~MFP
By Bill Sardi
October 7, 2019
A study published in 2017 among 1038 general practitioners found 14% recommended certain vaccines for their patients but not for their own children. Among physicians who had all of their children vaccinated, 35.9% did not always recommend the MMR vaccine to their childhood patients; 28.5% did not always recommend the meningococcal meningitis C vaccine; 47.2% did not always recommend the Hepatitis B vaccine; 27.4% did not always recommend the vaccine for the human papilloma virus.
Another study published in 2012 showed that 9% of pediatricians and 21% of specialized pediatricians deviated from CDC vaccination guidelines for their own children, mostly balking over newer vaccines introduced since 2009 such as human papilloma, meningitis, hepatitis and influenza vaccines.
Israel, Canada and Japan don’t have mandatory vaccination programs and aren’t overwhelmed with infectious diseases among school children.
Concern was expressed over a 2018 outbreak of the measles in Japan. But horrors, it turns out only 100 cases were reported at the half-year point. In 2019 another measles outbreak in Japan has been reported, affecting 167 children, almost all who were unvaccinated. All this means is that these children developed antibodies naturally rather than by injection of the measles virus with all of its accompanying heavy metal (aluminum, thimerosal/mercury) adjuvants to provoke an immune response…..Read More