Donate SIGN UP

Mmr Jab...worrying News

Avatar Image
mikey4444 | 13:26 Wed 23rd Sep 2015 | News
90 Answers
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-34335509

The entirely discredited scare story of a decade ago still seems to have an influence. According to the link, in some areas, vaccination has fallen to less than 80%.

Why are people not taking the advice of health visitors and their GPs ? Its a no brainer to me !
Gravatar

Answers

1 to 20 of 90rss feed

1 2 3 4 Next Last

Avatar Image
The problem with that, mushroom, is that MMR is at the very least not the only cause of autism. So not taking the jab not only leaves the child in question still at risk of developing autism anyway, but also at risk of still catching those diseases that, if not always fatal, are certainly very dangerous. It's just a bad risk assessment to refuse the MMR jab on those...
14:28 Wed 23rd Sep 2015
Immigration?
Without a complete and thorough survey of those who don't take it up , we'll never know all the reasons and there will be more than one.

Good to see take up is still high in many parts though.

Perhaps time for a new public campaign.
I thought that the fall was maybe exaggerated a little. From 92.7% to 92.3% is not all that significant a drop in take-up of MMR jabs, and is even back, if the article above is to be believed, to levels similar to those before the MMR scare story broke. More work is needed to boost take-up, to be sure, but I wouldn't call this news worrying.
Question Author
Yes, you are right Mamy. A new campaign wouldn't go a miss, providing there is enough funding for it !

But the NHS should have some data on the reasons that people are not taking part in this essential health precaution, and it would be interesting to see the social profiling of these refuseniks.
\\\\Why are people not taking the advice of health visitors and their GP\\

Parents have never seen a case of measles....or mumps or indeed rubella.....so what is the problem? In their minds they are diseases of the past like polio.

An outbreak of measles with complications and deaths will soon bring them, the parents, to their senses.

Our old friend Dr Andrew Wakefield and the Lancet proof readers didn't help with his research on MMR and autism.
Question Author
Jim....If if its less than 70% in any area, then that is worrying.

I seem to recall that a certain percentage is needed if the spread of disease is to be kept under control. We had an outbreak of measles here in South Wales in 2012, which was a cause for alarm. It could be that language and cultural concerns are a major cause of this less than 80% figure.

My niece is a Health Visitor, and she and her colleagues are always on at parents to make sure that childhood vaccinations are undertaken....its one of the most important of their duties.
because most people are stupid mikey! I remember the original scare where people would buy individual vaccines off a bloke in a pub car park and give them to their own children obviously injecting your kids with gawd knows what from some dodgy geezer is less risky than MMR! right oh! Never underestimate how thick the general public are. As my old maths teacher used to say 50% of people have an IQ under 100, and 50% of them are thicker than that!
Question Author
Afternoon Sqad...just back from the Club I hope !

The aspect that I just don't understand is this. Wakefield was a twit but why did some parents prefer to take his advice, when every family doctor and health visitor ( I presume ? ) was giving the correct advice ?
I guess my point is that MMR uptake has always been less than the 95% target, so its being less this year is not all that noteworthy -- while matching pre-Wakefield levels suggests that the problem is more than just his fault, and resolvable by shouting at people who haven't as if they were scientific dullards. Probably Sqad's post is closer to the truth, that many people, having never seen any of the diseases, don't appreciate what a danger they may be and don't address the risk accordingly.

I'd hope that the numbers of children receiving the MMR jab will rise in future, of course.
mikey....mikey!....wash your mouth out.......Wakefield was anything but a twit.....anything but a twit and here lies the problem. Qualified at St Mary,s Hospital London, Fellow of the Royal College of surgeons.....just the person that you are accusing the populace of ignoring.

You see and i have said this many times on AB, medicine and Surgery are just not sciences......there is an Art involved in this and many people still say that Wakefield is correct and his research must go on.

What happens in the Petri dish is quite often totally different from what happens in the human body.
the problem is that the public misinterpret what doctors etc say. When they hear, there's a 1 in a gazillion chance of brain damage from MMR, that's all they focus on, they do not take into consideration how tiny the chance is so they over react.
TTT, if you had assessed the risk of autism from MMR to be minimal and had permitted your offspring to be vaccinated, then it went on to develop autism, and you had guilty knowledge that it was a possibility - would you shrug and say "oh well, c'est la vie"?

no, didn't think so. and neither will most parents.
Question Author
Sqad...forgive me but all that I have read rather backs up what I have said about Wakefield :::

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_Wakefield

As a result of his dishonesty ( the GMC's findings, not my opinion ) Wakefield is barred from practising as a physician in the UK, and is not licensed in the US.

The GMC panel ruled that Wakefield had "failed in his duties as a responsible consultant", acted both against the interests of his patients, and "dishonestly and irresponsibly" in his published research.

He has even been accused of wide-spread fraud, in that he intended to set up a new venture on the back of an MMR vaccination scare that would profit from new medical tests and "litigation driven testing"

But even now, as recently as February 2015, he publicly repeated his denials and refused to back down from his assertions, even though—as stated by a British Administrative Court Justice in a related decision—"there is now no respectable body of opinion which supports [Dr. Wakefield's] hypothesis, that MMR vaccine and autism/enterocolitis are causally linked.

Seems rather definite and damning to me ! The word twit seems rather mild against what the medical authorities have decided.
The problem with that, mushroom, is that MMR is at the very least not the only cause of autism. So not taking the jab not only leaves the child in question still at risk of developing autism anyway, but also at risk of still catching those diseases that, if not always fatal, are certainly very dangerous. It's just a bad risk assessment to refuse the MMR jab on those grounds. And even if the kid did end up with autism later, the idea of a causal link between an MMR jab and autism has been discredited thoroughly, and certainly not confirmed.

As guilty as those parents may feel, it's an illusory and unhelpful guilt. Not that it would matter, to be sure -- I feel guilty about lots of things that I had no control over whatsoever. This would be basically the same. MMR jabs neither cause autism nor do they increase the risk of developing it.
Question Author
Jim....Its the same lazy thinking that makes some people to believe that Diana was murdered instead of being killed in a car accident. Its the "there's no smoke with fire" argument.

Very few of are capable of going through all the medical data to try to decide if Wakefield was right or not...perhaps Sqad can !

But all of us are perfectly capable of listening to our family Doctors advice, and its this rejection of medical advice that I find difficult to accept. If my Doc told me to vaccinate my kids, but an article somewhere in a newspaper said that this chap Wakefield might be right, I know whose advice I would follow.

Perhaps TTT is right here...maybe pure and simple stupidity was to blame.
//without a complete survey of those who dont take it up//

Mamalyne they are to be found in the case series of measles epidemics

80 deaths in Japan for example

This goes some way to answer your question of what happens if my child isnt vaccinated with MMR - they are susceptible to measles a disease which carries a death rate

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1173183/

It says there have been no deaths in UK
Actualy there were a few in Manchester ten years ago
Mike......steady on. I was describing someone who had qualifications that would not in any way describe him as a "twit"............you may.

His research however was flawed.......if that makes him a "twit"....then fine.
The wife of our family doctor was pregnant at the same time I was with my eldest child. We discussed the vaccination programme and I asked if his new born child would be getting the vaccinations --he replied 'no'. That was good enough for me and non of them have had the MMR though they did have the polio one. Not all doctors were, or are. in favour.
// some people to believe that Diana was murdered instead of being killed in a car accident//

if you say that to an Arab
I guarantee that 100% will say yes of course

when challenged on evidence
they will say - you dont need any - it is obviously true
mushroom:my kids had the vaccination before the whole thing hit the news so I never had that choice. Obviously I'd think about it but it's like getting on a plane really, you know there is an infinitesimal chance of it crashing. I certainly would rather the MMR than some dodgy back street version of gawd knows what.

1 to 20 of 90rss feed

1 2 3 4 Next Last

Do you know the answer?

Mmr Jab...worrying News

Answer Question >>

Related Questions

Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.