I've tried searching DuckDuckGo, but even that search engine turns up too much vaccine propaganda. I know I've seen articles listing them, but I can't find them. Help me out. Thanks.
Comments (14)
sorted by:
Like this?
http://www.thelibertybeacon.com/popular-tv-show-is-used-to-reinforce-vaccination-compliance/
Search terms: "disease vaccine chart by year clean water plumbing"
That's almost it. I haven't seen that article (gosh, I hate Family Guy---a Simpsons ripoff and it's not even funny), but I have seen the articles it links to. They discuss diseases that were eradicated by clean water, but polio has a vaccine. I remember an article listing at least six that never had vaccines developed for them but are a part of the past. I think cholera is another.
Cholera is still around and there is a vaccine. Orally administered- product available in US is called Vaxchora. (Although the company, Sanofi Pasteur, has temporarily halted production due to decrease in travel due to covid BS)
I took the cholera vaccine. It's a liquid that you drink in two parts.
A kind Canadian got it for me and may have saved my life. It is shown to reduce recurrence of cancer by a large %.
First vaccine was 1796, so also any diseases quashed before that point would have been through non-vaccination measures. They've known quarantine helps for centuries, the original 40 days. Not sure if this is quite what you meant, but an interesting secondary avenue perhaps.
There is a typhoid, also typhus, vaccine. I had them many years ago because I thought I was going to Africa and it was required. Bad reaction to the typhus which is two shots.
Well, they don't exactly go extinct because they still exist in third world shitholes. Bubonic plague is not extinct. They just aren't endemic in first world countries. Dysentery is a disease largely eliminated by sanitation. Africa has got all kinds of horrific nastiness because they're too stupid to keep shit out of their drinking water. Guinea worm is a nice example.
https://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/california-confirms-first-human-case-bubonic-plague-5-years-what-n1237306
The diseases exist, but at a low enough level that they dont rate a mention except by scare-mongering clickbait media now and then. As is posted elsewhere, common sanitation and cleanliness standards has taken the virulence out of what used to be severe existential threats. And almost all tangential to any positive impact vaccines have had.
I think bubonic plague is treatable with antibiotics. It's not really scarier than stuff that's more common like drug resistant TB or Mersa.
Plus now that we dont let rats run around freely it isn't as easy to spread
...Except in Democrat-run shitholes! Plenty of rats running around in Baltimore.
The prairie dogs out west are known to carry the plague, which is why there are signs up telling people to stay away from them. And yes, it is treatable with antibiotics if caught soon enough. I actually knew a young adult who died from it thirty years ago in SC. He cleaned out a disgusting shed that had mouse/rats in it and got it. He was my pastor's wife's younger brother.
You also have the plague, but clean water doesn't help with that, it's spread by fleas.
This doesn't answer your question, but if you look at the timeline it would seem that polio was reduced by improved sanitation vs the vaccine.