Embed Notice
HTML Code
Corresponding Notice
- Embed this notice@Shadowman311 As a guy with kids who is probably in a similar headspace to you on this, here's my qrd of what to look at:
>efficacy rates - full sheet docs suggest a lot of the vaccines are 💩. Influenza is the easiest to find this on but others are surprisingly bad.
>bacterial vaccines (e.g. tetanus) —these work well and are high efficacy in children and adults
>incentives — kickback for vaccination rates especially for newer vaccines with questionable harmful effects (gardasil)
>livestock — we use combination vaccines for humans but not animals. If you can find info from pre-COVID era it talks of harm to animals.
>Antibodies injections over vaccination — things like RSV have antibody injections that give a few months of coverage when baby is most vulnerable. These are good.