• Neuromancer
    link
    fedilink
    352 years ago

    Wakefield was a POS.

    He wasn’t just wrong. He was intentionally dishonest. He caused many people to avoid vaccines because they might cause an issue.

    I know several people, myself included who’ve had issues with vaccines. I still strongly support vaccines.

    Do I get the flu vaccine every year? No. It doesn’t sit well with me but I’m not against it. I just don’t handle it well but I’m making an informed decision.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      42 years ago

      IIRC, he wasn’t even anti vax at the start. He was being paid to peddle separate vaccines and claimed it was just the MMR jab that could cause autism.

      Which is still bollocks anyway, but people will do anything to deny that autism runs in their family…

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      52 years ago

      Figured the fraud mentioned in the wiki article covered the “dishonest” part and “wrong” was easier to prove. I can’t rule out the possibility that he’s in so deep that he really believes what he’s saying (not that it’d make the situation any better).

      Sucks to hear that you’ve had bad reactions in the past but I’m glad it didn’t turn you against them as a whole. Hopefully enough of the rest of us can get them and lower the overall risk of illness when flu season rolls around.

      • Neuromancer
        link
        fedilink
        72 years ago

        My friend developed Alopecia from the flu vaccine. He doesn’t get that flu vaccine but does the others.

        I got a heart condition from the Covid booster. As such I don’t do boosters anymore but I still do other vaccines.

        I’m very pro vaccine in general. They’ve never been a guarantee they’ll stop an outbreak but they greatly reduce the chances of most diseases spreading or making you seriously ill.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          2
          edit-2
          2 years ago

          I’m actually the same way, I’m one of those that got myocarditis after the vaccine, but I also understand that nothing is side affect free so while it stinks for me I still 100% support the use of vaccines… Thankfully after a few weeks/months the heart palpitations stopped.

          I mean … Polio anyone? No? Chickenpox? Oh yeah that’s right, vaccines. They actually worked.

          • Neuromancer
            link
            fedilink
            32 years ago

            Bingo. Same here and it caused some blood pressure issues.

            I just changed medications to see if the palpitations went away and it appears they did. So that’s good.

            Blood pressure is better but it’s mediated. I want to go off that next.

            Chickenpox. Ahem. We didn’t have a vaccine for that when I was a child. We just caught it and were miserable for a few weeks. I wish we’d had the vaccine. That was awful.

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              English
              12 years ago

              Chickenpox. Ahem. We didn’t have a vaccine for that when I was a child. We just caught it and were miserable for a few weeks.

              I’m sorry to tell you that’s not what happened.

              You had chickenpox for a few weeks whilst the shingles bedded down nice and cosy in your nerves ready to strike again when your immune system is down. It’s not over and it’ll be worse when it comes back.

              • Neuromancer
                link
                fedilink
                22 years ago

                We have vaccines for shingles now. We just didn’t have it when I was a kid.

                Parents use to have chicken pox parties.

                • @[email protected]
                  link
                  fedilink
                  English
                  22 years ago

                  There’s a chicken pox vaccine that prevents you from catching it yes. The shingles vaccine reduces the risk of the shingles you already have breaking through into active infection for about 10 years and then isn’t effective a second time. (Currently) there’s no not-having-shingles once you’ve got it.