02-02-2010, 11:31 AM
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#2
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Unfrozen Caveman Lawyer
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: Winebar Kensington
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Won't stop Jenny.
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02-02-2010, 11:35 AM
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#3
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Dances with Wolves
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Section 304
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Quote:
For the study, Wakefield took blood samples from children at his son's birthday party, paying them five pounds each ($8) for their contributions and later joking about the incident.
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Holy crap. So many kids didn't get vaccinated because of this crap. Scary stuff.
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02-02-2010, 11:41 AM
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#4
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The new goggles also do nothing.
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: Calgary
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Russic
Holy crap. So many kids didn't get vaccinated died because of this crap. Scary stuff.
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Fixed that for you
__________________
Uncertainty is an uncomfortable position.
But certainty is an absurd one.
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02-02-2010, 11:50 AM
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#5
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Unfrozen Caveman Lawyer
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: Winebar Kensington
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http://www.sciencebasedmedicine.org/?p=3660
In my not-so-humble opinion, the very kindest thing that can be said about Andrew Wakefield is that he is utterly incompetent as a scientist. After all, it’s been proven time and time again that his unethical and scientifically incompetent “study” that was published in The Lancet in 1999 claiming to find a correlation between vaccination with MMR and autistic regression in autistic children with bowel symptoms was at best dubious science and at worst fraudulent.
Vaccination rates plummeted in the UK, and measles, a disease once thought to be under control, has surged back and become endemic again. It is a feat that Jenny McCarthy and Jim Carrey appear to be trying to replicate right here in the U.S. with their wonderfully Orwellian-named Green Our Vaccines activism and ceaselesspromotion of anti-vaccine messages.
When it comes to the science, there is no doubt. No reputable scientist has been able to replicate Wakefield’s findings, and there is a remarkable convergence and agreement of findings of major studies looking for a correlation between MMR vaccination and autism: There ain’t one. Indeed, closing out 2009 was the publication of yet another study that failed to find any correlation between MMR and autism, or, as I put it at the time, yet another nail in the coffin of the myth that the MMR vaccine causes autism. Andrew Wakefield’s repeated claims that the MMR can cause or “trigger” autism in some children is deader than dead as a scientific hypothesis and without a basis in scientific or clinical evidence.
The General Medical Council ruled he had acted “dishonestly and irresponsibly” in doing his research.
In reaching its decision, the Panel notes that the project reported in the Lancet paper was established with the purpose to investigate a postulated new syndrome and yet the Lancet paper did not describe this fact at all. Because you drafted and wrote the final version of the paper, and omitted correct information about the purpose of the study or the patient population, the Panel is satisfied that your conduct was irresponsible and dishonest.
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02-02-2010, 12:42 PM
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#6
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Franchise Player
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Memento Mori
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My brother-in-law's wife's brother's wife didn't get her kids vaccinated. Good luck with the polio.
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If you don't pass this sig to ten of your friends, you will become an Oilers fan.
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02-02-2010, 01:01 PM
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#7
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UnModerator
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: North Vancouver, British Columbia.
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Shazam
My brother-in-law's wife's brother's wife didn't get her kids vaccinated. Good luck with the polio.
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Quote:
[examining a baby whose mother isn't vaccinating him because she feels it's a scam; House takes the child's stuffed frog] All natural, no dyes. That's a good business - all-natural children's toys. Those toy companies, they don't arbitrarily mark up their frogs. They don't lie about how much they spend on research and development. And the worst that a toy company can be accused of is making a really boring frog. Gribbit, gribbit, gribbit. You know another really good business? Teeny tiny baby coffins. You can get them in frog green, fire engine red. Really. The antibodies in yummy mummy only protect the kid for six months, which is why these companies think they can gouge you. They think that you'll spend whatever they ask to keep your kid alive. Want to change things? Prove them wrong. A few hundred parents like you decide they'd rather let their kid die then cough up 40 bucks for a vaccination, believe me, prices will drop *really* fast. Gribbit, gribbit, gribbit, gribbit, gribbit
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- House
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02-02-2010, 03:51 PM
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#8
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Franchise Player
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And a lot of what has not been reported makes it even worse.
This doctor was saying that MMR was killing children at the same time he was promoting single does of the vaccines.
And why was he promoting just the single measles vaccination? Because 6 months prior to that, he had secured a patent on it.
Just shameless self promotion all the way to the bank.
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