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Message
re: CDC Held a Secret Meeting after a Study showed the Hepatitis B Vaccine was Causing Autism
Posted on 1/14/26 at 5:13 pm to Ailsa
Posted on 1/14/26 at 5:13 pm to Ailsa
when you play the fallout series, you see a lot of similarities between our corporations, and valut tec and the companies in the game.
super fricking scummy, they care nothing about humanity, only about $$$
super fricking scummy, they care nothing about humanity, only about $$$
Posted on 1/14/26 at 5:26 pm to SallysHuman
Pediatricians aren’t split into “good ones” and “bad ones” on vaccines. They’re navigating a range of defensible responses shaped by real constraints. Professional guidance (e.g. AAP/AMA) explicitly allows multiple approaches - continued engagement, risk-mitigating accommodations, declining new patients, or yes, eventual dismissal - depending on context. The key drivers are practical and ethical variables like local access to care, the presence of vulnerable patients, outbreak risk, clinic capacity, and the clinician’s judgment about what best protects this child & others, etc.. So when you see different practices handling unvaccinated kids differently, that’s not chaos, it’s the predictable result of applying shared principles under very different conditions.
Posted on 1/14/26 at 6:02 pm to Ailsa
quote:
Why do many pediatricians refuse to treat children who refuse to vax their children? They make a huge profit from big pharma
Posted on 1/14/26 at 6:04 pm to Ailsa
quote:
Why do many pediatricians refuse to treat children who refuse to vax their children? They make a huge profit from big pharma to keep a large percentage of their clients fully vaxed. It's all about the $$$
Useful idiot. Board is infested with them now.
Posted on 1/14/26 at 6:05 pm to Jake88
quote:
Pediatricians make $225,000 on average. They aren't getting anything from pharma.
It’s crazy how many posters here think that most doctors are just getting these random Big Pharma direct deposits every two weeks
Posted on 1/14/26 at 6:06 pm to Jake88
quote:
They aren't getting anything from pharma.
They DO get incentives for higher vaccination compliance rates.
quote:
Incentives for pediatric practices to boost vaccination rates include financial rewards (bonuses, value-based payments for hitting benchmarks, grants), operational support (staffing for vaccine coordination), and system-based nudges (EMR alerts).
Practices benefit from monetary rewards linked to performance, reduced administrative burden through dedicated staff, and improved patient care by ensuring timely immunizations, ultimately leading to healthier communities, not just profit.
Posted on 1/14/26 at 6:12 pm to SallysHuman
quote:From pharma? Because that's what I was posting about.
They DO get incentives for higher vaccination compliance rates
Posted on 1/14/26 at 6:13 pm to onmymedicalgrind
quote:They cant even hand y'all chintzy pens anymore.
It’s crazy how many posters here think that most doctors are just getting these random Big Pharma direct deposits every two weeks
Posted on 1/14/26 at 6:14 pm to SallysHuman
quote:
They DO get incentives for higher vaccination compliance rates.
Is there any aspect of medicine you don't seem to try to intentionally misunderstand?
Posted on 1/14/26 at 6:14 pm to Jake88
quote:
From pharma? Because that's what I was posting about.
Incentives are incentives. Doesn’t matter where it's coming from, but to the fact pediatricians do, in fact, receive them.
To answer your question- I doubt pharma funds these incentives directly, but I don't actually know.
Posted on 1/14/26 at 6:15 pm to onmymedicalgrind
quote:
It’s crazy how many posters here think that most doctors are just getting these random Big Pharma direct deposits every two weeks
I like flirting with the cute pharma reps and I also like it when they give us lunch.
Posted on 1/14/26 at 6:17 pm to crazy4lsu
quote:
Is there any aspect of medicine you don't seem to try to intentionally misunderstand?
Do GPs get incentives for treating tennis elbow? Or testing hormone levels? Diagnosing UTIs?
Posted on 1/14/26 at 6:22 pm to SallysHuman
quote:You arguing a point with me I never made.
Incentives are incentives. Doesn’t matter where it's coming from, but to the fact pediatricians do, in fact, receive them
Posted on 1/14/26 at 6:25 pm to SallysHuman
quote:
Do GPs get incentives for treating tennis elbow? Or testing hormone levels? Diagnosing UTIs?
Another disingenuous question. You can have a contract that incentivizes preventative health measures, of which immunization status is a part of, if, for example, a practice uses something like the Healthcare Effectiveness Data and Information Set as a performance enhancement tool.
Whether you like it or not, immunizations are part and parcel of a cogent preventative health approach. That some physicians accept contracts which might use value-based models isn't really meaningful to anything.
Posted on 1/14/26 at 6:25 pm to SallysHuman
quote:
Do GPs get incentives for treating tennis elbow? Or testing hormone levels? Diagnosing UTIs?
Someone needs to look up MIPS
Posted on 1/14/26 at 6:28 pm to onmymedicalgrind
quote:
Someone needs to look up MIPS
quote:
Clinicians report performance data (quality, improvement, interoperability, cost) to receive payment adjustments for Medicare Part B services.
wtf does MIPS have to do with tennis elbow?
Posted on 1/14/26 at 6:31 pm to Ailsa
Of course the doctors serve their masters over their patients.
They made this clear during Covid.
They made this clear during Covid.
Posted on 1/14/26 at 6:35 pm to SallysHuman
quote:
wtf does MIPS have to do with tennis elbow?
You really don’t understand the analogy
No GPs probably don’t receive “incentives” when treating a relatively uncommon primary care diagnosis. Just like pediatricians.
Sally, think harder.
Posted on 1/14/26 at 6:36 pm to ItzMe1972
I swear to god the amount of stupid on this site is a disgrace
Posted on 1/14/26 at 6:37 pm to onmymedicalgrind
quote:
You really don’t understand the analogy
Reporting performance isn't the same as coercing patient behavior.
Medicare isn't all healthcare.
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