Vaccines. Tiny vials of scientific medical technology that have
successfully eradicated smallpox, and
measles, increased our lifespan
and decreased the need for having as many children as possible in the
hopes one or two of them will survive passed infancy.
Vaccines are
a product of their own success. Ever since the invention of the
smallpox vaccine in 1796, vaccines have done their job preventing
disease and building a protective wall around the community to decrease
the chance we ever experience our lungs filling with fluid due to an
invasion by one of the 23+ strains of Streptococcus pneumonia bacteria.
Vaccines, however, aren’t without opposition.
A
small but vocal minority of people have come together to attempt to ban
vaccines bringing with them a trial of pseudoscience, misinformation
and conspiracy theories to help them in their quest. They feel that
vaccines are the cause of every major illness and behavioural disorder
known and unknown, that the world’s governments are engaged in a secret
plot to use vaccines to make pharmaceutical companies rich and that
vaccines are nothing more than poison developed by scientists for
profit. Disregarding the fact that scientists have children who have
been vaccinated.
Talk to five members of the anti-vaccine
movement, and you’ll come away with five different answers as to why
they are against vaccination technology. Today I want to look at the
science of vaccine technology and how they function to prevent disease,
the results of their use and take a crack at some of the myths the
anti-vaccine community hold near and dear.
Read it all here:
11 Vaccine Myths That Just Refuse To Die: Debunked
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