I know a young family with a newborn that I can not convince to not to take the scheduled vaccines. but I might be able to convince them to avoid one or two. They also want to know if taking that 14 in one vax is better or worse than taking all of those same vaccines but at separate times. (Their doctor will only administer the many at one type but they are open to talking with other doctors) Does anyone have any advice or have something brief that is rich with verified data that I can show them? (They don't have time for long videos and are wary of data they can't look up themselves)
Besides that, does anyone have advice for what to do to or give to the infant before and / or after the vaccine to minimize the chance of negative effects? This is important to me, frens. Thank you all so much.
I wish they could come to my classroom with 3 out of ten children autistic. These are 3 and 4 year olds. I have one other child who could probably be on the spectrum. I would not risk it. I would rather my child risk the diseases which to me are less devastating or even death than being non-verbal severely autistic. The odds are no longer 1 out of 10000 or even the new 1 out of 22 boys. My class would be 1 of 4 girls and 1 out of 3 boys. If I include the probably child, the boys go up to 1 out of 2. If nothing else get them to delay ALL vaccinations. Document a healthy speaking child exists. Then if something bad happens the parents know the cause. Get only shots from late 1950's and spread them out if they just can't say NO. If I were pregnant, I would also say no to ultrasounds and doppler heartbeat checks.