Charlie09
Former Member
- Joined
- Feb 26, 2009
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""The measles virus is probably the most contagious infectious disease known to mankind," says Stephen Cochi, a senior adviser with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's global immunization division."
http://www.npr.org/2015/01/30/382716075/measles-is-a-killer-it-took-145-000-lives-worldwide-last-year
"The rest of the world hasn't been so fortunate. Last year roughly 250,000 people came down with measles; more than half of them died."
""It's really traveling Americans who are unvaccinated, then return to the United States with the measles virus, that are causing most of the measles in the U.S. currently," he says."
"Cochi adds that someone infected with measles may be contagious for 24 to 48 hours before feeling sick. So a returning traveler could spread the disease and not even know it."
""The children under 5 are very vulnerable to measles," Robinson says. They're the primary target of vaccination campaigns. "It takes just a few days to get them vaccinated but it also takes a very short time for the virus to kill them."
I actually remember mass vaccinations. Not by force, but through a public education campaign and the memory of the disease of polio. When I was in elementary school the oral vaccine (Sabin Oral) vaccine for polio was approved and there was a massive public health effort to immunize the population. We had "Sabin Oral Sundays" and whole families went to receive the vaccine--on sugar cubes, or a dropped into the mouth for infants. As I recall we needed three successive doses or full protection. We have eradicated polio through such efforts.
But with regard to your children and grandchildren, I think that the scenario more to be feared is that, unless your daughters (and granddaughters) have/had the disease as children, they could be exposed during pregnancy, enhancing the risk of birth defects. And unless your sons (and grandsons) have mumps during childhood, they could contract it as an adult with resultant serious impacts including sterility.
Now those are just the direct impacts to your family. There are also indirect impacts through the exposure of people with allergies that prevent inoculation, illness or age issues that preclude protection or those with compromised immune systems.
Since you believe that you have thoroughly researched the issue, I am curious at how you have weighed each of these risks. The folks who set immunization protocols (like the CDC), actually weigh peer-reviewed research and compare the epidemiological risks all the way around in making their recommendations. Frankly, I'll stick with their findings over amateurs chasing around the internet.
which safety peer reviewed research are you talking about?