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Doc Who Tied Vaccine to Autism Ruled Unethical (2 Viewers)

I think drunk driving is terrible, but don't try to tell me whether I can go where I want to or not.
What, you want some kind of "police state" where we physically restrain people from getting in their car while trying to drive after drinking? Next you'll want them in handcuffs and hauled off to jail, right?
You are not making any sense. People who want to have the priviledge of driving must comply with drunk driving laws. Just like people who want to have the priviledge of sending their kids to public schools have to comply with public health laws. But that's not what we are talking about here (or not what some people are talking about).

Look, I believe in vaccinations, but people should be intellecually honest when they call people stupid. Which is what the anti-anti-vaccers are doing.

I hear everybody laugh at the anti-vaccers who say that "parents should have a choice." Well, do you know what the opposite of "parents having a choice" is? It is the forced vaccination, using police-power if necessary, of every mother's child in the country. Are you ready to flippantly accept that? Say "sure, we can give the police the power to knock on people's doors and ask for their "vaccination papers," and if they don't comply, strap them down and inject them."

Because laugh all you want at someone saying "parents should have a choice to vaccinate," but what is the logical conclusion of saying that no, parents (or people for that matter), get no say in this? Its the forced vaccination against their will. I'm not saying I'm against it, but I wouldn't be so flippant and derogatory about it, because giving the state that kind of power is a big deal.

 
The money angle similarly makes very little sense. Vaccinations are probably the least profitable of medications. These are given over a couple doses and not again. For both physician offices as well as pharm companies, there is FAR more money in a medication that is taken every day than a couple doses of a vaccine. Most private pediatric offices LOSE money giving vaccinations and it certainly doesn't make anything near what a daily med will make for a pharm company.
Well yea, but what happens when those vaccinations cause illnesses that require daily doses? Profit is what happens
If you think that these vaccines are causing illnesses as some sort of elaborate profit scheme, then it's unlikely anything I or anyone else says is going to change your mind.

Very few medicines have been studied as extensively as vaccinations and even fewer have the safety profile that vaccines do. Your conjecture above completely flies in the face of that and suggests that there's a huge conspiracy to push vaccines that aren't safe in order to make money later.

If that's what you believe, we can just leave it at that.
:whoosh:

come on dude

 
The money angle similarly makes very little sense. Vaccinations are probably the least profitable of medications. These are given over a couple doses and not again. For both physician offices as well as pharm companies, there is FAR more money in a medication that is taken every day than a couple doses of a vaccine. Most private pediatric offices LOSE money giving vaccinations and it certainly doesn't make anything near what a daily med will make for a pharm company.
A $50 2 dose required vaccine will gross about $400,000,000 per year.

Not billions, but not chump change either.

 
The money angle similarly makes very little sense. Vaccinations are probably the least profitable of medications. These are given over a couple doses and not again. For both physician offices as well as pharm companies, there is FAR more money in a medication that is taken every day than a couple doses of a vaccine. Most private pediatric offices LOSE money giving vaccinations and it certainly doesn't make anything near what a daily med will make for a pharm company.
Well yea, but what happens when those vaccinations cause illnesses that require daily doses? Profit is what happens
Where do you get the idea that vaccinations cause illnesses that require daily doses? I'm not flaming, I'm legitimately asking because literally all of the literature and research says that opposite.

 
The money angle similarly makes very little sense. Vaccinations are probably the least profitable of medications. These are given over a couple doses and not again. For both physician offices as well as pharm companies, there is FAR more money in a medication that is taken every day than a couple doses of a vaccine. Most private pediatric offices LOSE money giving vaccinations and it certainly doesn't make anything near what a daily med will make for a pharm company.
Here's a twist on the ol' tin foil hat: Big Pharma wants you to get vaccinated so you live longer and Big Pharma has more opportunity to sell you a daily med. /removestonguefromcheek

 
The money angle similarly makes very little sense. Vaccinations are probably the least profitable of medications. These are given over a couple doses and not again. For both physician offices as well as pharm companies, there is FAR more money in a medication that is taken every day than a couple doses of a vaccine. Most private pediatric offices LOSE money giving vaccinations and it certainly doesn't make anything near what a daily med will make for a pharm company.
Well yea, but what happens when those vaccinations cause illnesses that require daily doses? Profit is what happens
Where do you get the idea that vaccinations cause illnesses that require daily doses? I'm not flaming, I'm legitimately asking because literally all of the literature and research says that opposite.
jesus h. christ. He's kidding.

 
The money angle similarly makes very little sense. Vaccinations are probably the least profitable of medications. These are given over a couple doses and not again. For both physician offices as well as pharm companies, there is FAR more money in a medication that is taken every day than a couple doses of a vaccine. Most private pediatric offices LOSE money giving vaccinations and it certainly doesn't make anything near what a daily med will make for a pharm company.
A $50 2 dose required vaccine will gross about $400,000,000 per year.

Not billions, but not chump change either.
You think doctors make $50 per vaccination?

 
The money angle similarly makes very little sense. Vaccinations are probably the least profitable of medications. These are given over a couple doses and not again. For both physician offices as well as pharm companies, there is FAR more money in a medication that is taken every day than a couple doses of a vaccine. Most private pediatric offices LOSE money giving vaccinations and it certainly doesn't make anything near what a daily med will make for a pharm company.
Well yea, but what happens when those vaccinations cause illnesses that require daily doses? Profit is what happens
Where do you get the idea that vaccinations cause illnesses that require daily doses? I'm not flaming, I'm legitimately asking because literally all of the literature and research says that opposite.
jesus h. christ. He's kidding.
Sorry I'm a little slow on the uptake.

 
I think drunk driving is terrible, but don't try to tell me whether I can go where I want to or not.
What, you want some kind of "police state" where we physically restrain people from getting in their car while trying to drive after drinking? Next you'll want them in handcuffs and hauled off to jail, right?
You are not making any sense. People who want to have the priviledge of driving must comply with drunk driving laws. Just like people who want to have the priviledge of sending their kids to public schools have to comply with public health laws. But that's not what we are talking about here (or not what some people are talking about).

Look, I believe in vaccinations, but people should be intellecually honest when they call people stupid. Which is what the anti-anti-vaccers are doing.

I hear everybody laugh at the anti-vaccers who say that "parents should have a choice." Well, do you know what the opposite of "parents having a choice" is? It is the forced vaccination, using police-power if necessary, of every mother's child in the country. Are you ready to flippantly accept that? Say "sure, we can give the police the power to knock on people's doors and ask for their "vaccination papers," and if they don't comply, strap them down and inject them."

Because laugh all you want at someone saying "parents should have a choice to vaccinate," but what is the logical conclusion of saying that no, parents (or people for that matter), get no say in this? Its the forced vaccination against their will. I'm not saying I'm against it, but I wouldn't be so flippant and derogatory about it, because giving the state that kind of power is a big deal.
You're right, drunk driving is not a good example.

A better example would be the recent hilarity from the North Carolina senator who said he opposes mandatory hand-washing for employees after they take a dump. If we say that "parents should have a choice," do we also say that "small business owners should have a choice?" Yeah, running a restaurant is optional ... but so is having/raising a child. If you choose to do it, I don't see why requiring you by law to take relatively simple preventative measures to benefit public health and safety is a problem.

 
The money angle similarly makes very little sense. Vaccinations are probably the least profitable of medications. These are given over a couple doses and not again. For both physician offices as well as pharm companies, there is FAR more money in a medication that is taken every day than a couple doses of a vaccine. Most private pediatric offices LOSE money giving vaccinations and it certainly doesn't make anything near what a daily med will make for a pharm company.
Well yea, but what happens when those vaccinations cause illnesses that require daily doses? Profit is what happens
If you think that these vaccines are causing illnesses as some sort of elaborate profit scheme, then it's unlikely anything I or anyone else says is going to change your mind.

Very few medicines have been studied as extensively as vaccinations and even fewer have the safety profile that vaccines do. Your conjecture above completely flies in the face of that and suggests that there's a huge conspiracy to push vaccines that aren't safe in order to make money later.

If that's what you believe, we can just leave it at that.
:whoosh: come on dude
My bad. Believe it or not that's actually what some people think.

 
The money angle similarly makes very little sense. Vaccinations are probably the least profitable of medications. These are given over a couple doses and not again. For both physician offices as well as pharm companies, there is FAR more money in a medication that is taken every day than a couple doses of a vaccine. Most private pediatric offices LOSE money giving vaccinations and it certainly doesn't make anything near what a daily med will make for a pharm company.
Here's a twist on the ol' tin foil hat: Big Pharma wants you to get vaccinated so you live longer and Big Pharma has more opportunity to sell you a daily med. /removestonguefromcheek
No joke. The income generated for Big Pharma off of my grandmother in the last 3 years of her life dwarfed whatever Big Parma made off of vaccinations in the entire state over that same stretch. If you believe Big Pharma is the driving force behind some conspiracy, that's the angle that makes way more sense than vaccinations.

 
A better example would be the recent hilarity from the North Carolina senator who said he opposes mandatory hand-washing for employees after they take a dump.
Wait, what??

:lmao: :lmao:

Holy ####
It's serious. His suggestion was made to reduce the burden of government regulation on businesses. But here's the kicker -- he would require those businesses to post "big" signs saying they don't make their employees wash their hands after going to the bathroom. So, in other words, his idea of "reducing" regulation is actually swapping out a health regulation for a sign regulation.

 
The money angle similarly makes very little sense. Vaccinations are probably the least profitable of medications. These are given over a couple doses and not again. For both physician offices as well as pharm companies, there is FAR more money in a medication that is taken every day than a couple doses of a vaccine. Most private pediatric offices LOSE money giving vaccinations and it certainly doesn't make anything near what a daily med will make for a pharm company.
A $50 2 dose required vaccine will gross about $400,000,000 per year.

Not billions, but not chump change either.
You think doctors make $50 per vaccination?
No and I didn't say that. I have no idea how it would be divided up between doctor's office, distribution and manufacturer, but the idea that it really isn't profitable isn't a valid point.

 
I think drunk driving is terrible, but don't try to tell me whether I can go where I want to or not.
What, you want some kind of "police state" where we physically restrain people from getting in their car while trying to drive after drinking? Next you'll want them in handcuffs and hauled off to jail, right?
You are not making any sense. People who want to have the priviledge of driving must comply with drunk driving laws. Just like people who want to have the priviledge of sending their kids to public schools have to comply with public health laws. But that's not what we are talking about here (or not what some people are talking about).

Look, I believe in vaccinations, but people should be intellecually honest when they call people stupid. Which is what the anti-anti-vaccers are doing.

I hear everybody laugh at the anti-vaccers who say that "parents should have a choice." Well, do you know what the opposite of "parents having a choice" is? It is the forced vaccination, using police-power if necessary, of every mother's child in the country. Are you ready to flippantly accept that? Say "sure, we can give the police the power to knock on people's doors and ask for their "vaccination papers," and if they don't comply, strap them down and inject them."

Because laugh all you want at someone saying "parents should have a choice to vaccinate," but what is the logical conclusion of saying that no, parents (or people for that matter), get no say in this? Its the forced vaccination against their will. I'm not saying I'm against it, but I wouldn't be so flippant and derogatory about it, because giving the state that kind of power is a big deal.
Authorities knocking on doors and strapping people down for their dose of medicine is nowherer near the 'logical conclusion'. When people like me say it should be the law that kids have to be vaccinated, I don't actually mean to suggest that we should do random sweeps of neighborhoods to guarantee compliance.

It's pretty intellectually dishonest to try to paint this as an either/or scenario. I think anti-vaccers are dumb. I think you should be legally obligated to vaccinate your child. I think you should not be allowed to attend a school if you are not vaccinated.

There are literally thousands of laws in practice today that do not result on people knocking on your door. You're being ridiculous in your assertion that this is anywhere near the natural outcome of a law.

 
The money angle similarly makes very little sense. Vaccinations are probably the least profitable of medications. These are given over a couple doses and not again. For both physician offices as well as pharm companies, there is FAR more money in a medication that is taken every day than a couple doses of a vaccine. Most private pediatric offices LOSE money giving vaccinations and it certainly doesn't make anything near what a daily med will make for a pharm company.
A $50 2 dose required vaccine will gross about $400,000,000 per year.

Not billions, but not chump change either.
You think doctors make $50 per vaccination?
No and I didn't say that. I have no idea how it would be divided up between doctor's office, distribution and manufacturer, but the idea that it really isn't profitable isn't a valid point.
Valid point? You made up a per dose revenue to make up an annual revenue number and then somehow translated that to profit without any accounting for costs of raw materials, storage, or the distribution network. So which one is the invalid point?

 
The money angle similarly makes very little sense. Vaccinations are probably the least profitable of medications. These are given over a couple doses and not again. For both physician offices as well as pharm companies, there is FAR more money in a medication that is taken every day than a couple doses of a vaccine. Most private pediatric offices LOSE money giving vaccinations and it certainly doesn't make anything near what a daily med will make for a pharm company.
A $50 2 dose required vaccine will gross about $400,000,000 per year.

Not billions, but not chump change either.
You think doctors make $50 per vaccination?
No and I didn't say that. I have no idea how it would be divided up between doctor's office, distribution and manufacturer, but the idea that it really isn't profitable isn't a valid point.
The money angle similarly makes very little sense. Vaccinations are probably the least profitable of medications. These are given over a couple doses and not again. For both physician offices as well as pharm companies, there is FAR more money in a medication that is taken every day than a couple doses of a vaccine. Most private pediatric offices LOSE money giving vaccinations and it certainly doesn't make anything near what a daily med will make for a pharm company.
A $50 2 dose required vaccine will gross about $400,000,000 per year.

Not billions, but not chump change either.
You think doctors make $50 per vaccination?
No and I didn't say that. I have no idea how it would be divided up between doctor's office, distribution and manufacturer, but the idea that it really isn't profitable isn't a valid point.
Just because the price is high does not mean that the profits are. I'm not saying they aren't either. I have no idea whatthe profit margin is on a dose of vaccine or what the return on investment would be for a newly developed vaccine.

 
I think drunk driving is terrible, but don't try to tell me whether I can go where I want to or not.
What, you want some kind of "police state" where we physically restrain people from getting in their car while trying to drive after drinking? Next you'll want them in handcuffs and hauled off to jail, right?
You are not making any sense. People who want to have the priviledge of driving must comply with drunk driving laws. Just like people who want to have the priviledge of sending their kids to public schools have to comply with public health laws. But that's not what we are talking about here (or not what some people are talking about).

Look, I believe in vaccinations, but people should be intellecually honest when they call people stupid. Which is what the anti-anti-vaccers are doing.

I hear everybody laugh at the anti-vaccers who say that "parents should have a choice." Well, do you know what the opposite of "parents having a choice" is? It is the forced vaccination, using police-power if necessary, of every mother's child in the country. Are you ready to flippantly accept that? Say "sure, we can give the police the power to knock on people's doors and ask for their "vaccination papers," and if they don't comply, strap them down and inject them."

Because laugh all you want at someone saying "parents should have a choice to vaccinate," but what is the logical conclusion of saying that no, parents (or people for that matter), get no say in this? Its the forced vaccination against their will. I'm not saying I'm against it, but I wouldn't be so flippant and derogatory about it, because giving the state that kind of power is a big deal.
Authorities knocking on doors and strapping people down for their dose of medicine is nowherer near the 'logical conclusion'. When people like me say it should be the law that kids have to be vaccinated, I don't actually mean to suggest that we should do random sweeps of neighborhoods to guarantee compliance.

It's pretty intellectually dishonest to try to paint this as an either/or scenario. I think anti-vaccers are dumb. I think you should be legally obligated to vaccinate your child. I think you should not be allowed to attend a school if you are not vaccinated.

There are literally thousands of laws in practice today that do not result on people knocking on your door. You're being ridiculous in your assertion that this is anywhere near the natural outcome of a law.
If it's a simple misunderstanding, I get that. But I sure do wonder what people mean when they say: "parents should not have a choice on whether to vaccinate their children."

That is a HELL of a lot different from "if parents want to send their kids to public schools, they have no choice on whether to vaccinate their children."

So what you (and maybe others?) are saying is: "Yes, parents absolutely get a choice on whether to vaccinate their children. If they don't want to send their kids to public schools, they are free to refuse to get their kids vaccinated." Is that what you are saying. Because if it is, it sounds like you and the anti-vaccination nutjobs aren't actually too far apart.

Oh, and by the way: Don't say "parents should be legally obligated to vaccinate their kids," when what you really mean is "I mean if a parent wants to send their kids to public schools they need to have them vaccinated." Because those are two very different things.

 
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There are literally thousands of laws in practice today that do not result on people knocking on your door. You're being ridiculous in your assertion that this is anywhere near the natural outcome of a law.
I swear, I'm fascinated by this debate. Either a parent has the choice to vaccinate his kids or he doesn't. Christie has gotten DESTROYED for saying just that: "parents should have a choice."

You tell me, mr smarty pants: If a parent does not have a choice to vaccinate his kids, what does that mean? Because to me, that means I refuse to vaccinate my kids (even my home-schooled kids) and the state vaccinates my kids anyway. How are you going to enforce it?

And we've had this example happen, right? Plenty of cases with religious folks to want to refuse medical care, and the state steps in with its police power, takes the child away, and forces the procedure. So yes, it can happen.

Just fascinating.

 
I think drunk driving is terrible, but don't try to tell me whether I can go where I want to or not.
What, you want some kind of "police state" where we physically restrain people from getting in their car while trying to drive after drinking? Next you'll want them in handcuffs and hauled off to jail, right?
You are not making any sense. People who want to have the priviledge of driving must comply with drunk driving laws. Just like people who want to have the priviledge of sending their kids to public schools have to comply with public health laws. But that's not what we are talking about here (or not what some people are talking about).

Look, I believe in vaccinations, but people should be intellecually honest when they call people stupid. Which is what the anti-anti-vaccers are doing.

I hear everybody laugh at the anti-vaccers who say that "parents should have a choice." Well, do you know what the opposite of "parents having a choice" is? It is the forced vaccination, using police-power if necessary, of every mother's child in the country. Are you ready to flippantly accept that? Say "sure, we can give the police the power to knock on people's doors and ask for their "vaccination papers," and if they don't comply, strap them down and inject them."

Because laugh all you want at someone saying "parents should have a choice to vaccinate," but what is the logical conclusion of saying that no, parents (or people for that matter), get no say in this? Its the forced vaccination against their will. I'm not saying I'm against it, but I wouldn't be so flippant and derogatory about it, because giving the state that kind of power is a big deal.
Authorities knocking on doors and strapping people down for their dose of medicine is nowherer near the 'logical conclusion'. When people like me say it should be the law that kids have to be vaccinated, I don't actually mean to suggest that we should do random sweeps of neighborhoods to guarantee compliance.

It's pretty intellectually dishonest to try to paint this as an either/or scenario. I think anti-vaccers are dumb. I think you should be legally obligated to vaccinate your child. I think you should not be allowed to attend a school if you are not vaccinated.

There are literally thousands of laws in practice today that do not result on people knocking on your door. You're being ridiculous in your assertion that this is anywhere near the natural outcome of a law.
If it's a simple misunderstanding, I get that. But I sure do wonder what people mean when they say: "parents should not have a choice on whether to vaccinate their children."

That is a HELL of a lot different from "if parents want to send their kids to public schools, they have no choice on whether to vaccinate their children."

So what you (and maybe others?) are saying is: "Yes, parents absolutely get a choice on whether to vaccinate their children. If they don't want to send their kids to public schools, they are free to refuse to get their kids vaccinated." Is that what you are saying. Because if it is, it sounds like you and the anti-vaccination nutjobs aren't actually too far apart.

Oh, and by the way: Don't say "parents should be legally obligated to vaccinate their kids," when what you really mean is "I mean if a parent wants to send their kids to public schools they need to have them vaccinated." Because those are two very different things.
I think your leap to a police state is the breakdown here. Parents are not given any choice with respect to lots of things when dealing with their kids, we just don't think about most of them because they seem obvious. Parents aren't given the choice to starve their children, for example. We don't send police in to houses to strap kids down and feed them, we don't go door-to-door randomly checking for evidence of malnourished kids either.

 
The money angle similarly makes very little sense. Vaccinations are probably the least profitable of medications. These are given over a couple doses and not again. For both physician offices as well as pharm companies, there is FAR more money in a medication that is taken every day than a couple doses of a vaccine. Most private pediatric offices LOSE money giving vaccinations and it certainly doesn't make anything near what a daily med will make for a pharm company.
A $50 2 dose required vaccine will gross about $400,000,000 per year.

Not billions, but not chump change either.
You think doctors make $50 per vaccination?
No and I didn't say that. I have no idea how it would be divided up between doctor's office, distribution and manufacturer, but the idea that it really isn't profitable isn't a valid point.
Valid point? You made up a per dose revenue to make up an annual revenue number and then somehow translated that to profit without any accounting for costs of raw materials, storage, or the distribution network. So which one is the invalid point?
Beat me to it. I might as well say something like "a $10 loss 2 dose required vaccination would gross (-$80,000,000) per year" to "prove" money is being lost on vaccinations. I don't really have any reason to believe any of my assumptions are correct, but it's not OK for you to question that.

 
I think drunk driving is terrible, but don't try to tell me whether I can go where I want to or not.
What, you want some kind of "police state" where we physically restrain people from getting in their car while trying to drive after drinking? Next you'll want them in handcuffs and hauled off to jail, right?
You are not making any sense. People who want to have the priviledge of driving must comply with drunk driving laws. Just like people who want to have the priviledge of sending their kids to public schools have to comply with public health laws. But that's not what we are talking about here (or not what some people are talking about).

Look, I believe in vaccinations, but people should be intellecually honest when they call people stupid. Which is what the anti-anti-vaccers are doing.

I hear everybody laugh at the anti-vaccers who say that "parents should have a choice." Well, do you know what the opposite of "parents having a choice" is? It is the forced vaccination, using police-power if necessary, of every mother's child in the country. Are you ready to flippantly accept that? Say "sure, we can give the police the power to knock on people's doors and ask for their "vaccination papers," and if they don't comply, strap them down and inject them."

Because laugh all you want at someone saying "parents should have a choice to vaccinate," but what is the logical conclusion of saying that no, parents (or people for that matter), get no say in this? Its the forced vaccination against their will. I'm not saying I'm against it, but I wouldn't be so flippant and derogatory about it, because giving the state that kind of power is a big deal.
Authorities knocking on doors and strapping people down for their dose of medicine is nowherer near the 'logical conclusion'. When people like me say it should be the law that kids have to be vaccinated, I don't actually mean to suggest that we should do random sweeps of neighborhoods to guarantee compliance.

It's pretty intellectually dishonest to try to paint this as an either/or scenario. I think anti-vaccers are dumb. I think you should be legally obligated to vaccinate your child. I think you should not be allowed to attend a school if you are not vaccinated.

There are literally thousands of laws in practice today that do not result on people knocking on your door. You're being ridiculous in your assertion that this is anywhere near the natural outcome of a law.
If it's a simple misunderstanding, I get that. But I sure do wonder what people mean when they say: "parents should not have a choice on whether to vaccinate their children."

That is a HELL of a lot different from "if parents want to send their kids to public schools, they have no choice on whether to vaccinate their children."

So what you (and maybe others?) are saying is: "Yes, parents absolutely get a choice on whether to vaccinate their children. If they don't want to send their kids to public schools, they are free to refuse to get their kids vaccinated." Is that what you are saying. Because if it is, it sounds like you and the anti-vaccination nutjobs aren't actually too far apart.

Oh, and by the way: Don't say "parents should be legally obligated to vaccinate their kids," when what you really mean is "I mean if a parent wants to send their kids to public schools they need to have them vaccinated." Because those are two very different things.
I think your leap to a police state is the breakdown here. Parents are not given any choice with respect to lots of things when dealing with their kids, we just don't think about most of them because they seem obvious. Parents aren't given the choice to starve their children, for example. We don't send police in to houses to strap kids down and feed them, we don't go door-to-door randomly checking for evidence of malnourished kids either.
I can dig it.

I think the starving your kids is a good example. It may even be too skewed in my direction, so I'll try and think of another one. But you are right: Police don't go door to door to make sure kids are fed. However, if we get some sort of evidence that kids are being starved, Child Welfare Services may very well show up on the parent's doorstep.

The closest example I can think about is the Jahovah's Witsness example where the parents were forced to allow the kid to have a blood transfusion. Or more properly, they took the kid and performed a blood transfusion on him. But even that isn't a great example because there, we were only talking about saving that one kid. In our situation, we are talking about saving everyone else in the country (i.e., it isn't for the kids' benefit, but rather the "greater good").

The only other example I can really think to compare is registering for the draft (or showing up for the draft if you get called). Because in that case, the law make you do something against your will, for the greater good of society. And no, we didn't have police busting down doors to find draft-dodgers.

Anyway, I don't mean to get crazy with my examples. I just think that probably most people's response to "should a parent have a choice to vaccinate" probably depends on what we mean by "having a choice," and what the punishment for non-compliance was. That's all I was saying.

NOTE: again, this was not an argument that parents shouldn't vaccinate. They most surely should. I was really doing a thought experiment on what it means to give parents the choice to vaccinate.

 
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A better example would be the recent hilarity from the North Carolina senator who said he opposes mandatory hand-washing for employees after they take a dump. If we say that "parents should have a choice," do we also say that "small business owners should have a choice?" Yeah, running a restaurant is optional ... but so is having/raising a child. If you choose to do it, I don't see why requiring you by law to take relatively simple preventative measures to benefit public health and safety is a problem.
he was part of a bit on TDS last night.

to be fair, he's a free-market proponent. he thinks the public/market will decide whether the restaurant/bar/coffee that advertises itself as "pro-handwashing" or "unwashed" is viable. savvy consumers will likely choose the place of business - if the prices are the same - that does require their employees to wash hands over the one that doesn't. taking his idea to its extremity, the "unwashed" joint could make their prices so low that enough people in the market would risk getting ill. the margins would stink but they could get buy on volume selling, i suppose. however, in this example, the market would be deciding if unwashed really does matter.

Or he could just restauarant and bar owners to see what their feelings are about public health ratings being made known and on prominent display. they might tell him what getting a ####ty rating does to their business.

 
A better example would be the recent hilarity from the North Carolina senator who said he opposes mandatory hand-washing for employees after they take a dump. If we say that "parents should have a choice," do we also say that "small business owners should have a choice?" Yeah, running a restaurant is optional ... but so is having/raising a child. If you choose to do it, I don't see why requiring you by law to take relatively simple preventative measures to benefit public health and safety is a problem.
he was part of a bit on TDS last night.

to be fair, he's a free-market proponent. he thinks the public/market will decide whether the restaurant/bar/coffee that advertises itself as "pro-handwashing" or "unwashed" is viable. savvy consumers will likely choose the place of business - if the prices are the same - that does require their employees to wash hands over the one that doesn't. taking his idea to its extremity, the "unwashed" joint could make their prices so low that enough people in the market would risk getting ill. the margins would stink but they could get buy on volume selling, i suppose. however, in this example, the market would be deciding if unwashed really does matter.

Or he could just restauarant and bar owners to see what their feelings are about public health ratings being made known and on prominent display. they might tell him what getting a ####ty rating does to their business.
Right ... but even that line of reasoning ignores the fact it's not just people who choose to visit the restaurant who incur the added risk when they eat ####-covered food. If they get sick they could pass on that disease to other people they come in contact with who didn't knowingly take on the risks inherent in poop-eating.

And the same thing applies to vaccines. It's not just your kids you put at risk when you don't vaccinate, although that's bad enough. It's the kids that your kids might infect, like infants or kids who can't get vaccinated because of some other disease they have or people whose vaccine isn't effective for some reason.

ETA: And of course it ignores that requiring signs also requires regulation, so it's not really anti-regulation so much as he just wants a different regulation.

 
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I think drunk driving is terrible, but don't try to tell me whether I can go where I want to or not.
What, you want some kind of "police state" where we physically restrain people from getting in their car while trying to drive after drinking? Next you'll want them in handcuffs and hauled off to jail, right?
You are not making any sense. People who want to have the priviledge of driving must comply with drunk driving laws. Just like people who want to have the priviledge of sending their kids to public schools have to comply with public health laws. But that's not what we are talking about here (or not what some people are talking about).

Look, I believe in vaccinations, but people should be intellecually honest when they call people stupid. Which is what the anti-anti-vaccers are doing.

I hear everybody laugh at the anti-vaccers who say that "parents should have a choice." Well, do you know what the opposite of "parents having a choice" is? It is the forced vaccination, using police-power if necessary, of every mother's child in the country. Are you ready to flippantly accept that? Say "sure, we can give the police the power to knock on people's doors and ask for their "vaccination papers," and if they don't comply, strap them down and inject them."

Because laugh all you want at someone saying "parents should have a choice to vaccinate," but what is the logical conclusion of saying that no, parents (or people for that matter), get no say in this? Its the forced vaccination against their will. I'm not saying I'm against it, but I wouldn't be so flippant and derogatory about it, because giving the state that kind of power is a big deal.
Authorities knocking on doors and strapping people down for their dose of medicine is nowherer near the 'logical conclusion'. When people like me say it should be the law that kids have to be vaccinated, I don't actually mean to suggest that we should do random sweeps of neighborhoods to guarantee compliance.

It's pretty intellectually dishonest to try to paint this as an either/or scenario. I think anti-vaccers are dumb. I think you should be legally obligated to vaccinate your child. I think you should not be allowed to attend a school if you are not vaccinated.

There are literally thousands of laws in practice today that do not result on people knocking on your door. You're being ridiculous in your assertion that this is anywhere near the natural outcome of a law.
If it's a simple misunderstanding, I get that. But I sure do wonder what people mean when they say: "parents should not have a choice on whether to vaccinate their children."

That is a HELL of a lot different from "if parents want to send their kids to public schools, they have no choice on whether to vaccinate their children."

So what you (and maybe others?) are saying is: "Yes, parents absolutely get a choice on whether to vaccinate their children. If they don't want to send their kids to public schools, they are free to refuse to get their kids vaccinated." Is that what you are saying. Because if it is, it sounds like you and the anti-vaccination nutjobs aren't actually too far apart.

Oh, and by the way: Don't say "parents should be legally obligated to vaccinate their kids," when what you really mean is "I mean if a parent wants to send their kids to public schools they need to have them vaccinated." Because those are two very different things.
I think your leap to a police state is the breakdown here. Parents are not given any choice with respect to lots of things when dealing with their kids, we just don't think about most of them because they seem obvious. Parents aren't given the choice to starve their children, for example. We don't send police in to houses to strap kids down and feed them, we don't go door-to-door randomly checking for evidence of malnourished kids either.
I can dig it.

I think the starving your kids is a good example. It may even be too skewed in my direction, so I'll try and think of another one. But you are right: Police don't go door to door to make sure kids are fed. However, if we get some sort of evidence that kids are being starved, Child Welfare Services may very well show up on the parent's doorstep.

The closest example I can think about is the Jahovah's Witsness example where the parents were forced to allow the kid to have a blood transfusion. Or more properly, they took the kid and performed a blood transfusion on him. But even that isn't a great example because there, we were only talking about saving that one kid. In our situation, we are talking about saving everyone else in the country (i.e., it isn't for the kids' benefit, but rather the "greater good").

The only other example I can really think to compare is registering for the draft (or showing up for the draft if you get called). Because in that case, the law make you do something against your will, for the greater good of society. And no, we didn't have police busting down doors to find draft-dodgers.

Anyway, I don't mean to get crazy with my examples. I just think that probably most people's response to "should a parent have a choice to vaccinate" probably depends on what we mean by "having a choice," and what the punishment for non-compliance was. That's all I was saying.

NOTE: again, this was not an argument that parents shouldn't vaccinate. They most surely should. I was really doing a thought experiment on what it means to give parents the choice to vaccinate.
I'm with you -- implementation and enforcement is always the rub. The whole "police coming into the home and strapping the kid down" hyperbole is a bit much though. That type of hyperbole (on both sides) is antithetical to discourse since it makes people's hackles rise up.

At the end of the day, the question becomes: "Are you prepared to remove children from the home if their parents won't get them vaccinated?" That's a bold step, and not one that I think most folks are willing to take. If you aren't willing to make that the consequences of failing to vaccinate, then enforcement becomes almost impossible if it isn't tied to something else (for example, school). You could even ramp-up the enforcement to include private schools and even home-schooling (since kids have to be registered for that as well in most states). The response will be that folks will just keep their heads down, not send their kids to school, and won't properly register for home-schooling. If no one complains about a specific family, no one will ever know. Then you have to balance the importance of having kids in school (or properly accredited home schooling programs) against the importance of vaccinations.

As a practical matter, requiring it for school attendance (public and private) without the bull#### exceptions and the religious exceptions is probably about as far as you can go.

 
There are literally thousands of laws in practice today that do not result on people knocking on your door. You're being ridiculous in your assertion that this is anywhere near the natural outcome of a law.
I swear, I'm fascinated by this debate. Either a parent has the choice to vaccinate his kids or he doesn't. Christie has gotten DESTROYED for saying just that: "parents should have a choice."

You tell me, mr smarty pants: If a parent does not have a choice to vaccinate his kids, what does that mean? Because to me, that means I refuse to vaccinate my kids (even my home-schooled kids) and the state vaccinates my kids anyway. How are you going to enforce it?

And we've had this example happen, right? Plenty of cases with religious folks to want to refuse medical care, and the state steps in with its police power, takes the child away, and forces the procedure. So yes, it can happen.

Just fascinating.
Here's where I think the disconnect is: I believe that the requirement to vaccinate children should be on par with other facets of mandated care that are currently accepted. Let's use car seats for one example. There are mountains of evidence that show that car seats increase child safety. Thus, by law, they are required to be used by everyone. Luckily, there isn't some movement that is debating the merits of that evidence with increasing widespread use of refusal of car seats. It's accepted that that is what is expected when you have a child. You can't leave the hospital your child is born in without one.

So, let's go to another example that was mentioned. You similarly can't starve your child. So, if your child is seen by a healthcare provider and noted to be malnourished, that child will have an evaluation done to see why. If you try to refuse, the state will intervene and not permit you to do so. This is just accepted because there are mountains of evidence that shows the danger of poor growth and malnutrition from a medical standpoint. If you think you know better or disagree, then your child will be taken away from you and put in a new environment so that he can receive the nutrition he needs.

Vaccinations should be on par with this. It should be a part of basic care that everyone that can receive it does. "Choosing" to withhold that kind of care from your child should amount to a form of neglect. So no, no one will come breaking down your door to shove a needle in your kids' arms. But, an agency can step in and remove your children since your decision is actually endangering their health. And yes, the decision to not vaccinate is endangering the health of your children. Your children can be removed from you for other forms of poor parenting such as children left alone, being neglectful with children around a hot stove or iron or pills or swimming pool if DFS investigates and finds that parental supervision is lacking. "Choosing" not to vaccinate should fall in line with all of those things, IMO, because the evidence is OVERWHELMING that they are both incredibly safe and incredibly effective at preventing disease.

For some strange reason, this is an area where this thinking is completely out of line with the entire medical community and I wish I knew why. For those of you that have said "I decided to delay my vaccinations", how did you even come to that conclusion? Who did you base your opinion on? It certainly wasn't from anyone reputable in the medical community because the thought there is UNANIMOUS that vaccinations are necessary. Yet, somehow, such a huge portion of the population feels they know better based on reading from other sources. It's such a frustrating argument because of how one-sided and clear it should be.

 
I'm going to try and paint a new picture as a hypothetical.

We're all pretty familiar with the antibiotic known as penicillin or amoxicillin. It's a very common antibiotic used for various infections ranging from ear infections to sore throats to pneumonia. It's been around for a long time. It's quite safe, although with some minor side effects for some, and has been shown to be very effective.

One day, some unethical physician or researcher comes out and claims that he's found a link between penicillin/amoxicillin and ADHD (even though it's false). The study catches on and creates a panic and suddenly parents start to refuse the use of these antibiotics. Or maybe they'll use them, but they want to alter the dosing of the antibiotic or how frequently or for the duration. Next thing you know, there's a not-so-insignificant portion of the population that refuses to give their children this antibiotic.

The argument is that this antibiotic needs to be studied all over again. And despite that happening with the same results showing no link, no amount of studies are enough because so many parents have a story about how their child was diagnosed with ADHD soon after taking Amoxil for an ear infection.

And since these infections, like a sore throat, are relatively minor, they'd rather let it run its course than deal with the potential harm of the antibiotic. Except some kids can actually develop very severe problems from these untreated infections like rheumatic fever. What is that, you say? Well, something that used to be much more common than now because of the lack of treatment of strep throat. But since we don't see it anymore, it doesn't seem like a big deal and surely it won't happen to my kid.

All of a sudden, the general population knows more than the medicine profession and has completely changed a practice guideline that was about as slam dunk as can be. This may sound completely ridiculous, but this is essentially what's taken place with childhood vaccinations. One of the greatest inventions of all times as a tool to fight disease has been vilified for no good reason and has caused irreparable harm to so many people. Dr. Wakefield should be in a prison cell rotting for the rest of his life for what he did. I pray nothing similar ever happens again and I hope one day we can reverse these effects and get back to allowing medicine to do the wonderful things it can do.

 
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The money angle similarly makes very little sense. Vaccinations are probably the least profitable of medications. These are given over a couple doses and not again. For both physician offices as well as pharm companies, there is FAR more money in a medication that is taken every day than a couple doses of a vaccine. Most private pediatric offices LOSE money giving vaccinations and it certainly doesn't make anything near what a daily med will make for a pharm company.
A $50 2 dose required vaccine will gross about $400,000,000 per year.

Not billions, but not chump change either.
You think doctors make $50 per vaccination?
No and I didn't say that. I have no idea how it would be divided up between doctor's office, distribution and manufacturer, but the idea that it really isn't profitable isn't a valid point.
Valid point? You made up a per dose revenue to make up an annual revenue number and then somehow translated that to profit without any accounting for costs of raw materials, storage, or the distribution network. So which one is the invalid point?
Sorry, I'm an accountant so I made a lot of assumptions in my post.

First off I used the word "gross" because that is all I was referring to. Implied are the facts that there are costs. When pharmaceutical companies discuss that they are a "Billion dollar company" that is what they are referring to, annual GROSS sales. Nobody shares what the costs are on a specific product line and a ton of that would be subject to cost allocation methods anyway, so whatever was provided could easily be swayed to show a loss or profit depending on the desired output. Gross number is all we have to go with.

And I didn't just make up a number, I went with what I eyeballed to be an average cost per dose based on the same CDC chart that someone else linked. I also looked up the number of babies being born per year and it is just under 4 million. Not one of my numbers was made up.

And I promise you that the pharmaceutical companies aren't negotiating contracts with built in losses, so they are making their money. Plus another bonus of required vaccine is the lack of a need for marketing and advertising. That is one huge expense that is cut out right there.

Again, I've become a supporter of vaccination, but to act like there is no profit motive for companies that manufacture vaccines is just as stupid as saying they cause autism.

 
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I think drunk driving is terrible, but don't try to tell me whether I can go where I want to or not.
What, you want some kind of "police state" where we physically restrain people from getting in their car while trying to drive after drinking? Next you'll want them in handcuffs and hauled off to jail, right?
You are not making any sense. People who want to have the priviledge of driving must comply with drunk driving laws. Just like people who want to have the priviledge of sending their kids to public schools have to comply with public health laws. But that's not what we are talking about here (or not what some people are talking about).

Look, I believe in vaccinations, but people should be intellecually honest when they call people stupid. Which is what the anti-anti-vaccers are doing.

I hear everybody laugh at the anti-vaccers who say that "parents should have a choice." Well, do you know what the opposite of "parents having a choice" is? It is the forced vaccination, using police-power if necessary, of every mother's child in the country. Are you ready to flippantly accept that? Say "sure, we can give the police the power to knock on people's doors and ask for their "vaccination papers," and if they don't comply, strap them down and inject them."

Because laugh all you want at someone saying "parents should have a choice to vaccinate," but what is the logical conclusion of saying that no, parents (or people for that matter), get no say in this? Its the forced vaccination against their will. I'm not saying I'm against it, but I wouldn't be so flippant and derogatory about it, because giving the state that kind of power is a big deal.
Authorities knocking on doors and strapping people down for their dose of medicine is nowherer near the 'logical conclusion'. When people like me say it should be the law that kids have to be vaccinated, I don't actually mean to suggest that we should do random sweeps of neighborhoods to guarantee compliance.

It's pretty intellectually dishonest to try to paint this as an either/or scenario. I think anti-vaccers are dumb. I think you should be legally obligated to vaccinate your child. I think you should not be allowed to attend a school if you are not vaccinated.

There are literally thousands of laws in practice today that do not result on people knocking on your door. You're being ridiculous in your assertion that this is anywhere near the natural outcome of a law.
If it's a simple misunderstanding, I get that. But I sure do wonder what people mean when they say: "parents should not have a choice on whether to vaccinate their children."

That is a HELL of a lot different from "if parents want to send their kids to public schools, they have no choice on whether to vaccinate their children."

So what you (and maybe others?) are saying is: "Yes, parents absolutely get a choice on whether to vaccinate their children. If they don't want to send their kids to public schools, they are free to refuse to get their kids vaccinated." Is that what you are saying. Because if it is, it sounds like you and the anti-vaccination nutjobs aren't actually too far apart.

Oh, and by the way: Don't say "parents should be legally obligated to vaccinate their kids," when what you really mean is "I mean if a parent wants to send their kids to public schools they need to have them vaccinated." Because those are two very different things.
We need to bar anti-vaxxers from schools, Disneyland/world, six flags, county fairs; give them their own section in movie theaters and make them go to the mall/grocery store at designated times.

 
To do some further math on the GROSS revenue provided by infant vaccines:

Say a 90% participation rate accross the population for a single dose, it generates (4,000,000 x .9 x $50) = $180MM per year

Per the CDC, there are 22 recommended vaccines in the first year. Using $180MM per dose, that yields $3.96 billion per year of revenue generated in year 1 of a child's life. A $4B industry is nothing to sneeze at.

And that is not even taking into consideration the remaining child vaccines or adult vaccines.

 
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out of curiousity...

if non vaccinated kids show up with measles or whatever around the vaccinated kids... they're putting the vaccinated kids in increased risk?

 
I'm going to try and paint a new picture as a hypothetical.

We're all pretty familiar with the antibiotic known as penicillin or amoxicillin. It's a very common antibiotic used for various infections ranging from ear infections to sore throats to pneumonia. It's been around for a long time. It's quite safe, although with some minor side effects for some, and has been shown to be very effective.

One day, some unethical physician or researcher comes out and claims that he's found a link between penicillin/amoxicillin and ADHD (even though it's false). The study catches on and creates a panic and suddenly parents start to refuse the use of these antibiotics. Or maybe they'll use them, but they want to alter the dosing of the antibiotic or how frequently or for the duration. Next thing you know, there's a not-so-insignificant portion of the population that refuses to give their children this antibiotic.

The argument is that this antibiotic needs to be studied all over again. And despite that happening with the same results showing no link, no amount of studies are enough because so many parents have a story about how their child was diagnosed with ADHD soon after taking Amoxil for an ear infection.

And since these infections, like a sore throat, are relatively minor, they'd rather let it run its course than deal with the potential harm of the antibiotic. Except some kids can actually develop very severe problems from these untreated infections like rheumatic fever. What is that, you say? Well, something that used to be much more common than now because of the lack of treatment of strep throat. But since we don't see it anymore, it doesn't seem like a big deal and surely it won't happen to my kid.

All of a sudden, the general population knows more than the medicine profession and has completely changed a practice guideline that was about as slam dunk as can be. This may sound completely ridiculous, but this is essentially what's taken place with childhood vaccinations. One of the greatest inventions of all times as a tool to fight disease has been vilified for no good reason and has caused irreparable harm to so many people. Dr. Wakefield should be in a prison cell rotting for the rest of his life for what he did. I pray nothing similar ever happens again and I hope one day we can reverse these effects and get back to allowing medicine to do the wonderful things it can do.
Very well put. Unfortunately...well..people are stupid.

 
out of curiousity...

if non vaccinated kids show up with measles or whatever around the vaccinated kids... they're putting the vaccinated kids in increased risk?
Yes, because vaccines are not 100% effective, don't work at all on some people, can't be given until a certain age, and are not safe for some people to take for valid health reasons.
 
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To do some further math on the GROSS revenue provided by infant vaccines:

Say a 90% participation rate accross the population for a single dose, it generates (4,000,000 x .9 x $50) = $180MM per year

Per the CDC, there are 22 recommended vaccines in the first year. Using $180MM per dose, that yields $3.96 billion per year of revenue generated in year 1 of a child's life. A $4B industry is nothing to sneeze at.

And that is not even taking into consideration the remaining child vaccines or adult vaccines.
But a little scale is needed. Humira grossed more than $9B in 1 year. That's 1 drug, 1 R&D cost, 1 manufacturing facility. Lipitor annihilated those numbers. So, ~$4B for an entires sector sounds big, but whatever profit is netted is likely a rounding error for the backbone of what those companies do.

http://www.forbes.com/sites/simonking/2013/01/28/the-best-selling-drugs-of-all-time-humira-joins-the-elite/

I'm not saying profit isn't being made. It's just not terribly important to the bottom line of those companies.

 
To do some further math on the GROSS revenue provided by infant vaccines:

Say a 90% participation rate accross the population for a single dose, it generates (4,000,000 x .9 x $50) = $180MM per year

Per the CDC, there are 22 recommended vaccines in the first year. Using $180MM per dose, that yields $3.96 billion per year of revenue generated in year 1 of a child's life. A $4B industry is nothing to sneeze at.

And that is not even taking into consideration the remaining child vaccines or adult vaccines.
But a little scale is needed. Humira grossed more than $9B in 1 year. That's 1 drug, 1 R&D cost, 1 manufacturing facility. Lipitor annihilated those numbers. So, ~$4B for an entires sector sounds big, but whatever profit is netted is likely a rounding error for the backbone of what those companies do.

http://www.forbes.com/sites/simonking/2013/01/28/the-best-selling-drugs-of-all-time-humira-joins-the-elite/

I'm not saying profit isn't being made. It's just not terribly important to the bottom line of those companies.
2012 vaccine industry was about $25B

From what I've read up on it today, there are basically only 5 vaccine companies worldwide. It is a very different animal from the other parts of the pharmaceutical industry.

It also seems that the only real "customers" are the WHO and CDC who regulate what vaccines are approved and what companies are approved to manufacture and distribute them.

 
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To do some further math on the GROSS revenue provided by infant vaccines:

Say a 90% participation rate accross the population for a single dose, it generates (4,000,000 x .9 x $50) = $180MM per year

Per the CDC, there are 22 recommended vaccines in the first year. Using $180MM per dose, that yields $3.96 billion per year of revenue generated in year 1 of a child's life. A $4B industry is nothing to sneeze at.

And that is not even taking into consideration the remaining child vaccines or adult vaccines.
But a little scale is needed. Humira grossed more than $9B in 1 year. That's 1 drug, 1 R&D cost, 1 manufacturing facility. Lipitor annihilated those numbers. So, ~$4B for an entires sector sounds big, but whatever profit is netted is likely a rounding error for the backbone of what those companies do.http://www.forbes.com/sites/simonking/2013/01/28/the-best-selling-drugs-of-all-time-humira-joins-the-elite/

I'm not saying profit isn't being made. It's just not terribly important to the bottom line of those companies.
2012 vaccine industry was about $25BFrom what I've read up on it today, there are basically only 5 vaccine companies worldwide. It is a very different animal from the other parts of the pharmaceutical industry.

It also seems that the only real "customers" are the WHO and CDC who regulate what vaccines are approved and what companies are approved to manufacture and distribute them.
The top 5 vaccine manufactures in your link (90% of the market) are: Sanofi, Merck, GSK, Pfizer, and Novartis. Those aren't "vaccine companies" those are "pharmaceutical companies with a vaccine division".

 
To do some further math on the GROSS revenue provided by infant vaccines:

Say a 90% participation rate accross the population for a single dose, it generates (4,000,000 x .9 x $50) = $180MM per year

Per the CDC, there are 22 recommended vaccines in the first year. Using $180MM per dose, that yields $3.96 billion per year of revenue generated in year 1 of a child's life. A $4B industry is nothing to sneeze at.

And that is not even taking into consideration the remaining child vaccines or adult vaccines.
But a little scale is needed. Humira grossed more than $9B in 1 year. That's 1 drug, 1 R&D cost, 1 manufacturing facility. Lipitor annihilated those numbers. So, ~$4B for an entires sector sounds big, but whatever profit is netted is likely a rounding error for the backbone of what those companies do.http://www.forbes.com/sites/simonking/2013/01/28/the-best-selling-drugs-of-all-time-humira-joins-the-elite/

I'm not saying profit isn't being made. It's just not terribly important to the bottom line of those companies.
2012 vaccine industry was about $25BFrom what I've read up on it today, there are basically only 5 vaccine companies worldwide. It is a very different animal from the other parts of the pharmaceutical industry.

It also seems that the only real "customers" are the WHO and CDC who regulate what vaccines are approved and what companies are approved to manufacture and distribute them.
The top 5 vaccine manufactures in your link (90% of the market) are: Sanofi, Merck, GSK, Pfizer, and Novartis. Those aren't "vaccine companies" those are "pharmaceutical companies with a vaccine division".
I agree.

 
The money angle similarly makes very little sense. Vaccinations are probably the least profitable of medications. These are given over a couple doses and not again. For both physician offices as well as pharm companies, there is FAR more money in a medication that is taken every day than a couple doses of a vaccine. Most private pediatric offices LOSE money giving vaccinations and it certainly doesn't make anything near what a daily med will make for a pharm company.
Well yea, but what happens when those vaccinations cause illnesses that require daily doses? Profit is what happens
Is this real or are you dicking with us?

 
The money angle similarly makes very little sense. Vaccinations are probably the least profitable of medications. These are given over a couple doses and not again. For both physician offices as well as pharm companies, there is FAR more money in a medication that is taken every day than a couple doses of a vaccine. Most private pediatric offices LOSE money giving vaccinations and it certainly doesn't make anything near what a daily med will make for a pharm company.
Well yea, but what happens when those vaccinations cause illnesses that require daily doses? Profit is what happens
Is this real or are you dicking with us?
Lot of sarcasm meters broken today.

 
The money angle similarly makes very little sense. Vaccinations are probably the least profitable of medications. These are given over a couple doses and not again. For both physician offices as well as pharm companies, there is FAR more money in a medication that is taken every day than a couple doses of a vaccine. Most private pediatric offices LOSE money giving vaccinations and it certainly doesn't make anything near what a daily med will make for a pharm company.
Well yea, but what happens when those vaccinations cause illnesses that require daily doses? Profit is what happens
Is this real or are you dicking with us?
Lot of sarcasm meters broken today.
Some people believe that, so it can be hard to tell. Text isn't great for it... thus my question.

 
The money angle similarly makes very little sense. Vaccinations are probably the least profitable of medications. These are given over a couple doses and not again. For both physician offices as well as pharm companies, there is FAR more money in a medication that is taken every day than a couple doses of a vaccine. Most private pediatric offices LOSE money giving vaccinations and it certainly doesn't make anything near what a daily med will make for a pharm company.
Well yea, but what happens when those vaccinations cause illnesses that require daily doses? Profit is what happens
Is this real or are you dicking with us?
Lot of sarcasm meters broken today.
if only they skipped their vaccines
 
The money angle similarly makes very little sense. Vaccinations are probably the least profitable of medications. These are given over a couple doses and not again. For both physician offices as well as pharm companies, there is FAR more money in a medication that is taken every day than a couple doses of a vaccine. Most private pediatric offices LOSE money giving vaccinations and it certainly doesn't make anything near what a daily med will make for a pharm company.
Well yea, but what happens when those vaccinations cause illnesses that require daily doses? Profit is what happens
Is this real or are you dicking with us?
Lot of sarcasm meters broken today.
if only they skipped their vaccines
I heard the other day that vaccines are actually developed by the government to make the population uglier so they reproduce less as a way to control the population and I believe it.

 
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