Growing Up Unvaccinated

Nurses COVID

Published

"I am the 70s child of a health nut. I wasn't vaccinated. I was brought up on an incredibly healthy diet: no sugar til I was one, breastfed for over a year, organic homegrown vegetables, raw milk, no MSG, no additives, no aspartame. My mother used homeopathy, aromatherapy, osteopathy, we took daily supplements of vitamin C, echinacea, cod liver oil..

I had an outdoor lifestyle; I grew up next to a farm, walked everywhere, did sports and danced twice a week, drank plenty of water. I wasn't even allowed pop; even my fresh juice was watered down to protect my teeth, and I would've killed for white, shop-bought bread in my lunch box once in a while and biscuits instead of fruit like all the other kids. We only ate (organic local) meat maybe once or twice a week and my mother and father cooked everything from scratch - I have yet to taste a Findus crispy pancake and oven chips were reserved for those nights when mum and dad had friends over and we got a "treat."

As healthy as my lifestyle seemed, I contracted measles, mumps, rubella, a type of viral meningitis, scarlatina, whooping cough, yearly tonsillitis, and chickenpox, some of which are vaccine preventable. In my twenties I got precancerous HPV and spent 6 months of my life wondering how I was going to tell my two children under the age of 7 that mummy might have cancer before it was safely removed.

Anecdotal evidence is nothing to base decisions on. But when facts and evidence-based science aren't good enough to sway someone's opinion, then this is where I come from. After all, anecdotes are the anti-vaccine supporter's way. Well, this is my personal experience. And my personal experience prompts me to vaccinate my children and myself."

http://www.voicesforvaccines.org/growing-up-unvaccinated/

well, I'm an 80's child, fully vaccinated. I've never been seriously ill in 27 years and I was an honour roll student throughout high school, went to university with a full scholarship (although I admit, I left before fiishing my degree) and I have a 4.0 gpa so far in nursing school. My 2, fully vaccinated children (4 & 2), have been to the doctor once each for illness (ear infection and pink eye), my 4 yo can read and do math better than most 6 yo's. None of us has ever had a reaction stronger than a slight fever to any vaccine. So I guess if people want to base vaccination decisions on anecdotal evidence (although I would seriously advise against it!), add my kids and I to the pile of "vaccination success stories". :)

The plural of "anecdote" is not "data". I see this everyday on social media and, unfortunately, in my own family. One can lead a horse to science, but one cannot make it drink. I have, however, seen people change their minds about vaccines when presented with scientific data. I'm confused about people who try to present their anti-vaccine propaganda based on non-scientific studies....it is almost as though they refuse to accept what "peer-reviewed journal" means.

And I belly laughed at the Jenny McCarthy comment :)

Specializes in ER.

My kids will be vaccinated. I would rather see them cry for a bit than to end up with a disease we could have prevented.

Specializes in Telemetry.

Penn Teller Vaccine - Clean Version: http://youtu.be/Ffhi1CPzT48. Here is the censored, fit for public consumption version of a video I posted earlier. It's in your face, but I think effective. :thumbup:

I am very pro-vaccine but this person really contracted all of these things?

Before the middle of the last century, diseases like whooping cough, polio, measles, Haemophilus influenzae, and rubella struck hundreds of thousands of infants, children and adults in the U.S.. Thousands died every year from them. As vaccines were developed and became widely used, rates of these diseases declined until today most of them are nearly gone from our country.

  • Nearly everyone in the U.S. got measles before there was a vaccine, and hundreds died from it each year. Today, most doctors have never seen a case of measles.
  • More than 15,000 Americans died from diphtheria in 1921, before there was a vaccine. Only one case of diphtheria has been reported to CDC since 2004.
  • An epidemic of rubella (German measles) in 1964-65 infected 12½ million Americans, killed 2,000 babies, and caused 11,000 miscarriages. In 2012, 9 cases of rubella were reported to CDC.

Vaccines: Vac-Gen/What Would Happen If We Stopped Vaccinations
I was mostly unvaccinated as a child. Not bc of my mom thinking any of the myths, but bc I was almost one of the 2 in 10 that die from a tetorifice shot. I had an anaphylactic response when I was a baby. So my mom was so scared she only opted to give me the oral polio. (She had polio as a child). Later when I was 15 they thought that I should get a tetorifice booster. She said that the doctors told her that my earlier reaction was to the pertussis most likely. Nope. I had hives everywhere! I am now fully vaccinated (my own doing) except for the Tdap shot. I was unaware that I had NO immunizations except for polio until I started nursing school. I don't blame my mom for her decision. (God rest her soul). She was just a scared mother. Sometimes it's not that people believe these myths it's that something scary has happened and now they are scared of what will happen in the future. Fear is a powerful thing.

Anaphylaxis following immunizations rarely occur; we're talking less than 1 in a million. On the other hand, up to 10% of the US population is allergic to PCN. I don't see a bunch of angry moms starting anti-penicillin websites though. Both vaccines & PCN do a lot of good. There are always exceptions & risks with any medical intervention, but that doesn't mean most people can't benefit from them.

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