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Since you knew they were not my words, why did you put them in quotes and demand that I defend them as my beliefs? Since you knew, that is disingenuous at best.I know they're not your words. But they were indeed a quote from someone in this thread. Your words were not "proof of anything".
Context is crucial. VAERS exists for the purpose of being an early warning system. If it is brought up to demonstrate what it does not nor is meant to, then it is immediately dismissed as anecdotal evidence not arising to the level of proof. By "no one" you seem to be excluding the researchers and epidemiologists for whom this database exists in favor of random posters.Do you have any evidence that is occurring? Every time VAERS is brought up., it is immediately dismissed. No one attempts to "filter noise from data". They simply point out some obviously ridiculous example as a reason to discard everything. You do it later in this very post, where you point out that someone got run over by a bus. That seems to be the MO. Find one crazy report that is clearly false as a reason to discard everything else.
Sure.Have you ever read a VAERS report that concerned you?
No, that is way beyond my skill set. I have never even taken statistics although I did take a couple of courses on using related software.Have you ever actually done what you suggest here and filtered the noise from the data?
Obviously or I wouldn't have said I did and mentioned a particular case I read about.Yes. Have you?
How would you know if your case wasn't looked into as part of statistical studies? What did the emergency room tell you? Your treating physicians would be the ones to advise you personally and report your case history.I've even submitted two VAERS reports of my own: one for me and one for my daughter. We had very severe and concerning reactions to the COVID vaccination. I reported thinking maybe someone would follow up. But no one ever did. I guess temporary paralysis and fevers of 105 aren't "severe" enough to warrant further investigation.
Again, sure. Ask me as many times as you please, the answer will remain the same. After the first time, this just seems rhetorical and tiresome on your part, not at all informational.Again, have you ever read a VAERS report you found concerning?
Yes, this has been my point consistently throughout this discussion of VAERS.Boy, ain't that the truth.
Repeating my own question back at me is singularly unhelpful. The question is genuine and I was hoping that you or someone with actual knowledge could answer it.What is the evidence that newborns at low risk who receive the birth-dose have better outcomes than those who don't?
The data *are* - where?The data is available
What is their reason for this? Is there evidence that a dose given at 24 hours of birth has worse outcomes or is less effective than one given at three months or is this simply how they've "always" done it?. Many countries don't recommend the birth-dose of the Hep B vaccine.
*countries* Also, do those countries' populations have more chronic liver problems than the populations of countries that vaccinate at 24 hours?Is there evidence that those counties have "more childhood hepatitis B infections" and "more chronic infections that will follow patients into adulthood"?
I don't know. Do you? Do you know if they have better, worse or similar outcomes at three months over 24 hours?That's why these medical organizations say they are "deeply concerned". Can they point to evidence that countries that don't universally recommend the Hep B birth-dose have worse outcomes?
There is considerable evidence - overwhelming to the point of arising to proof - that hep b infant vaccinations prevent death and long term complications. The immediate question is which timing is preferable and why. At least theoretically, 24 hours will provide protection from transmission during the time the infant is vulnerable.I happen to believe that if you're going to recommend a preventive medical intervention, you need to show evidence of benefit. Is there any such evidence?
Repeating my own question back at me is singularly unhelpful. The question is genuine and I was hoping that you or someone with actual knowledge could answer it.
What is their reason for this? Is there evidence that a dose given at 24 hours of birth has worse outcomes or is less effective than one given at three months or is this simply how they've "always" done it?
*countries* Also, do those countries' populations have more chronic liver problems than the populations of countries that vaccinate at 24 hours?
I don't know. Do you? Do you know if they have better, worse or similar outcomes at three months over 24 hours?
There is considerable evidence - overwhelming to the point of arising to proof - that hep b infant vaccinations prevent death and long term complications.
Since you knew they were not my words, why did you put them in quotes and demand that I defend them as my beliefs? Since you knew, that is disingenuous at best.
I stand by my actual words. Evidence is different from proof.
Context is crucial. VAERS exists for the purpose of being an early warning system.
If it is brought up to demonstrate what it does not nor is meant to, then it is immediately dismissed as anecdotal evidence not arising to the level of proof.
By "no one" you seem to be excluding the researchers and epidemiologists for whom this database exists in favor of random posters.
Far from my dismissing the entire database because of this single case, my point is both that outliers need to be weeded and that significant trends do need to be investigated, investigated by researchers.
Sure.
No, that is way beyond my skill set. I have never even taken statistics although I did take a couple of courses on using related software.
A distinction without much difference still provided no actual information.I didn't repeat your question back to you. I rephrased it.
No, my question is concerning the timing of 24 hours vs three months, whether one is better, worse or no difference from the other. The benefit of the vaccine for infants is not seriously disputed that I've seen.Your position seems to be that there needs to be evidence of harm to not recommend it. My position is that there needs to be evidence of benefit to recommend it. Those are very different positions.
No, we are not agreed that there is no evidence. My position is that I don't know one way or the other. My not knowing something does not mean that evidence of it does not exist. This is the basis for my asking.What we seem to be agreeing on here is that there is no evidence of benefit or harm in the timing of the vaccine dose. Therefore, the proclamations that this will lead to more infections are, shall we say, a bit over the top, and not at all informed by evidence.
Is there a benefit to waiting three months? At least theoretically, the shorter window of vulnerability would be a benefit for the earlier one.Swell. Is there evidence that vaccinating newborns at low risk results in better outcomes for them? I'm asking the same question you are. The difference is that I want to see evidence of a benefit to the birth-dose of the vaccine to make a universal recommendation.
Is there a benefit to waiting three months? At least theoretically, the shorter window of vulnerability would be a benefit for the earlier one.
Why put in quotes what people-not-me have said and then sweetly inquire how I defend "my beliefs" when they're not my beliefs?First of all, I'm not "demanding" anything of anyone. I put things in quotes that people have said.
Oookay....then what was your intent in labeling what was in quotes as "my beliefs" then delicately requesting that I defend said beliefs?I'm pleased to know that you don't think VAERS is "riddled with lies and misnfo" and I apologize if you think I was trying to make it seem like you said something you did not. That was not my intent.
The pandemic was a new situation as was the vaccine development and distribution. Data will always lag the events with analysis lagging even further behind and determining a course of action, particularly a change in the course, lagging even further behind. Do you truly believe that adverse reactions to the administration of the vaccines were not and are not tracked?I couldn't disagree more. VAERS did nothing to inform the vaccination policies during COVID despite a veritable mountain of reports. V-Safe did even less. The main thing they provided was the illusion that someone was tracking adverse events.
There are also reports from health professionals and required reporters - as well as cranks, trolls and those looking to game the system to make a profit.if you say so. Meanwhile, the database consists of reports from real people who have been harmed by vaccines, and they are tossed into this database and simply forgotten.
Well then, that's that. I don't see any point in further discussion since your mind is made up no matter what.I truly don't believe the database exists for any other reason than to pretend like someone actually cares about adverse events from vaccination.
Oh look! A graph with no sourcing. Cool.Did you see the increase in number of VAERS repots during COVID? Even though there were clearly fake reports, exactly how many reports do you think constitutes a "significant trend"? There's no doubt there's "noise" in this data, but there's also some very real "trends"that warranted further investigation. That didn't stop the government and public health from telling everyone to get vaccinated multiple times per year. Their booster recommendations during the Biden administration resulted in the top two vaccine regulators at the FDA resigning in protest.
The bottom line is, what you're saying sounds great. If VAERS were used in the way you explain, it would be a wonderful system to identify risks and pivot accordingly. But that's not what happens in practice. In practice, people pretend like the fact that there were over 1,000,000 VAERS reports in a single year when the previous high was around 60K is all just "noise" worthy of being ignored.
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This was years ago. Generally, at some point I was looking at some covid vaccines particularly among the elderly in nursing homes. I don't remember the specifics - it was years ago and I was not particularly invested.Would you be willing to share more specifics? What vaccine was involved, and what was concerning to you?
No, the question is not completely different; it is mostly the same.Again, you're asking a completely different question.
I disagree - the question is what is the risk to benefit ratio to vaccinating at 24 hours versus at three months? That there is a benefit at all has been pretty well established by the near elimination of Hep B and its associated problems (cirrhosis of the liver, liver cancer, etc.) in children after the protocol was instituted compared to before.The question should be, is there a benefit to vaccinating a newborn who is at low-risk?
Is the risk at 24 hours greater than the risk at three months? The risk includes the vaccination itself as well as the risk of infection between 24 hours and three months, taking into consideration that a newborn is more likely to be closely monitored by doctors and nurses than a three month old in a doctor's office or clinic.If there is no evidence of benefit, then you're simply introducing risk, no matter how small it might be. "First do no harm" means tthat if we're going to recommend that every newborn baby should receive a Hep B vaccine within hours of birth, there should be evidence of benefit for such a recommendation.
Baloney. Is the risk greater or lesser at 24 hours than at three months? I don't know - my theoretical actually assumed equal risk but not no risk. If the risk is greater earlier, please provide evidence that this is so. You haven't even given a theoretical why this would be so.Your theoretical can only be true if you assume that the risk associated with vaccination at birth is zero.
If that's what you know, then I question your general knowledge.It's not. We may not know exactly what it is, and I'm sure it's quite small. But it's not zero. There is always a risk in any medical intervention. I know people have been taught to believe that vaccines are all benefit and no risk, but that's simply not true. If there is no evidence of benefit, then all you have left is risk, no matter how small it may be.
How do you justify other people-not-you saying what you haven't said?Earlier in the thread, there was a link to the ACP's statement on this change in recommendation. It said:
“For example, ACIP’s decision to downgrade the longstanding recommendation to vaccinate all newborns against hepatitis B at birth will lead to more childhood hepatitis B infections, will lead to more chronic infections that will follow patients into adulthood, and will complicate vaccine access for children. No new data was presented during the ACIP meeting to justify this change. “The evidence remains clear: the hepatitis B birth dose is safe and an essential component in helping children develop immunity against a serious, potentially lifelong disease. In fact, since the U.S. implemented the hepatitis B birth dose in 1991, annual hepatitis B infections among infants and children have dropped 99%, from 16,000 to less than 20. This progress is directly attributable to timely vaccination. “ACIP’s actions will harm children, their families and the medical professionals who care for them. That is why we are joining together to speak up. American families deserve information grounded in science and clear, consistent guidance – not speculation intended to scare them. We urge the CDC leaders to reject ACIP’s new recommendation and instead retain the current, evidence-based approach.”
Those are bold statements. Is there any evidence that "timely vaccination" is the reason that Hep B infections have dropped? We've already established that correlation is not causation, but here it seems it gets a pass. They make a bold statement this is "directly attributable to timely vaccination", as if we're to believe that there are no other confounders in play here over the last 34 years. No in this case, correlation IS causation.
Where is the evidence that supports this apoplectic hand-wringing?
Well then, that's that. I don't see any point in further discussion since your mind is made up no matter what.
Oh look! A graph with no sourcing. Cool.