Let's review:
DS: "There were 145,700 fatalities from measles in 2013. That is 8x the number of fatalities caused by terrorism globally in the same year"
ELO: "Out of how many reported cases worldwide in a population? Regardless, you're describing fatalities in a population of 7,000,000,000, so it's not many relatively speaking."
DS: "Relative to say terrorism?"
ELO: "No, relative to the enormous population of the world..."
DS: "Why would you compare it to the population of the earth to determine lethality?"
ELO: "I'm not. Learn to read."
:dizzy:
According to the CDC, "In 2010 in the U.S., almost 800 bicyclists were killed and there were an estimated 515,000 emergency department visits due to bicycle-related injuries."
"How many
children do you reckon die every year from measles versus riding bicycles?
NATIONAL HIGHWAY TRAFFIC SAFETY ADMINISTRATION
A total of 677 pedalcyclists were killed in motor vehicle crashes in 2011. The 14-and-younger age group accounted for 9% of those fatalities |
According to the CDC, "During 2001--2008, a median of 56 (range: 37--140) measles cases were reported to CDC annually..."
"...Of the 118, 105 (89%) patients were unvaccinated."
The incidence of measles is low in the United States
because there is high vaccination coverage. Shall we compare the numbers to a country that has low vaccination coverage?
Measles is hardly a threat.
It is not a threat now because of high vaccination coverage. Why does this point keep evading you? Interesting how measles deaths hovered around 400 before the vaccine and is now only a small handful after widespread vaccine coverage, and a national effort to eradicate the disease. Anti-vax boneheads keep rescuing the disease from the brink of eradication.
What are the odds of developing the moderate and severe complication from measles? You still haven't told me.
I don't know, I haven't seen the statistics on the matter, it makes no difference because if you don't get the disease you can't have complications from it.
That means the death rate was higher per case after the vaccination than before. Interesting, and not good press for the vaccine.
Which would be a salient point if you think the MMR is a vaccine against death. The MMR only reduces the chances of catching measles. It is of no import on the death rate of those who already have it.
Might the fact they had just doubled the dose because of previous high vaccine failure rates caused the increase
The addition of this second dose for school-aged children raised the vaccine efficacy rate from 90-95% to 99.7% |
[In 1989] The increased incidence of measles in preschoolers living in densely populated urban areas reflects low vaccination levels in these populations. While these children are generally well immunized by the time they enter school, immunization levels in some inner cities are as low as 49% in children 2 years of age (3). Many of these children receive intermittent health care and are less likely to be age-appropriately immunized with other antigens (4). Innovative efforts need to be directed toward reducing barriers to immunization services and toward full use of existing opportunities to vaccinate eligible children whenever they present for health care. This approach should increase opportunities for vaccine administration in highly susceptible populations and reduce transmission to infants too young for routine immunization.
Suboptimal vaccination also played a major role in measles incidence among adults: 53% of cases in adults greater than or equal to 20 years of age were in unvaccinated persons for whom vaccine was indicated. |
source
90% of those infected during the 1989 outbreak were unvaccinated, again no surprise there. vaccine failure rates didn't cause the increase, failure to vaccinate did.
Those pesky facts again!
or perhaps the poor economic conditions in the U.S. at that time and just prior to that time?
See above.
One's odds appear to have been better before the vaccine was licensed.
Only if you don't understand the difference between estimated cases and reported cases.
So take the .03% chance of having a seizure (every time my child gets the vaccine)
We are discussing the known adverse reaction from the vaccination. 1 in 3000 have a seizure because of the vaccine. That risk is repeated with boosters.
So in your calculus, you'd rather the 0.02% chance of death :rip: and 20% chance of hospitalization over the 0.03% chance of temporary seizure
with no known long-term adverse consequences? :dizzy: