I don't think so. Because if you are doing a calculated risk/benefit analysis, then you are looking at: "50% of today’s children suffer from issues, like childhood diabetes, ADHD, Sensory Processing Disorders, childhood cancers, food allergies (peanut especially), auto immune diseases, etc." VERSUS stats like (from https://www.cdc.gov/m…
I don't think so. Because if you are doing a calculated risk/benefit analysis, then you are looking at: "50% of today’s children suffer from issues, like childhood diabetes, ADHD, Sensory Processing Disorders, childhood cancers, food allergies (peanut especially), auto immune diseases, etc." VERSUS stats like (from https://www.cdc.gov/measles/downloads/measlesdataandstatsslideset.pdf)
"U.S. Measles Burden: Before 1963 Vaccine Development*
Each year, measles caused an estimated 3 to 4 million cases
• Close to 500,000 cases were reported annually to CDC, resulting in:
Many of these deaths were in institutions where the first measles vaccine was tested. The conditions were appalling, nutrition horrible. Not sure about the encephalitis, but childhood vaccines routinely cause brain swelling and extremely high fevers.
I think the risk-to-benefit analysis is to what Frontera Lupita is referring when she says "we did not die". My understanding of her statement is that we didn't need vaccines that might harm us because the vast majority of children are not harmed by these childhood illnesses. The risk-to-benefit ratio shows more risk than benefit.
I don't think so. Because if you are doing a calculated risk/benefit analysis, then you are looking at: "50% of today’s children suffer from issues, like childhood diabetes, ADHD, Sensory Processing Disorders, childhood cancers, food allergies (peanut especially), auto immune diseases, etc." VERSUS stats like (from https://www.cdc.gov/measles/downloads/measlesdataandstatsslideset.pdf)
"U.S. Measles Burden: Before 1963 Vaccine Development*
Each year, measles caused an estimated 3 to 4 million cases
• Close to 500,000 cases were reported annually to CDC, resulting in:
o 48,000 hospitalizations
o 1,000 cases with encephalitis (brain swelling)
o 400 to 500 deaths"
Many of these deaths were in institutions where the first measles vaccine was tested. The conditions were appalling, nutrition horrible. Not sure about the encephalitis, but childhood vaccines routinely cause brain swelling and extremely high fevers.
The calculated risk/benefit analysis is a different argument from "We all got the measles, mumps and chicken pox…and we did not die!"
I think the risk-to-benefit analysis is to what Frontera Lupita is referring when she says "we did not die". My understanding of her statement is that we didn't need vaccines that might harm us because the vast majority of children are not harmed by these childhood illnesses. The risk-to-benefit ratio shows more risk than benefit.