Myths and Truths About Vaccination

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Myths/Truths about Vaccination

Myth 1- The fact that we have better hygiene and revolutionized our ways of sanitation will simply make diseases die off. Ultimately, the idea of vaccination is not necessary.

The diseases we can vaccinate against has the capability to return if we were to stop vaccination. While it is true that forms of cleanliness to preserve hygiene such as: using soap when washing our hands and utilizing clean water ultimately prevents the creation of infectious and deadly diseases, there are many infections that have the possibility of spreading despite our efforts to clean. If your loved ones are not vaccinated, the diseases that used to be rare, such as polio and measles have the chance of re-appearing.

Myth 2- Vaccines have a lot of long term and deadly side effects. NO research has been done to determine these effects yet. But we hypothesize that some of these effects can be fatal.

This is not true. The vaccines that we take are generally safe. There may be exceptions that react with the body in a minor way, however, ultimately, vaccines are safe to take. It is extremely rare to have a fatal event happen. Given that statement, there is a higher chance that one who does not take the vaccine gets sick than one who does. A specific example includes polio, where instead of paralysis and blindness a person has the possibility to experience slight dizziness and fatigue. Simply put, the benefits of vaccination greatly outweigh the risk.

Myth 3- Diseases that were destroyed by vaccines in the past are irrelevant now- we don’t need to take vaccines any more.

There are still a lot of bacteria out there foreignly that can come, cross, and infect our borders, ultimately infecting everyone who is not protected ...

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...ath. Vaccines ultimately work with the immune system to create an immune response that is similar to that created by the natural infection. But the person that is injected with the vaccine doesn’t have the chance to endure the strong negative effects given by the full disease, yet will still be able to create the antibodies necessary to combat any foreign disease.

Vaccines cause autism

There was a 90s study that revealed possible link between measles-mumps-rubella vaccine and autism, but was later to be found questionable. Since then, the paper has been taken away from the public by the journal that published it. The release however, had ultimately created a panic that led to dropping immunization rates, and ironically enough, additional outbreaks of these diseases.Ultimately, there is no evidence of a link between the vaccine and the development of autism.

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