View Single Post
Old 01-10-2011, 02:29 PM   #201
Hanni
First Line Centre
 
Hanni's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2009
Exp:
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by To Be Quite Honest View Post
Guess someone missed the point...

Instead of immediately jumping on this wagon you could also include the size of a two month old and the volumes used. But why do that when you can just try to ignore it!
No I get the point, I take issue when a statement is made that is a half truth.

This is all I was able to find as far as dosing goes, but I'm willing to trust Public Health's decisions on dosage based on scientific studies.

Can giving a child several vaccines at the same time overload the immune system?

Answer: No. Only vaccines that have been shown to be safe and effective when given together are administered at the same time. When new vaccines go through the extensive testing process, they are given along with all of the recommended childhood vaccines. Scientific studies assess the effect of giving these vaccines at the same time.
Children may receive several vaccines during the same clinic visit, but only after studies have shown that this is a safe practice. In order to receive a licence to combine vaccines, the manufacturer must also prove that the combined product does not make any of the vaccine components less effective or raise new safety concerns. Giving several vaccines at one time keeps children safe by protecting them against more diseases sooner. As an added benefit, it also reduces children's discomfort by reducing the number of injections they receive, and it saves parents the time and expense of additional office visits.


http://www.phac-aspc.gc.ca/im/vs-sv/vs-faq10-eng.php
Hanni is offline   Reply With Quote