Vaccine info
They all have a lot of information about the autism/vaccineconnection and have links to other sites as well. What stands out tome in all of the discussions is that for some reason doctors are notusually in favor of disclosing the possible problems with vaccines toparents prior to vaccinating so that an informed decision can bemade. Considering that you can’t buy a bottle of aspirin without awarning label on the back of the box it doesn’t make sense.
This post tagged as: autism
Chere Bourjolly said,
Wrote on January 10, 2007 @ 11:56 am
My son (almost age 3) has been on the dietfor a month. The information from this group has been so helpful. Inoticed that there are some other topics discussed in the group, and Iwas hoping for some direction. I was wondering if anyone had vaccineadvice for me? We discovered that our son was autistic two months ago,at the same time we brought our newborn baby boy home from thehospital. I am terrified to get my two month old his shots, but amfinding no support for this from anyone I know. My family is certain Iam going to give him whooping cough. Has any one been in thissituation? What did you do? Any advice would be helpful.
Bethanie Milin said,
Wrote on January 12, 2007 @ 9:54 am
My 5th child is now 11 months old and has had no shots whatsoever. Ican’t find a pediatrician that agrees but she is not the one that hasto live with an autistic child. One doctor I went to told me he hadnever heard of anyone not vaccinating their child. As I was walkingout the door, he said to me, “Whooping cough is going around - howcan you live with that on your conscience?”. I responded with, “howare your patients getting whooping cough if they have all beenvaccinated?” The fact is there is no proof that vaccines haveprevented the diseases they are designed for and sometimes even givethem the disease (ie all cases of polio in the US in the last 10years was contracted by the vaccine). Yes, the rates of manydiseases have decreased after the introduction of vaccines but if youlook at the rate of decline before the vaccine, you will notice thatthey were naturally decreasing anyway and the introduction ofvaccines did not accelerate their decrease. It is just not worth therisk. It is not just a case of mercury in them but also aluminum,fermaldahyde, monkey kidney, aborted fetuses and the list goes on.
Shane Dearmond said,
Wrote on January 12, 2007 @ 7:30 pm
Just wanted to throw this in there…. My ASD son Sasha wasvaccinated and cought whooping cough last November. My non-vaccinated son also cought it and he was 3 months old and survivedit.
Bethanie Milin said,
Wrote on January 13, 2007 @ 9:04 pm
I hate it when doctors treat getting a disease as a death sentence.Most people that get these different diseases fully recover. I hadchicken pox, measles & mumps and I’m fine. Not only that, whatparent in their right mind would not take their child to the doctorfor medical care if they got a disease? Or is it that the doctorswant you to vaccinate because they don’t want to admit they have noidea what to do if your child does get the disease. If I were totake a gamble, I would take my chances with the slim chance my childwould get a disease over injecting that junk directly into their body.
Shane Dearmond said,
Wrote on January 15, 2007 @ 6:23 am
Not to mention that our bodies have natural immunity to the diseasesanyway. My non-vaccinated son’s vaccine titers came back highshowing immunity to many things and he’s not had a vaccine. I wastold that the point of a titer was to see the immunity level of whatthe vaccine did for your child. They said Fallon wouldn’t show anyimmunity b/c he wasn’t vaccinated; boy were they wrong.
I watch Discovery Health a lot and they always show people havingtumors cut off that are 200 lbs and one child had 4 tumors on hisface that were 25 lbs each. So some people in poverty regions thatdo not have access to doctors may not seek medical help but I don’tsee that happening here in america.
Well except the people on there who live in america and let theirtumors grow 200lbs in their leg or back before saying “I think I’llgo see a doctor about this”. I guess there are a few out there.