With the prevalence of ticks like I’ve never seen before, I started researching Lyme disease. This was never a concern when I was a kid; we played in the woods and tall grass all day without an issue. No one knew what a tick was.
I’m suspicious that disease carrying ticks have risen to the level they are at seemingly out of nowhere, but I have no proof other than my own speculation.
I did, however, discover some interesting parallels in my research about the disease. There was a vaccine that was released sometime in the late ‘90s and pulled from the market in 2002. It was called LYMERix. They site insufficient consumer demand as the reason for discontinuation. Interestingly, news articles from the time read almost identically to todays stories about antivaxxers spreading disinformation and that LYMERix was safe and effective. The so called disinformation spreaders were blamed for the lack of demand, when in reality people were having bad reactions to it just like today.
Here’s the kicker…the CDC’s website says Pfizer and another company are currently developing a new vaccine. Interesting when you reference that with the steep rise in disease carrying ticks over the last 5 - 10 years.
What is Lyme disease? Where did all the ticks come from? How do you treat Lyme disease? Antibiotics? Why is a vaccine needed for a treatable condition? Why do some people suffer long term, while others are cured? Why do the blood tests for Lyme disease often yield both false positive and negative results? Why are most doctors very poor at diagnosing and treating this disease?
I’d love to hear everyone’s collective knowledge on this.
I have lived in an area that has ticks for over 40 years. My kids and myself found ticks on us and "matched" that is burned them away. We never got "Lyme disease". If you live in the country; check yourself for ticks. If you find one; remove it. There is no need for an effing vaccine!
Today's doctors have no idea what living in the country entails-that is why they have no idea what in hell a tick bite means.
Lyme disease is spread by the teeny weeny tick usually found on deer. A tick must be attached for 36 to 48 hours or more before the Lyme disease bacterium can be transmitted. If you remove a tick quickly (within 24 hours), you can greatly reduce your chances of getting Lyme disease.
If you want more info on how to handle a tick bite... https://www.webmd.com/rheumatoid-arthritis/arthritis-lyme-disease https://unclinic.ru/bolezn-lajma-kleshhevoj-borrelioz/
I added a comment...my daughter had Lyme disease...believe me they are NOT removed as easily as normal ticks...I have removed many...my husband is a hunter...my daughter has a small scar from burning it off...they are a whole different ballgame...
You are so correct!