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Home Market Research Economy

‘Alternative Facts’ Aren’t a Reason To Skip Vaccines

by TheAdviserMagazine
7 months ago
in Economy
Reading Time: 8 mins read
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‘Alternative Facts’ Aren’t a Reason To Skip Vaccines
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Yves here. Articles like this drive me crazy. The efforts to shore up a discredited medical orthodoxy, here with vaccines, demonstrates in a pet peeve cognitive bias, that of black and white thinking.

It is undeniable that RFK, Jr. getting a much bigger platform thanks to his Presidential campaign and now his role as head of HHS, has played a big role in the dangerous decline in vaccination, particularly among the young. However, the fact that RFK, Jr. is dangerously wrong with his measles vaccine alarmism and his doubling down on the bogus claim that it causes autism does not mean that all the vaccines being pushed onto patients are warranted….as this article tacitly assumes.

In general, American medicine has a strong, money-driven propensity to overtesting and overtreatment. Vaccines are one example. And that’s before getting to the ginormous controversy about Covid vaccine injuries, which are a legitimate cause for outrage, not merely for the harm done but the lack of adequate disclosure plus many being coerced into taking them as a condition of employment. That is the elephant in the room that has greatly increased distrust of what passes for medical authority.

Exhibit A is the childhood vaccine schedule. Have a gander (or visit the CDC site):

You will see the Hep B vaccine starts immediately…when pray tell how will babies or toddlers contract Hep B? By stepping on a needle with live virus on it? That is literally the sort of scenario used to justify it.

Confirming that view, from the Mayo Clinic:

Common ways that HBV can spread are:

Sexual contact. You may get hepatitis B if you have sex with someone who is infected and you don’t use a condom. The virus can pass to you if the person’s blood, saliva, semen or vaginal fluids enter your body.Sharing of needles. HBV easily spreads through needles and syringes that are tainted with infected blood. Sharing equipment used to inject illicit drugs puts you at high risk of hepatitis B.Accidental needlesticks. Hepatitis B is a concern for healthcare workers and anyone else who comes in contact with human blood.Pregnant person to newborn. Pregnant people infected with HBV can pass the virus to their babies during childbirth. But the newborn can be vaccinated to prevent getting infected in almost all cases. Talk with your healthcare professional about being tested for hepatitis B if you are pregnant or want to become pregnant.

From IM Doc:

When the boys were born – and they came with the shots the 1st day of life, I thought my wife was going to bust a gut.

She yelled at the pediatrician – her ne (milk) is comprised of her chi – and she is donating her very life stream to her kids to protect them – until the breast milk stops there will be no shots – and I will fire you if you bring it up again. It is a Buddhist thing.

All the kids vaccines were delayed until they were about 11 months when the breast feeding stopped – if I am remembering correctly. There was no negotiation. Any attempt to force COVID vaccines – and she will be home-schooling the kids. She is a very very bright person – she is a graduate of [XYZ University] – their version of MIT – but there is no way on earth that will be done with our kids. What I think does not matter, trust me. If we do vaccinate the kids – she will be taking them home to China and get their vaccine. “I will not dream of letting these scum companies inject my kids – they lie every day – what if they are lying about the vaccine.”

And later:

It is absolutely true – my wife and I were literal human shields in the nursery with the twins –

They were not out of our sight –

Here is the thing – EVERY SINGLE NURSE VISIT to the room – EVERY TIME – we were always questioned about the Hep B Vaxx. The same cannot be said for poo pee food mom’s health sleep burp whatever – those all got short shrift – when they found out that we were not interested – the Hep B pressure came on.

Mind you, I do get vaccines and even asked for my tetanus booster. But I refuse low efficacy ones like the flu shot and ones like Hep B where I do not engage in behaviors that put me at risk of contagion. The fact that I feel the need to be discriminating speaks volumes about our system.

By Elisabeth Rosenthal, senior contributing editor who joined KFF Health News in 2016 as editor-in-chief after 22 years as a correspondent with The New York Times. Originally published at KFF Health News

President Donald Trump’s administrations have been notorious for an array of “alternative facts” — ranging from the relatively minor (the size of inaugural crowds) to threats to U.S. democracy, such as who really won the 2020 election.

And over the past six months, the stakes have been life or death: Trump’s health officials have been endorsing alternative facts in science to impose policies that contradict modern medical knowledge.

It is an undeniable fact — true science — that vaccines have been miraculous in preventing terrible diseases from polio to tetanus to measles. Numerous studies have shown they do not cause autism. That is accepted by the scientific community.

Yet Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who has no medical background or scientific training, doesn’t believe all that. The consequences of such misinformation have already been deadly.

For decades, the vast majority Americans willingly got their shots — even if a significant slice of parents had misgivings. A 2015 survey found that 25% of parents believed that the measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccine could cause autism. (A 1998 study that suggested the connection has been thoroughly discredited.) Despite that concern, just 2% of children entering kindergarten were exempted from vaccinations for religious or philosophical objections. Kids got their shots.

But more recently, poor government science communication and online purveyors of misinformation have tilled the soil for alternative facts to grow like weeds. In the 2024-25 school year, rates of full vaccination for those entering kindergarten dropped to just over 92%. In more than a dozen states, the rate was under 90%, and in Idaho it was under 80%. And now we have a stream of measles cases, more than 1,300 from a disease declared extinct in the U.S. a quarter-century ago.

It’s easy to see how both push and pull factors led to the acceptance of bad science on vaccines.

The number of recommended vaccines has ballooned this century, overwhelming patients and parents. That is, in large part, because the clinical science of vaccinology has boomed (that’s good). And in part because vaccines, which historically sold for pennies, now often sell for hundreds of dollars, becoming a source of big profits for drugmakers.

In 1986, a typical child was recommended to receive 11 vaccine doses — seven injections and four oral. Today, that number has risen to between 50 and 54 doses by age 18.

The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, which renders judgments on vaccines, makes a scientific risk-benefit assessment: that the harm of getting the disease is greater than the risk of side effects. That does not mean that all vaccines are equally effective, and health officials have done a lackluster job of fostering public understanding of that fact.

Older vaccines — think polio and measles — are essentially 100% effective; diseases that parents dreaded were wiped off the map. Many newer vaccines, though recommended and useful (and often heavily advertised), don’t carry the same emotional or medical punch.

Parents of the current generation haven’t experienced how sick a child could be with measles or whooping cough, also called pertussis. Mothers didn’t really worry about hepatitis B, a virus generally transmitted through sex or intravenous drug use, infecting their child.

That lack of understanding spawned skeptics. For example, since 2010, the vaccine for influenza, which had been around for decades, has been recommended annually for all Americans at least 6 months old. In the 2024-25 season, the rate of flu vaccination was only between 36% and 54% in adults; in other years, it has been lower than that. “I got the flu vaccine, and I still got the flu” has been a common refrain of skeptics.

“Pre-covid, there were people who took everything but flu,” said Rupali Limaye, an associate professor at Johns Hopkins University’s Bloomberg School of Public Health, who studies vaccine demand and acceptance. “Then it became everything but covid. Now it’s everything — including MMR and polio.”

Even as the first Trump administration’s Operation Warp Speed helped develop covid vaccines, conservative media outlets created doubts that the shots were needed: doubts that mRNA technology had been sufficiently tested; doubts that covid-19 was bad enough to merit a shot; concerns that the vaccines could cause infertility or autism.

Trump did little to correct these dangerous misperceptions and got booed by supporters when he said that he’d been vaccinated. Once vaccine mandates came into play, Trump strongly opposed them, reframing belief in the vaccine as a question of personal liberty. And if the government couldn’t mandate the covid shot for school, it followed that officials shouldn’t — couldn’t — mandate others.

Thus 100 years of research proving the virtues of vaccination got dropped into a stew of alternative facts. You were either pro- or anti-vaccine, and that signaled your politics. Suddenly, the anti-vax crowd was not a small fringe of liberal parents, but a much larger group of conservative stalwarts who believed that being forced to vaccinate their kids to enter school violated their individual rights.

Even within the Trump administration, there have been some who (at least partly) decried the trend. While Marty Makary, the Food and Drug Administration commissioner, defended Kennedy’s decision to roll back the recommendation that all Americans get annual covid boosters — saying the benefits were unproven — he noted it should not be a signal to stop taking other shots.

As “public trust in vaccination in general has declined,” he wrote, the reluctance to vaccinate had harmed “vital immunization programs such as that for measles–mumps–rubella (MMR) vaccination, which has been clearly established as safe and highly effective.”

Nonetheless, Makary’s boss, Kennedy, continued to promote bad science about vaccines broadly, even as he sometimes grudgingly acknowledged their utility in cases like a measles outbreak. He has funded new research on the already disproven link between MMR shots and autism. He has halted $500 million in grants for developing vaccines using mRNA technology, the novel production method used for the first covid vaccines and a technique scientists believe holds great promise for preventing deaths from other infectious diseases.

In my 10 years practicing as a physician, I never saw a case of measles. Now there are cases in 40 states. More than 150 people have been hospitalized, and three, all unvaccinated, have died.

Alternative facts have formed what David Scales, a physician and sociologist at Weill Cornell Medical College who studies misinformation, calls “an unhealthy information system.” It is an alternative scientific universe in which too many Americans live. And some die.

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