BGeise
No longer a newbie, moving up!
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- #16
Yes it is easy to find information to support my belief. The problem is how hard it is to find substantial evidence to discredit it. There is a lot of estimating and guessing with "the results". Also the only way you can refuse a shot is religious beliefs or medical issues. So I think I am going to make my own religion that does not allow them[emoji6]If someone has an adverse reaction to the shot, of course, they can't require it. But, if they don't have any allergies or reactions to it and it's required by the job, then they need to do it to keep the job.If the job requires it, okay, but should the job require it? I understand the reason why nurses and teachers would be required - they are more at risk of getting the flu and transmitting it to people who are more vulnerable to it (sick people and children) and who could have more serious consequences if they get the flu. There's a question of public health involved.
Having said that, there should be (and I think there is) an option to waive the requirement, either temporarily or permanently, depending on the circumstances.
My mother works in a pre-school and had to start getting the flu shot. One year, she started feeling numbness in her hands and feet. Didn't know what caused it. The next year, right after she had the flu shot, she ended up in the hospital with Guillain-Barre, an auto-immune syndrome. The body attacks the peripheral nervous system. And yes, it can be the result of a reaction to the flu shot.
She doesn't get the shot anymore and her job waives her requirement to do so. And because there's still a question about whether or not this kind of reaction is hereditary, I don't get the flu shot either. (To be honest, I never got a flu shot before that, either.)
It's easy to find data to support your own beliefs (see below).It's not that I just"don't believe" in them. The information shows that all of the things you hear about how the vaccine does so many great things is biased information that the vaccine manufacturers and your government have tailored to fit what they need to portray to the public. The fact is that your chance of getting influenza decreases from 2% to 1% and that is if the vaccine is perfectly manufactured to fit the strain in the environment which is almost impossible because the influenza virus is always changing. Also the facts show that children under 6 months of age did not show any significant results to require vaccination and children under 2 years of age have the risk of cataplexy, narcolepsy and febrile convulsions.
Here is the real facts:
Vaccines for preventing influenza in healthy children. - PubMed - NCBI
Vaccines for preventing influenza in healthy adults. - PubMed - NCBI
The problem arises when you're not a doctor and you didn't do the study. You can read this, but can you actually understand what it means on a day to day basis, including all the nuances that you can't learn from reading a study? I'm not in the medical field, so I'll just make an informed decision after listening to my doctor and reading studies. In the end, I'd rather be safe than sorry.
Influenza vaccine given to pregnant women reduces hospitalization d... - PubMed - NCBI
The efficacy of live attenuated, cold-adapted, trivalent, intranasa... - PubMed - NCBI
Effectiveness of influenza vaccine in reducing hospital admissions in people with diabetes.
Influenza vaccination in secondary prevention from coronary ischaem... - PubMed - NCBI
Effectiveness of Influenza Vaccine Against Life-threatening RT-PCR-confirmed Influenza Illness in US Children, 2010–2012
Relation between influenza vaccination and outpatient visits, hospi... - PubMed - NCBI
Influenza vaccination reduces cardiovascular events in patients wit... - PubMed - NCBI
Effectiveness of seasonal vaccine in preventing confirmed influenza... - PubMed - NCBI
Effectiveness of influenza vaccine for preventing laboratory-confir... - PubMed - NCBI
Association between influenza vaccination and cardiovascular outcom... - PubMed - NCBI