridation programs elsewhere; the fact is where they're instituted there is significantly less pain and suffering from dental disease, and thus far epidemiology has yet to find a reason not to flouridate.)

Goldman's also hawking a new book, "An Epidemic of Disease and Corruption," about the dangers of vaccines, the chickenpox vaccine in particular. He has a financial angle to his point of view.

Until another researcher reproduces his results, I have no reason to believe he's anything other than a shill.

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Elf Sternberg

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