Blood holds genetic information. That should be kept private unless permission is given that overrides. I'm sure they could do it on one drop of blood. 5 one inch circles...
Yes but while the PKU test uses blood it is not itself a genetic test, however genetic tests can be performed on the blood too obviously. I believe the issue you are referring to is that of several US states and some countries keeping the blood samples in storage and later using them in population genetic research. This was all done apparently without the knowledge or consent of parents, it raises questions for medical research ethics but is irrelevant to what we are talking about.
I've seen it done and you are either lying to yourself or us. Nobody likes to watch it done or do it. (unless they are strange)
Who said they liked seeing it done? But neither is it as bad as you make out, you are citing a very personal emotive reaction as if it is suggestive of something more than your personal reaction.
Wrong again. And you represent public opinion just fine. That is, you represent people who think like you in the public.
The nocebo effect might even be powerful enough to kill. In one case study, researchers noted an individual who attempted to commit suicide by swallowing 26 pills. Although they were merely placebo tablets without a biological mechanism to harm the patient even at such a high dose, he experienced dangerously low blood pressure and required injections of fluids to be stabilized, based solely on the belief that the overdose of tablets would be deadly. After it was revealed that they were sugar pills, the symptoms went away quickly.
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http://www.smithsonianmag.com/scienc...XbXm6cfeIl1.99
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That is a single case report of psychiatric patient in an extreme state of stress where he tried to take his life and then thought he might be successful, it is a big reach to extrapolate this to the wider population. Second of all it is the only report of such a "reaction" to a placebo drug, in the review article also cited in the page you linked it showed what other research was available and it all matched what I said - single case reports should be interpreted with caution. Third the patients blood pressure at worst was 80/40 with a heart rate of 110 and remained conscious (I got past the pay wall) - while low and would generally trigger empirical treatment with fluids it is not life threatening nor did it cause any harm to him. Fourth it was not possible to exclude all other potential simultaneous causes of his hypotension, thus again reinforcing that why interpretations of single case reports should be done with caution.
Ultimately it looks likely that the hypotension was due to his psychological/psychiatric response to taking pills he believed would be lethal. He seemed to have an extreme emotional stress related response, hypotension is a known response to this in some instances.
In the end you are extrapolating WAAAAY to far, this case report is while interesting still not going to affect management of depression or studies with placebos. Carrying it over to children getting vaccinations is a big leap. Furthermore the significance and severity of the case report has been overblown by those reporting about it.
But that is yet another thing that must be screened for - else we are talking needless risks again.
Is your position that unless all risks can be eliminated then a preventative health measure should not be enacted? Even if the health measures risks reduce the risk of harm from other sources more than its own risks?
That has no bearing on the # of undetected cases.
It is reasonable to expect that the undetected cases don't significantly deviate in their characteristics from the detected cases in any way other than aspects that would affect their detection rate.
Suggesting that they are otherwise different, for no theoretical reason, is just wild speculation on your part.
No need. The facts are, it's usually diagnosed well after the vaccine schedule is underway.
http://www.silive.com/healthfit/ind...d_with_primary_immune_deficiency_disease.html
While that wasn't quite what I was referring to your reference matches what I have read about the time it takes to diagnose these types of conditions. It also highlights why screening tests would be so good and are likely considerably more important than even your inflated estimates of risk from vaccines. Some screening tests seem to be being trialed for some variants it seems.
By the way did you know that in some PID types vaccines are actually an important part of their management? By denying them vaccines until we can screen and detect them all you are doing them a disservice.
You think quarantine is more draconian than vaccination? Silly boy. And you seen to have ignored the fact that it worked with containing Ebola in the USA.
No I think that for some diseases quarantine is effective but for some the limitations needed to make the quarantine work would be draconian (i.e. long arbitrary confinement of large numbers of people who each had a small risk of exposure). Ebola was a good example of where it works.
I thought I was clear that I was talking about why hygiene and quarantine good but can not be relied upon for ALL diseases. i.e. treating them as a magic bullet/one size fit's all policy.
Besides, I've used the method, as a non-vaccinating parent, and it works. We don't get the whole town sick for every sniffle. If we came into contact with a person suffering from measles or anything else like that we would self quarantine to ensure no spreading until passing the prodromal period.
You are not an example of it working, you are a too small a sample size and statistically families like yours would be expected to occur even if no-one vaccinated. The problem is ho many WOULDN'T be like your family, and that the odds of being like your family are skewed anyway at the moment because of how many vaccination around you.
Besides your plan for avoiding measles is down right
stupid. First of all you risk getting measles in the first place. Second of all measles first signs can look a lot like many other minor and common viral illnesses and so your children could come into contact with people with measles and not even know it (you're relying on the other person A. getting a correct diagnosis, B. Getting that diagnosis in time to quarantine your kids and C. That diagnosis actually being told to you at all/in time). Third measles can linger in a room for quite a while so they might only enter a room an HOUR after someone with measles has been in their coughing, catch measles and NEVER know how they got it (and have already spread it by the time you realise what it is)
What is the side effect of rehydration therapy? Is it death? No. Dehydration is not only inherently risky, it's 100% fatal.
And while there are ways to administer hydration in harmful fashion, you would have to be extreme and intentional about it.
Actually the important side affects of rehydration therapy are fluid overload and electrolyte imbalances (mainly sodium and potassium - which can be fatal if sufficiently severe). These are quite difficult to achieve in otherwise young and healthy individuals getting oral rehydration but a known and monitored for risk in those with certain cardiac or renal co-morbidities or those getting IV or NG rehydration.
So side effects should not be forced.
On an adult? Sure. On a child? They should be given the most appropriate care regardless of parental stupidity or beliefs.
My treatment for measles exposure is without side effects. Just stay home for observation, eat well and be sure to stay as stress free as possible. No risks; no exposing others to risk.
Your treatment for measles HAS side affects. You risk them A) getting measles and all the
much higher risk of complications it has B) risk infecting others (as pointed out above your strategy is far FAR from without risk of failure)
That worth depends on the individual. Extreme suffering and chemo-brain isn't worth it, to me.
You are generalising too much. In some cases refusing chemo is a very much a valid option in others it is silly. Not all chemo causes "extreme suffering" and "chemo-brain", some chemo is nasty and only sometimes worth it (even in children), some chemo is fairly mild and pretty much every adult would use it if indicated and would be negligent in the extreme not to give it to a child if indicated.
There are over 40 hypoallergenic foods. Some have to live on them.
This is nothing like drugs, and no, you don't get infection from aspirating breastmilk normally, because it is antimicrobial in fresh, raw form.
And yet the risk is still there, mainly from the aspiration pneumonitis causing the lungs to be vulnerable to secondary infection and sensitive to further insults (loss of reserve function), plus there is also the oral contamination that occurs for the milk anyway (bug fine in mouth, bad in lung). The risk is ridiculously absurdly low but still there, I say it to point out the absurdity of your view that all risk must be eliminated and that even you don't ascribe to that principle consistently.
No, I'm a person with vaccine damaged loved ones, who has also lost other loved ones to different types of drugs/surgery.
I'm sorry to hear. However while that is definitely an
emotional reason to be opposed to vaccines, drugs and surgery in general it is not a
logical reason. It is no reason to chase the phantasm of risk free anything, I repeat that you have been lied that such a thing is even possible and add that you have just explained why you are so enamored with the idea of non-medical risk free anything. They promise the world but can't do squat, while doctors promise what is possible and are honest that risks are never zero.
Do you want honesty realism or happy delusion?
You expected that vaccines would save the world, so when diseases fell, naturally, you gave the glory to vaccines.
And when disease rates rise when vaccine rates decline.... ?
We have multiple instances of correlation with good theoretical reasons for seeing the correlations and studies showing how the affect causing the correlation occurs. The science on many vaccines effectiveness was settled a long time ago.
Find me a single nation that isn't controlled by money. Maybe we can start there.
Ahh the problem we now has is that even if vaccines are effective and safe there is no way I could ever convince you unless I also created a political utopia and ran a vaccine program there. In your view anything which disagrees with you is due to corporate corruption, but anything which agrees is OK. I can cite studies till the end of days and it would do nothing to convince you since you'd dismiss every single one of them out of hand due to "corruption" without further thought and there is nothing I can think of that would change that even if it were false.