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re: 2 confirmed cases of Measles in New Orleans area

Posted on 2/22/24 at 10:16 am to
Posted by BregmansWheelbarrow
Member since Mar 2020
2652 posts
Posted on 2/22/24 at 10:16 am to
If you have children and don’t get them vaccinated against MMR, you’re fricking retarded. But why stop there? Maybe we can bring back polio too. I hear that’s lovely.
Posted by GetCocky11
Calgary, AB
Member since Oct 2012
51350 posts
Posted on 2/22/24 at 10:17 am to
quote:

no it isn’t. Pre 2019 nobody gave a flying frick on this board about schools and forced vaccines or employers and forced vaccines



thread from 2019

quote:

Darth_Vader Posted on 3/26/19 at 10:29 am

Bottom line, the risk of getting vaccinated is far and away less than the danger your child will face if they contract something like small pox or polio.


quote:

TheCaterpillar Posted on 3/26/19 at 10:33 am

There are exponentially more people injured and killed by Advil than vaccines.


2014 Thread - Study of nearly 1.3 Million children shows no relationship b/w vaccines & autism

quote:

CorkSoaker Posted on 5/18/14 at 2:32 pm

Those who believe the garbage that vaccinations cause autism and crap like that are idiots.


Posted by MBclass83
Baton Rouge
Member since Oct 2010
9374 posts
Posted on 2/22/24 at 10:18 am to
Illegals are also bringing in TB. Be careful out there.
Posted by PacoPicopiedra
1 Ft. Above Sea Level
Member since Apr 2012
1160 posts
Posted on 2/22/24 at 10:20 am to
quote:

Generally kids get the final vaccination for Measles around the age of 5. The first vaccination usually between 12-18 months old.


My first year of college in fall of 1989, there was a nationwide outbreak of measles, mainly at colleges. They suggested that all incoming freshman get a second round (back then children only received one round as a baby) of the measles vaccine that year. I did, but didn't know anyone that first year in college who got the measles.
History of Vaccines - 1989 Basketball Tournament

quote:

In 1989, the Committee of Infectious Disease of the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) recommended a second dose of the MMR (measles, mumps, and rubella) vaccine be given to children entering middle school (around 11 or 12 years of age). Because many outbreaks of measles were being observed in colleges and universities at the time, the recommendation expanded to include students at those institutions. This recommendation did not arrive in time for the 1989 college basketball playoffs. That spring, several colleges and universities had to hold games in empty arenas or prohibit students exposed to measles from entering sporting venues.

Siena and the University of Hartford went into a quarantine over measles cases at their respective campuses in February 1989. However, Hartford was to host the North Atlantic Conference Tournament at that time, so the only options were to cancel the tournament or play without fans. 

The worry was measles would spread through the spectators and then be carried back to the fans’ respective campuses. The disruptions to the basketball games lasted well into March as more cases were identified, resetting the 21-day clock on the quarantine period.

Siena would win the conference title with “no crowd to go wild” when a last-second basket clinched the championship.

1989 was a record year for measles in the United States. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported 17,840 cases, “a 423% increase [in 1989] over the 3411 cases reported for 1988.” This was the largest number since 1978, and the 41 deaths in US residents associated with measles were the highest since 1971. On average, there is one death from measles for each 1,000 cases in the United States.

Reasons for the epidemic that lasted from 1989 to 1991 include the one-shot recommendation, and budget cuts to childhood vaccination programs in the United States. Those cuts left many children without access to vaccination, something the United States Congress reversed with the creation of the Vaccines for Children program in 1993.

Unfortunately, the Vaccines for Children program was created too late for many children. Then there was the matter of vaccine hesitancy among parents... In 1991, nine children in Philadelphia died from measles. The courts had to get involved to immunize children whose parents would not immunize on religious grounds:

Soon after the United States and other developed nations adopted the two-dose recommendation, other nations followed suit. This led to a dramatic reduction in cases and deaths from measles worldwide.

Today, most deaths from measles are reported in developing African and Asian nations, with many of those deaths associated with comorbidities like malnutrition or poor healthcare infrastructure.



Posted by NYNolaguy1
Member since May 2011
20919 posts
Posted on 2/22/24 at 10:28 am to
quote:

No...FORCING vaccines on people is dangerous territory on this board.


Um, so if I told you the MMR (which includes Measles) is mandatory to attend school, I am guessing you also think that is dangerous?
Posted by JimTiger72
Member since Jun 2023
5149 posts
Posted on 2/22/24 at 10:31 am to
quote:

Validates every argument we have had on my end


Same. You’re a group thinker & can’t look at something objectively and make a decision on your own.

“Everyone else thinks this, so this must be the correct way”
Posted by lsupride87
Member since Dec 2007
95885 posts
Posted on 2/22/24 at 10:34 am to
Do you also think the world is flat?
Posted by JimTiger72
Member since Jun 2023
5149 posts
Posted on 2/22/24 at 10:34 am to
Nope. Did you vote for Teedy?
Posted by lsupride87
Member since Dec 2007
95885 posts
Posted on 2/22/24 at 10:38 am to
Nope.
Posted by BluegrassBelle
RIP Hefty Lefty - 1981-2019
Member since Nov 2010
99226 posts
Posted on 2/22/24 at 10:44 am to
quote:

I'm interested in this one. If those illegals are bringing in diseases, why are y'all catching it? Did your kids get a "shot" and not a "vaccine?"


Kids are unable to get the measles vaccine until they are around a year old. Then get the second round at 4-6 years old.

It's highly contagious. So folks getting vaccinated when they do reduces spread (and we had it eliminated here in 2000) and prevents those unvaccinated kids from getting sick until they are able to get the vaccine themselves.

Measles is capable of killing children who are unvaccinated. The larger issue is that it causes encephalitis, which can create life long disabilities if they recover from it.

This is all totally preventable but people have gone full on off the ledge over COVID and it's like they just skipped all of science class or something.

This post was edited on 2/22/24 at 10:46 am
Posted by JimTiger72
Member since Jun 2023
5149 posts
Posted on 2/22/24 at 10:54 am to
Good for you.

Do you think the Covid virus was created in a lab & was politically motivated?
Posted by lsupride87
Member since Dec 2007
95885 posts
Posted on 2/22/24 at 10:58 am to
Yes I think it was lab created and of course politicians used it
Posted by real turf fan
East Tennessee
Member since Dec 2016
8699 posts
Posted on 2/22/24 at 11:17 am to
There's something you all are overlooking: the damage done to a fetus if its Mother catches Rubella during her pregnancy.

A family friend had four children and then her husband died serving our country. She contracted Rubella during her third pregnancy and only after the child was born did the family realize the damage that had happened. Severe retardation both physical and mental. Not the loving child some get along with retardation, but mean and physical.

The other three children had a hellish family life although cousins tried to help.

This happened to an educated, well behaved family and everybody back then tried to make sure their children got measles when it "was going around."
Posted by dgnx6
Baton Rouge
Member since Feb 2006
68857 posts
Posted on 2/22/24 at 11:29 am to
Idk maybe make these kids show vaccine status like you made people do to go to a saints game.

Just a thought.
Posted by dgnx6
Baton Rouge
Member since Feb 2006
68857 posts
Posted on 2/22/24 at 11:31 am to
quote:

Nope. Did you vote for Teedy?


He didn’t vote which was a vote for her.

Muh no one ran against her bullshite from these idiots.



Posted by GreenRockTiger
vortex to the whirlpool of despair
Member since Jun 2020
42129 posts
Posted on 2/22/24 at 11:38 am to
quote:

Suburban moms not getting their kids vaccinated
not sure, but in BR about 10 years ago we had a milf fight at the library bc some of the kids were not vaccinated and moms were talking about it during story time

One mom wanted me to ask for vaccination records for the kids coming to story time

Point being - illegals and kids that aren’t immunized are the problem
Posted by NYNolaguy1
Member since May 2011
20919 posts
Posted on 2/22/24 at 11:38 am to
quote:

There's something you all are overlooking: the damage done to a fetus if its Mother catches Rubella during her pregnancy.

A family friend had four children and then her husband died serving our country. She contracted Rubella during her third pregnancy and only after the child was born did the family realize the damage that had happened. Severe retardation both physical and mental. Not the loving child some get along with retardation, but mean and physical.

The other three children had a hellish family life although cousins tried to help.

This happened to an educated, well behaved familyand everybody back then tried to make sure their children got measles when it "was going around."


Posted by HuskyPanda
Philly
Member since Feb 2018
1750 posts
Posted on 2/22/24 at 12:08 pm to
quote:

It is absolutely the illegals


In this case it isn't. The families recently returned from a trip from Florida. It also coincides with an elementary school in Florida that just had its 6th case.

Some of y'all just be saying shite on here sometimes.
Posted by saderade
America's City
Member since Jul 2005
25746 posts
Posted on 2/22/24 at 12:12 pm to
I’m not saying there’s no effect from unvaccinated illegals coming over the border in Texas but if that was the main reason you’d have multiple outbreaks in border towns in Texas and California.
Posted by HuskyPanda
Philly
Member since Feb 2018
1750 posts
Posted on 2/22/24 at 12:18 pm to
quote:

main reason you’d have multiple outbreaks in border towns in Texas and California.


California has 2 cases reported and Texas has 0. Not to say they we may not see it, but for people to quickly blame illegals is disingenuous
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