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Vaccine trials have usually excluded "vulnerable" individuals -- only extremely healthy individuals with no allergies are recruited. It's a "selection bias," say Soriano and Shoenfeld, and has likely resulted in serious adverse events being "considerably underestimated" in "real life where vaccines are mandated to all individuals regardless of their susceptibility." The true incidence of allergic reactions to vaccines, normally estimated at between one in 50,000 to one in a million doses, is probably much higher and particularly where gelatin or egg proteins are on the ingredients list, they say.
There's a long list of vaccine ingredients that are potential allergens: besides the infectious agents themselves, there are those from hen's egg, horse serum, baker's yeast, numerous antibiotics, formaldehyde and lactose, as well "inadvertent" ingredients such as latex. People's allergic histories have to be taken before vaccination say the researchers. But some signs of reaction don't show up until after the shot, and a great number of people don't even know whether they're allergic or not.

Babies are vaccinated before leaving the hospital, and receive multiple vaccinations within their first 6 months of life. "Don't feed them honey, strawberries, peanuts, ECT., But stick this in their bloodstream, they'll be fine(trust us, we make billions selling this stuff, why would we lie.) At this point their doctors should be convicted of malpractice.
The public health nurse or GP might tell patients that a long-lasting swelling around the injection site after a vaccine is a normal reaction, for example. But that is not what the immunologists say. "Aluminum sensitization manifests as nodules [hard lumps] at the injection site that often regress after weeks or months, but may persist for years." In such cases, they say, a patch test can be done to confirm sensitivity and to avoid vaccination.
According to a growing body of research, though, allergy may be only the beginning of many dangerous aluminum-induced phenomena.
A number of studies claim vaccines are safe for the "overwhelming majority of patients with established autoimmune diseases," the study allows, but they only looked at rheumatoid arthritis and lupus and not at severe and active cases so "the potential benefit of vaccination should be weighed against its potential risk."

Idk about you, but our doctors hand us a paper that tells us vaccines are perfectly harmless and then tries to guilt us in to getting a shot. WE have to bring up genetics, allergies, and other potential risk factors. Luckily, we finally found a gp who listens. I have family members who aren't so lucky.

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Confused?

So were we! You can find all of this, and more, on Fundies Say the Darndest Things!

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