- Yellow Fever
- The 17D strain is a live attenuated vaccine developed in 1937. It is a highly effective vaccine which is administered to residents in the tropics and travellers to endemic areas. A single dose induces protective immunity to travellers and booster doses, every 10 years, are recommended for residents in endemic areas.
- The public health benefits of vaccinations are exaggerated. Critics of vaccination policy point out that the mortality rates of some illnesses were already dramatically reduced before vaccines were introduced, and claim that further reductions cannot immediately be attributed to vaccines.
- Secondary and long-term effects on the immune system from introducing immunogens directly into the bloodstream are not fully understood.
- The recommended vaccination schedule does not consider the cumulative effect of being exposed to multiple immunogens at the same time and at a young age.
- At least some vaccine studies did not include such young children (e.g., 5 week old infants, 2 month old infants), yet vaccination schedules start with newborns. There can be a vast difference between the weight and all around development of a newborn baby versus a toddler, yet this is not accounted for.
- claims diseases including leukemia, MS, sids, autism, and others were rare, and have increased coinciding with the increased use of vaccinations, and that this is due to vaccinations.
- Opponents of current vaccination policy question if vaccinations actually create immunity against the targeted diseases because some people who have been vaccinated still contracted the illness.
Vaccine Controversy - By not exposing children to common childhood illnesses, they may be more susceptible to diseases at a point when their immune system is weakened.
- Vaccinations contain chemical components that are known to be toxic, such as formaldehyde, aluminum in various compounds, acetone, glyceride, ethylene glycol, and neomycin when injected in large enough quantities.
- As is true with any medication, adverse events to the vaccine (even when rare) may be worse than the disease itself.
- There are a number of possible conflicts of interest that may affect the research design, findings, and opinions about vaccines, including financial interests of companies, the self-regulatory mechanism of medical doctors, and fear of the consequences should vaccines be found to be dangerous..
- Some researchers hypothesize possible links between the increasing incidence of cancer and use of vaccines, suggesting links to the way vaccines may alter the cells in our bodies.
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