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re: Fully vaxxed, not jabbed. More than 6X more likely to get autism.
Posted on 12/11/25 at 9:23 pm to TigerDoc
Posted on 12/11/25 at 9:23 pm to TigerDoc
Name the diseases and age groups.
Get ready to pay you mucho? You’re subsidized from day one of college to your profession in the building you work in and the money you receive. Cute acting like most doctors deserve their pay when most deal with common shite
Get ready to pay you mucho? You’re subsidized from day one of college to your profession in the building you work in and the money you receive. Cute acting like most doctors deserve their pay when most deal with common shite
Posted on 12/11/25 at 9:37 pm to Jugbow
take measles for simplicity's sake. Measles vaccination might be the best return-on-investment in all of medicine. Every dollar spent on prevention saves roughly $20-30 in treatment and outbreak costs. vaccination costs $150/kid and an uncomplicated case costs $500 to $1k, but lots of cases are complicated - pneumonia puts lots of kids in the hospital. That's just the clinical cost. You have quarantine kids, have schools go remote, keep their parents home from work. and of course it can kill kids, can cause lifelong brain-damage and disability.
And that's just one once-eradicated disease. Rubella causes lots of miscarriages and stillbirths, mumps can make you infertile. All preventable in a single vaccine and all about to be banked by me and my colleagues courtesy of you for some miniscule and/or speculative benefits.
And that's just one once-eradicated disease. Rubella causes lots of miscarriages and stillbirths, mumps can make you infertile. All preventable in a single vaccine and all about to be banked by me and my colleagues courtesy of you for some miniscule and/or speculative benefits.
This post was edited on 12/11/25 at 9:42 pm
Posted on 12/11/25 at 9:42 pm to SallysHuman
quote:
The declining of a huge sum and platform to debate the issue doesn't exactly give me warm fuzzies for our "expert class".
Especially against a guy with a badly damaged voice.
Posted on 12/11/25 at 9:52 pm to TigerDoc
I’ve already said people should be vaccinated but arguing about the full schedule and annual vaccinations. As a doctor you’re not understanding that. You named 4 that are beneficial and gave two examples. You’re also still putting emphasis on “bank”, like you don’t already. The situations you explained also are very low percentage or higher percentage to different categories, which you didn’t address as well as many socioeconomic factors.
Posted on 12/11/25 at 9:55 pm to Jugbow
What's wrong with a annual vaccination recommendation?
Posted on 12/11/25 at 10:05 pm to TigerDoc
quote:
Get ready to pay us mucho.
Your field is prime for drastic changes coming very soon. Your salaries are artificially inflated by the pharmaceutical companies, insurance companies, and subsidized by the American taxpayer.
Last I read, something like 40% of you are un-specialized and educated in the Caribbean.
Enjoy your urgent care racket while it lasts, Doc.
Posted on 12/11/25 at 10:09 pm to lurking
Bring it on if worthwhile reforms come with it. I've been calling for it for years including on this board. It's far from the main problem in the US health care overspending, though, so a lot else would have to happen too.
But if we're going insanely bring back preventable diseases, we'll pay excessively no matter the system.
But if we're going insanely bring back preventable diseases, we'll pay excessively no matter the system.
This post was edited on 12/11/25 at 10:10 pm
Posted on 12/11/25 at 10:17 pm to TigerDoc
quote:
But if we're going insanely bring back preventable diseases, we'll pay excessively no matter the system.
This is more than a little hyperbolic. Not the excessive cost (although at some point they would just let people die), but that we’re on the brink of massive outbreaks of previously preventable diseases.
We’re not
The percentage of people dismissing vaccines entirely is so insignificant no one will ever notice. What people are doing is questioning the schedule, combination, and dosage at and after birth. The data doesn’t lie.
Posted on 12/11/25 at 10:19 pm to lurking
He has to pump his doom and gloom for his Bank, as he refers to it. Exposing himself as a worthless credentialed douche.
Posted on 12/11/25 at 10:23 pm to lurking
There are hundreds in quarantine for measles in South Carolina right now.
But you're right, I'm being hyperbolic about current prevalence, but the handwriting is on the wall for public health policy. Our current pols are using a trial-lawyer strategy to change the regulatory environment to make vaccines less affordable and available and more feared by the public so fewer are vaccinated. The result will be more infectious disease unless the leadership changes and the strategies are rebuked.
But you're right, I'm being hyperbolic about current prevalence, but the handwriting is on the wall for public health policy. Our current pols are using a trial-lawyer strategy to change the regulatory environment to make vaccines less affordable and available and more feared by the public so fewer are vaccinated. The result will be more infectious disease unless the leadership changes and the strategies are rebuked.
Posted on 12/11/25 at 10:23 pm to Jugbow
Still waiting on your objection.
Posted on 12/11/25 at 10:24 pm to TigerDoc
Don't worry doc, when a bunch of kids start getting permanent lung damage and dying from preventable diseases, we can all shake our fist at how the illegals did this. It won't bring the kids back but maybe we can buy a very nice American-made tiny casket.
Posted on 12/11/25 at 10:27 pm to TigerDoc
quote:
There are hundreds in quarantine for measles in South Carolina right now.
Care to provide information that shows age and socioeconomic data?
Posted on 12/11/25 at 10:29 pm to Ingeniero
What's ironic is that this is the skepticism is effectively a result of the incredible success of mass vaccination. The diseases being gone has eradicated their public memory and opened us up to this silliness. Looks like we gotta learn the hard way again.
Posted on 12/11/25 at 10:30 pm to Jugbow
Preventable diseases hit worse in the poor and young like they always have.
So the frick what?
So the frick what?
Posted on 12/11/25 at 10:31 pm to TigerDoc
quote:
There are hundreds in quarantine for measles in South Carolina right now.
Quarantine doesn't mean they have measles... also, we have a lot of, uh, migrants. Living here and seeing the news blurbs they don't delineate between native and immigrant populations in that count.
Posted on 12/11/25 at 10:32 pm to SallysHuman
Inegeniero was right on the money. 
Posted on 12/11/25 at 10:33 pm to TigerDoc
That it’s a small percent and you know why they’re getting sick. You’re for pushing annual vaccinations on healthy people and argue it’s not a money maker. Just like it’s ridiculous how many shots a kid has in its first few years when the human has an immune system.
Posted on 12/11/25 at 10:35 pm to TigerDoc
quote:
There are hundreds in quarantine for measles in South Carolina right now.
More than half were vaccinated. The majority of the unvaccinated are foreign born. The church at the epicenter of the outbreak is one of those refugee churches.
quote:
The result will be more infectious disease unless the leadership changes and the strategies are rebuked.
Who in leadership has advised against vaccines? That’s not what’s been said at all.
Posted on 12/11/25 at 10:37 pm to Jugbow
Yes, humans have always had immune systems and at the turn of the 20th century a third of deaths were in people less than 5. It's now less than 1%. It's a good thing. It protects people who can't be vaccinated.
Us getting vaccinated protects babies who are too young to be vaccinated and sick people who can't be vaccinated.
It's one of the most successful and beneficial public health interventions of all times. They're great.
Us getting vaccinated protects babies who are too young to be vaccinated and sick people who can't be vaccinated.
It's one of the most successful and beneficial public health interventions of all times. They're great.
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