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Showing Original Post only (View all)I've Got Whooping Cough. Thanks a Lot, Jenny McCarthy. [View all]
It would be an understatement to say that pertussis and other formerly conquered childhood diseases like measles and mumps are making a resurgence. Pertussis, specifically, has come roaring back. From 2011 to 2012, reported pertussis incidences rose more than threefold in 21 states. (And thats just reported cases. Since were not primed to be on the look-out for it, many people may simply not realize they have it.) In 2012, the CDC said that the number of pertussis cases was higher than at any point in 50 years. That year, Washington state declared an epidemic; this year, Texas did, too. Washington, D.C. has also seen a dramatic increase. This fall, Cincinnati reported a 283 percent increase in pertussis. Its even gotten to the point that pertussis has become a minor celebrity cause: NASCAR hero Jeff Gordon and Sarah Michelle Gellar are now encouraging people to get vaccinated.
How responsible are these non-vaccinating parents for my pertussis? Very. A study recently published in the journal Pediatrics indicated that outbreaks of these antediluvian diseases clustered where parents filed non-medical exemptionsthat is, where parents decided not to vaccinate their kids because of their personal beliefs. The study found that areas with high concentrations of conscientious objectors were 2.5 times more likely to have an outbreak of pertussis. (To clarify: I was vaccinated against pertussis as a child, but the vaccine wears off by adulthood, which, until recently, was rarely a problem because the disease wasn't running rampant because of people not vaccinating their kids.)
So thanks a lot, anti-vaccine parents. You took an ethical stand against big pharma and the autism your baby was not going to get anyway, and, by doing so, killed some babies and gave me, an otherwise healthy 31-year-old woman, the whooping cough in the year 2013. I understand your wanting to raise your own children as you see fit, science be damned, but you're selfishly jeopardizing more than your own children. Carry your baby around in a sling, feed her organic banana mash while you drink your ethical coffee, fine, but what gives you denialists the right to put my health at riskto cause me to catch a debilitating, humiliating, and frightening cough that, two months after I finished my last course of antibiotics (hows that for supporting big pharma?), still makes me convulse several times a day like some kind of tragic nineteenth-century heroine?
How responsible are these non-vaccinating parents for my pertussis? Very. A study recently published in the journal Pediatrics indicated that outbreaks of these antediluvian diseases clustered where parents filed non-medical exemptionsthat is, where parents decided not to vaccinate their kids because of their personal beliefs. The study found that areas with high concentrations of conscientious objectors were 2.5 times more likely to have an outbreak of pertussis. (To clarify: I was vaccinated against pertussis as a child, but the vaccine wears off by adulthood, which, until recently, was rarely a problem because the disease wasn't running rampant because of people not vaccinating their kids.)
So thanks a lot, anti-vaccine parents. You took an ethical stand against big pharma and the autism your baby was not going to get anyway, and, by doing so, killed some babies and gave me, an otherwise healthy 31-year-old woman, the whooping cough in the year 2013. I understand your wanting to raise your own children as you see fit, science be damned, but you're selfishly jeopardizing more than your own children. Carry your baby around in a sling, feed her organic banana mash while you drink your ethical coffee, fine, but what gives you denialists the right to put my health at riskto cause me to catch a debilitating, humiliating, and frightening cough that, two months after I finished my last course of antibiotics (hows that for supporting big pharma?), still makes me convulse several times a day like some kind of tragic nineteenth-century heroine?
http://www.newrepublic.com/article/115551/jenny-mccarthy-anti-vaccination-movement-blame-whooping-cough
Sometimes craziness kills.
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Sure, there were a few, but McCarthy spewed her ignorance and made it mainstream.
cleanhippie
Nov 2013
#76
The problem with stupid people is that they refuse to acknowledgr and accept their
Drahthaardogs
Nov 2013
#55
Being vaccinated is not a 100% guarantee that you won't catch the illness.
AtheistCrusader
Nov 2013
#40
While you were hospitalized they should have advised you that adults can be vaccinated anytime Tdap
lunasun
Nov 2013
#4
See post #14 and you're responding to an article posted, not the poster of said article.
Moonwalk
Nov 2013
#16
Yes, you can get shingles as an adult if you had chickenpox as a kid. n/t
winter is coming
Nov 2013
#105
Yeah. One of my kid's teachers just got revaccinated because one of her children came down with
winter is coming
Nov 2013
#13
The newest Tetanus booster (DTaP) shot (every 10 years) has whooping cough included.
NutmegYankee
Nov 2013
#123
This is exactly how I got my poster for Whooping cough, just 2 years ago. n/t
Sheepshank
Nov 2013
#137
What's scary is how many people will believe anti-science craziness is 'mainstream'
geek tragedy
Nov 2013
#25
Getting a 'booster' isn't the point here... non-vaccination creates a vector that makes EVERYONE
JCMach1
Nov 2013
#31
More here. I regard this material as factual (see extensive footnotes), neutral, essential reading.
proverbialwisdom
Nov 2013
#36
The National Vaccine Information Center (NVIC) is a public charity anti-vaccination advocacy group.
idwiyo
Nov 2013
#93
Interesting perspective. Certainly those who act in accordance with the advice of a medical
geek tragedy
Nov 2013
#57
You read it correctly, the post title is the same as the article title. nt
geek tragedy
Nov 2013
#75
Please carefully check out the Mumper study, noting the publication source and the article content.
proverbialwisdom
Nov 2013
#66
1) I am not the author; 2) most people don't realize that their childhood vaccines
geek tragedy
Nov 2013
#73
Hard to guess. I would ask the provider, or see what your current Dr. says. n/t
jtuck004
Nov 2013
#140
It's amazing how many people in this country ignore science and listen to idiots.
Vashta Nerada
Nov 2013
#96
I got a booster after a couple babies died of it in CA a couple years ago.
Warren DeMontague
Nov 2013
#112
All 5 cases in our area last week were in people who were up-to-date on their vaccines. Why so many?
Liberty Belle
Nov 2013
#121
there is no connection between vaccine/vaccine schedules and autism
La Lioness Priyanka
Nov 2013
#133
anti-vaccine nuts are dangers and insanely selfish. i really cannot stand people who wont vaccinate
La Lioness Priyanka
Nov 2013
#132