Pretty sure that's more than the "safe" amount. I'm sure it's purely coincidental that aluminum buildup has been found in the brains of autistic children.
Side note...I hate studies like this so much. It is always painfully clear that the people doing the study want vaccines to be okay so they dance around obvious things. One of the things I have brought up with pediatricians in the past is that my kids' genetic background is absolutely riddled with autoimmune disease and therefore I am more cautious than most mamas about artificially stimulating their tiny (God given) immune systems. Every doctor I've talked to has assured me that vax and autoimmune issues are in no way correlated, so I, being the obsessive researcher I am, have extensively looked for information to share, but the papers I find tend to be summarized like this "vax x is positively correlated with autoimmune condition y, but it isn't the vax causing it and we didn't prove the vax causes any other conditions so it is better to put this in your kids rather than letting them get chickenpox (for example)." It is absolutely maddening. Heh, also, doctors don't really like it when you pull out the package insert you printed from the manufacturers website and show them that among the reported side effects you can find the very conditions you are concerned about.
Pretty sure that's more than the "safe" amount. I'm sure it's purely coincidental that aluminum buildup has been found in the brains of autistic children.
Side note...I hate studies like this so much. It is always painfully clear that the people doing the study want vaccines to be okay so they dance around obvious things. One of the things I have brought up with pediatricians in the past is that my kids' genetic background is absolutely riddled with autoimmune disease and therefore I am more cautious than most mamas about artificially stimulating their tiny (God given) immune systems. Every doctor I've talked to has assured me that vax and autoimmune issues are in no way correlated, so I, being the obsessive researcher I am, have extensively looked for information to share, but the papers I find tend to be summarized like this "vax x is positively correlated with autoimmune condition y, but it isn't the vax causing it and we didn't prove the vax causes any other conditions so it is better to put this in your kids rather than letting them get chickenpox (for example)." It is absolutely maddening. Heh, also, doctors don't really like it when you pull out the package insert you printed from the manufacturers website and show them that among the reported side effects you can find the very conditions you are concerned about.
Its so confusing