Do You Vaccinate? Back to School Part V
Rightly so, August is National Immunization Awareness Month. Vaccinations play an important role in our society and the goal of NIAM is to increase awareness about immunizations from the infants to the elderly. Because August is back to school time and many children do need physicals the Center for Disease Control and Prevention feels that August is the perfect month for awareness.
Many of my readers know that AJ tested positive for many heavy metals back in April when we did biomedical testing at the Pfeiffer Treatment Center. Although I think that vaccines are essential and can save lives I am at a crossroad.
Do I vaccinate and risk giving him aluminum and mercury again or do I not vaccinate and expose him to smallpox, polio, measles, whooping cough, rubella, etc.?
He had his MMR, Varicella, DTap, and PPV all last year as catch ups so I think he is okay until next year. I don’t give him the Influenza shot because it contains salicylates and phenols, which he reacts poorly to. He also has a poor immune system and my gut tells me that if I do give him the vaccine he would actually get the flu. Not necessarily something I want.
What is your opinion?
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August 11th, 2007 at 8:01 am
I can’t believe how many shots some countries give.
Children here won’t get an influenza shot. Their immune systems are able to cope with it, or there are pgood meds to deal with some of the problems that go with it. Fever for example.
Flushots are only for elderly and people with high risk like those with diabetes.
All in all we don’t give as many shots, still our autism and autism spectrum disorder rate is high.
So I don’t believe shots are the cause at all.
August 11th, 2007 at 9:22 am
I don’t believe that vaccinations are the cause of autism either. However, because they contain toxins like aluminum and mercury I am concerned, as my son did have those heavy metals in his system. Make sense?
March 27th, 2008 at 10:40 am
[...] Risk or Vaccinate? by Marcie Every state allows exemptions for religious preferences, but states are now allowing exemptions for personal beliefs. According to Johns Hopkins University, twenty states, including California, Ohio, and Texas allow personal exemptions. [...]