ext_211332 ([identity profile] liveonearth.livejournal.com) wrote in [personal profile] liveonearth 2009-10-25 10:59 pm (UTC)

It truly depends on the individual. If one of your baby girls has asthma, or is insulin resistant/hyperglycemic, she is at higher risk of complications. There is the chance that your family could get vaccinated still get the flu. The vaccines don't cover 100% of strains and the flu virus is notorious for evolving faster than they can manufacture new vaccines. If your girls are strong wild young things, they might benefit from getting the flu and hence being forever immune to H1N1 threats---even though the threat might not come again until they are 80 years old. So in other words, it is beyond me to say what you should do, but I do believe that the fear and hype are overblown, and that healthy humans have been surviving flu since our beginning.

As for the worries about the toxic additives in the vaccines, those are real and serious concerns. Girls age 5-21 are at the highest risk of developing auto-immune disease after having vaccines. There are other risks that are poo-pooed by the CDC, but for which the science is just beginning. There is a real risk, and there is also imagined and hyped risk. If you do decide to vaccinate, it is reasonable to avoid multiple vaccinations in short time periods, and to support the body's self-cleaning process in between. Make them eat their veggies!! =-]

Post a comment in response:

This account has disabled anonymous posting.
If you don't have an account you can create one now.
HTML doesn't work in the subject.
More info about formatting