Estellea
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Mar 11, 2009
- Messages
- 1,305
True it's a hurdle but it can be done as there are already two states in the U.S. which do not allow religious exemptions, only medical. There is no constitutional protection for religious refusal of vaccination.That may be true, but only for so long as the unvaccinated remain a tiny percentage of the population. Currently, the main driver toward vaccination is public school policy. If you want your child to get an education, get vaccinated or go through a hellish process of getting an exemption.
I'm pretty happy with this. It seems to be working well enough. The only thing you could toughen up is the religious exemption and that raises serious problems of its own.
This is where an understanding of epi comes in handy. Herd immunity assumes equal distribution of susceptibles i.e. non-immune. But there is clustering of like-minded individuals who are creating gaps in herd immunity sufficient to sustain outbreaks. Add to that one of the most infectious diseases, measles and why the U.S. is experiencing the largest outbreak in over ten years. You also believe that people who sign a religious waiver are doing so for religious reasons and that is false. Twenty-one states have a philosophical waiver in addition to religious so that leaves 22 states with just religious. There are no organised religions which prohibit the use of vaccines and no scripture which precludes the refusal of vaccines. In essence, people are using religion to refuse vaccines simply because they don't want to vaccinate.No, not really. However, I think the requiring vaccination of others is asking a great deal more than is asking you to tolerate others being unvaccinated. IOW, the cost to society due to the loss of individual freedom and autonomy is higher than the cost to society to allowing people to decline vaccinations.
No. My point is that the actual religious objectors are a small enough group (< 5%) such that if they were the only refusers, it would not endanger herd immunity. Likewise with the medical exemption. It's the people who are refusing because they don't think the vaccines are the best choice for their kids that are messing that up.
Who said anything about solely trusting pharma results; vaccine safety and efficacy data extend far beyond pharma's grasp and don't forget there are many countries surveilling vaccine safety and efficacy.Okay. I agree there's no conspiracy as you are thinking of one. IMO, we can't trust the pharmaceutical companies for unbiased results. That's not a conspiracy theory though, just a general cynicism about how business works in the modern world.
It should be but isn't, we keep seeing larger outbreaks of VPDs because people are stupid and selfish. They convince themselves that the victim did something wrong ergo they are doing everything right so will not suffer complications from disease.That's not an unexpected outcome. On the other hand, such outbreaks are leading to more people deciding to vaccinate against those diseases. It is a self-correcting problem in that regard.
You need more than a passing familiarity of the definition to arm yourself with the requisite knowledge to do a proper risk assessment. I read a blog post of a particularly arrogant anti-vaxx person who prided himself and his wife for having very high I.Q.s so could do his own risk assessment of both risk of infection as well as complications. His maths were so laughable and crude that I hurt myself face-palming. He didn't take into account such basic (for an epidemiologist) factors as the infectivity rate of a disease and population at risk. I think he was representative of the average anti-vaxxer who ignorantly believes they possess as much or sufficiently enough knowledge to make such decisions.I have a reasonable familiarity with epidemiology. It is the study of the spread of disease, with 'disease' being able to be defined quite loosely. I don't see how my understanding or lack of understanding of epidemiology has any bearing on this though. Why do you think that epidemiology is a argument that trumps allowing individuals to make their own choices about vaccines? It's not because of the risk to others, which is what my examples were about. So what is the reason?
Este