Sorry, it looks like a combination of better hygiene and natural forces has caused a remarkable decrease in Polio cases.
Sure, Bill Gates, the WHO, and that fraud Salk will take all the credit for ending a scourge that paralyzed and killed millions, but won’t take any of the blame for the dozens of parents who claim their children have been harmed by the Polio vaccine.
I actually know a man who was paralyzed by polio vaccine. It wasn’t “claimed”, it was the actual case, and he received a settlement in compensation. I don’t see where anyone dodged blame or responsibility. There is a set process for this. Of course, companies aren’t going to shell out for *every *problem a kid has after vaccination because for the most part those problems are unrelated to the vaccine despite what the woo-woo crowd claims. There has to be some proof that it was the vaccine that caused the problem.
Actually, the companies don’t pay directly. In the U.S., there is something called Office of Special Masters of the U.S. Court of Federal Claims, aka the vaccine court established as part of the National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program. We know that there will be injuries (mostly shoulder injuries due to bad jabs) because of vaccines. But we also know that vaccines are absolutely vital to public health and need to be mandated by the government. So there is a system in place, with a very low bar, to compensate any possible injuries. It is funded by a tax on all vaccines, and only requires passing a three prong test to prove possible injury:
Prove that, and you can get a settlement. Note, that autism claims are routinely rejected, despite what some have claimed.
Yes, the point being that actual vaccine injuries are covered - and it seems to me a modest tax on all vaccines and/or fund that vaccine manufacturers pay into is a much more efficient and probably kinder method of compensating those injured than a court case.
Medicine is an area where you can do everything absolutely correctly and still get a bad outcome. No malice required. So setting up some sort of insurance for the inevitable bad outcomes is not a bad way to handle the injuries.
The aforementioned niece just shared a document on FB that supposedly “proves” that getting the pertussis vaccine makes one more likely to get the disease than not getting vaxed at all. The lower right chart’s columns for 0 doses and 3+ doses are circled on the FB version.
So I just got the first dose of the new Shingrix shingles vax, with the second to follow in a few months. I did go through some nasty muscle and joint pain which is a common reaction to the shot. Advil took care of it when Tylenol wouldn’t.
I made the mistake of texting my SIL (mother of the niece I’ve mentioned several times) about the pain, and she responded, “Don’t get the vaccine!”
I replied that I already had (duh) and that a friend is suffering right now from shingles and another friend’s brother almost lost his eyesight to shingles.
Oh, and I should mention that the SIL is a registered nurse.
I just got the first dose of Shingrix last Thursday. 2 days of bruise like pain around the injection site was all I noticed. Much better than Shingles.
Got my flu shot at Walgreens. No real side effects except brief soreness at the injection site. I’m glad to have it early this year.
It’s time to talk to my sister about gardasil for my niece. I’m prepared to throw down but I probably won’t have to. Great news about it in Australia recently, where mandatory gardasil shots are working toward making cervical cancer & HPV extinct.
I miss working in South Korea at the public schools. Every year, all the students and staff got a free flu shot and free tuberculosis test.
Just a couple of years ago, my wife had to get Gardasil because the national health scheme in South Korea requires it or your coverage, your entire coverage, lapses until you are in compliance.
Darn straight we are. Penn & Teller’s Bullshit, Season 8, Episode 10, is a great explanation of why we are so lucky.
Have I mentioned before that I have exactly zero, maybe even less, respect for anti-vaxers?
I got the second part of the shingles vaccine a couple of weeks ago. I didn’t notice much of anything after the shot. The injection area was sore but not for as long as from the first shot.
I got my first flu shot ever this Monday. I wasn’t against them or anything, but figured I didn’t need to, or would forget, etc. But with more and more antivax nonsense going around and working regularly with 70+ year olds, I got off my ass and got it done. I did it for the herd.
I will say I have some fatigue right now and there’s a tender and warm lump where the shot was administered, but that should go away in a few days.