Girl Gets Flu Shot - Now She Can Only Walk Backwards


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You have essentialy proven my point. I am far more likely to drop dea from either of those. Should I go get all the cancer treatments on the off chance I have cancer? Maybe the doc should put me on blood pressure meds on teh off chance I get high blood pressure. No, so why get a vaccine for something you're probably not even going to get and if you did you'd recover from anyway. It's retarded.

That was your point? If vaccines existed for those diseases then I'd get them but they don't. Receiving treatments for diseases that you do not have would be silly. There is a difference between vaccines and treatments. Vaccines train your body to fight a virus to the point where you probably won't know if you were ever exposed.

That was your point? If vaccines existed for those diseases then I'd get them but they don't. Receiving treatments for diseases that you do not have would be silly. There is a difference between vaccines and treatments. Vaccines train your body to fight a virus to the point where you probably won't know if you were ever exposed.

That makes an assumption that people are unable to fight the disease off using their own immune system, which is franky an absurd suggestion and many many many have, in fact far in excess of those who have died, and all despite not being vaccinated. So again, what is the point in an otherwise healthy individual being vaccinated?

If it is psychogenic then the flu shot would have only been the trigger and not the actual cause. As I said before though, it doesn't really matter because rare adverse reactions to the flu shot do actually happen. I'd be inclined to accept her at her word.

170px-Thiomersal-2D-skeletal.png

Thiomersal (INN) (C9H9HgNaO2S), or sodium ethylmercurithiosalicylate, commonly known in the United States as thimerosal, is an organomercury compound (approximately 49% mercury by weight) used as an antiseptic and antifungal agent.

It was invented and patented by Morris Kharasch. The pharmaceutical corporation Eli Lilly and Company gave it the trade name Merthiolate and it has been used as a preservative in vaccines, immunoglobulin preparations, skin test antigens, antivenins, ophthalmic and nasal products, and tattoo inks. The compound is being phased out from routine childhood vaccines in the United States, the European Union, and a few other countries.[1]

Thiomersal's main use is as an antiseptic and antifungal agent. In multidose injectable drug delivery systems, it prevents serious adverse effects such as the Staphylococcus infection that, in one 1928 incident, killed 12 of 21 children inoculated with a diphtheria vaccine that lacked a preservative.[2] Unlike other vaccine preservatives used at the time, thiomersal does not reduce the potency of the vaccines that it protects.[3] Bacteriostatics like thiomersal are not needed in more-expensive single-dose injectables.[4]

In the United States, countries in the European Union and a few other affluent countries, thiomersal is no longer used as a preservative in routine childhood vaccination schedules.[1] In the U.S., the only exceptions among vaccines routinely recommended for children are some formulations of the inactivated influenza vaccine for children older than two years.[5] Several vaccines that are not routinely recommended for young children do contain thiomersal, including DT (diphtheria and tetanus), Td (tetanus and diphtheria), and TT (tetanus toxoid); other vaccines may contain a trace of thiomersal from steps in manufacture

Thimerosal-

Thiomersal is very toxic by inhalation, ingestion, and in contact with skin (EC hazard symbol T+), with a danger of cumulative effects. It is also very toxic to aquatic organisms and may cause long-term adverse effects in aquatic environments (EC hazard symbol N).[8] In the body, it is metabolized or degraded to ethylmercury (C2H5Hg+) and thiosalicylate.[2]

Few studies of the toxicity of thiomersal in humans have been performed. Animal experiments suggest that thiomersal rapidly dissociates to release ethylmercury after injection; that the disposition patterns of mercury are similar to those after exposure to equivalent doses of ethylmercury chloride; and that the central nervous system and the kidneys are targets, with lack of motor coordination being a common sign. Similar signs and symptoms have been observed in accidental human poisonings. The mechanisms of toxic action are unknown. Fecal excretion accounts for most of the elimination from the body. Ethylmercury clears from blood with a half-time of about 18 days, and from the brain in about 14 days. Inorganic mercury metabolized from ethylmercury has a much longer clearance, at least 120 days; it appears to be much less toxic than the inorganic mercury produced from mercury vapor, for reasons not yet understood.[9]

Risk assessment for effects on the nervous system have been made by extrapolating from dose-response relationships for methylmercury.[9] Methylmercury and ethylmercury distributes to all body tissues, crossing the blood-brain barrier and the placental barrier, and ethylmercury also moves freely throughout the body.[10] Concerns based on extrapolations from methylmercury caused thiomersal to be removed from U.S. childhood vaccines, starting in 1999. Since then, it has been found that ethylmercury is cleared from the body and the brain significantly faster than methylmercury, so the late-1990s risk assessments turned out to be overly conservative.[9] A 2008 study found that the half-life of blood mercury after vaccination averages 3.7 days for newborns and infants, much shorter than the 44 days for methylmercury.

Thimerosal

post-254403-1256426498_thumb.jpg

That makes an assumption that people are unable to fight the disease off using their own immune system, which is franky an absurd suggestion and many many many have, in fact far in excess of those who have died, and all despite not being vaccinated. So again, what is the point in an otherwise healthy individual being vaccinated?

Lets see how you fight off cancer without Chemo.

There already is a seasonal flu vaccine, which is given to those with health problems and OAPs.

This swine seems to affecting the younger people most with underlaying health problems, more than any other group.

I wouldn't get the vaccine myself if it were to be available tomorrow, however if the cases of Swine flu do increase over the winter then I will consider it.

That makes an assumption that people are unable to fight the disease off using their own immune system, which is franky an absurd suggestion and many many many have, in fact far in excess of those who have died, and all despite not being vaccinated. So again, what is the point in an otherwise healthy individual being vaccinated?

If you get exposed to the virus after you've been vaccinated then you will likely never come down with symptoms and you will likely never know that you did come into contact. You won't sneeze and cough over your friends, relatives and co-workers and the virus will have less of a chance to mutate while in your system.

I have explained all of this before. I also said that if you were only concerned with your own self and you know that you have no other conditions then it would be best for you to skip the flu shot (either the seasonal, the H1N1 or both). People who do get the vaccine are likely concerned with friends, relatives and co-workers or they care about their community in general.

Receiving treatments for diseases that you do not have would be silly. There is a difference between vaccines and treatments.

There is very little difference in this case. The flu vaccine is the treatment, usualy pre-emptive but a treatment none the less. But at least you agree that its silly for a healthy person to receive "treatment".

170px-Thiomersal-2D-skeletal.png

...

Thimerosal- Thimerosal

So when it comes down to it, don't get a flu shot more often than once every 18 days and don't eat a lot of fish either.

Okay, no problem.

I'd worry a lot more about crossing the street or getting into a vehicle.

There is very little difference in this case. The flu vaccine is the treatment, usualy pre-emptive but a treatment none the less. But at least you agree that its silly for a healthy person to receive "treatment".

Vaccines are not treatment. Vaccines train the body's white blood cells. Chemotherapy does not do this. It's an inept comparison to say the least.

So when it comes down to it, don't get a flu shot more often than once every 18 days and don't eat a lot of fish either.

Vaccines are not treatment. Vaccines train the body's white blood cells. Chemotherapy does not do this. It's an inept comparison to say the least.

Most people are perfectly capable of training their own immune system without any help. However, should they have the vaccine and the strain changes, their body will be too busy producing antibodies for the last strain, that a vaccine for the new strain won't help them in the slightest. Even wiki's tightly monitored Influenza Vaccine page states;

Clinical trials of vaccines

In adults, vaccines show high efficacy against the targeted strains, but low effectiveness overall, so the benefits of vaccination are small...

In children, vaccines again showed high efficacy, but low effectiveness in preventing "flu-like illness", in children under two the data are extremely limited, but vaccination appeared to confer no measurable benefit...

In the elderly, vaccination does not reduce the frequency of influenza, but seems to reduce pneumonia, hospital admission and deaths from influenza or pneumonia...

Overall, the benefit of influenza vaccination is clear in the elderly and vaccination of children may be beneficial. Vaccination of adults is not predicted to produce significant improvements in public health. The apparent contradiction between vaccines with high efficacy, but low effectiveness, may reflect the difficulty in diagnosing influenza under clinical conditions and the large number of strains circulating in the population

You can read it for yourself, and the associated references. So, if it is as you said, and the swine flu vaccine will be as useful as the seasonal flu, I'd say that ain't a whole hell of a lot. So again, why should a perfectly healthy person receive the vaccine?

Edited by O.G
There is zero social benefit to mass flu vaccination, and to say otherwise is a bold face lie.

That's one hell of a statement.

So I guess http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herd_immunity is fiction?

Yes, it's not amazingly effective, but it's silly to say it has "zero" benefit.

Ok, again since you couldn't read my last post

Vaccination of adults is not predicted to produce significant improvements in public health.

Battle of the wiki articles.

Influenza Vaccine - Wiki

To add;

Since the A/Brisbane/59/2007 (H1N1)-like virus used in the vaccine is an unrelated seasonal strain of influenza, it probably cannot create immunity to the new, non-seasonal strain of influenza A virus subtype H1N1 responsible for the 2009 swine flu outbreak

So the 2009-2010 seasonal vaccines will/has offered no protection, and everyone who has had it and not died did so without any help from a vaccine. Those who took a seasonal vaccine thinking it would help were wrong.

Edited by O.G

How disturbing... I really feel for the poor girl :(

These flu shots are only provided so the pharmaceutical indutry can make a quick and big buck :x

The whole hysteria around the flu shot is just artificially created, to get more people to take flu shots, so they make more money from them.

It's just the same thing as with the "terror" phantom, which was also blown way out of proportion just so they can take the citizen's rights away :crazy:

The point of vaccination is not to protect individuals in a direct sense. The point is to deprive a specific strain, identified as a particular hazard, of its pool of potential hosts. This makes the disease spread much more slowly, or, if a large-enough portion of the population is vaccinated, the virus can't spread at all, and it dies off.

It is true that normal healthy adults can fight off most flu infections without permanent damage, but if you're actually capable of looking beyond your own interests, the cost of a viral infection is more than a few days of discomfort. Your body is used by the virus to replicate and spread, and it is the dissemination of disease that leverages the primary cost on society.

Thiomersal (INN) (C9H9HgNaO2S), or sodium ethylmercurithiosalicylate, commonly known in the United States as thimerosal, is an organomercury compound (approximately 49% mercury by weight) used as an antiseptic and antifungal agent.

Yeah, are you trying to make a point with that emphasis? Water is 90% oxygen by weight - that doesn't make it practically breathable.

The point of vaccination is not to protect individuals in a direct sense. The point is to deprive a specific strain, identified as a particular hazard, of its pool of potential hosts. This makes the disease spread much more slowly, or, if a large-enough portion of the population is vaccinated, the virus can't spread at all, and it dies off.

It is true that normal healthy adults can fight off most flu infections without permanent damage, but if you're actually capable of looking beyond your own interests, the cost of a viral infection is more than a few days of discomfort. Your body is used by the virus to replicate and spread, and it is the dissemination of disease that leverages the primary cost on society.

Yeah, are you trying to make a point with that emphasis? Water is 90% oxygen by weight - that doesn't make it practically breathable.

true

How disturbing... I really feel for the poor girl :(

These flu shots are only provided so the pharmaceutical indutry can make a quick and big buck :x

The whole hysteria around the flu shot is just artificially created, to get more people to take flu shots, so they make more money from them.

It's just the same thing as with the "terror" phantom, which was also blown way out of proportion just so they can take the citizen's rights away :crazy:

"You know another really good invention? Tiny tiny baby coffins. You can get them in frog green, fire engine red.... really! The antibodies in yummy mummy only protect the kid for 6 months which is why these companies think they can gouge you! They think that you'l pay anyhting to protect your kid. Want to make a point? Prove them wrong. A few hundred parents like you decide they would rather let their kid die than cough up $40 for a vaccination, trust me, prices will drop really, really fast."

Yes, it's a quote from House, MD, I think it applies here.

Not vaccinating children (or any other person considered at risk) against a potentially deadly virus is idiotic.

Most people are perfectly capable of training their own immune system without any help. However, should they have the vaccine and the strain changes, their body will be too busy producing antibodies for the last strain, that a vaccine for the new strain won't help them in the slightest. Even wiki's tightly monitored Influenza Vaccine page states;

In adults, vaccines show high efficacy against the targeted strains, but low effectiveness overall, so the benefits of vaccination are small...

You can read it for yourself, and the associated references. So, if it is as you said, and the swine flu vaccine will be as useful as the seasonal flu, I'd say that ain't a whole hell of a lot. So again, why should a perfectly healthy person receive the vaccine?

You are grasping at two different concepts and trying to pull them together but it doesn't work.

The benefits of seasonal vaccinations are small because it is highly dependent on the experts choosing the correct strains to immunize against. Vaccines are highly efficacious on the targeted strains themselves ("vaccines show high efficacy against the targeted strains"). This claim of low effectiveness overall is based on the assumption they they won't pick the right strains or that other strains will fill in the gaps. Still, one has to remember that these benefits are compared to doing nothing.

Now, if you are trying to tie this logic to H1N1 then it all breaks down. Since vaccines show "high efficacy against the targeted strains" then the H1N1 vaccine can be expected to be highly efficient leading to a much greater overall/community effectiveness relative to the seasonal flu vaccine. And that is just all the more reason to get the H1N1 vaccine.

The answer to your last question is the same as it always has been. Healthy people should get it to protect the people they care about. If you don't care about anyone else then by all means don't take it but it makes no sense to tell others not to get it unless you simply wish to justify your own decision.

I've had a few seizures before about 10 years ago (was about 20). I don't think I'm epileptic anymore. I've no permanent damage luckily. I've also had the flu vaccine well before and after - I know it didn't cause it. Still there's some serious and rare side effects from the vaccines. Trust me, one seizure is one too many .... and they hurt like a ...... It can completely debilitate you. I'm normal now - I, ironically am able to run marathons. I'm training for more too.

I just feel the H1N1 vaccine was rushed to market, I'll let the other 20+ million Canadians that feel like taking it as guinea pigs for the rest of the population. I'm NOT TAKING IT EVER. If there's a couple million dropping like flies, then I'll reconsider. After working breifly in a few gov't agencies (Health Canada included) - there's no way in hell this vaccine could have been approved unless there's some conflict of interest. IMO the Avian flu had a higher mortalitly rate and possibility of spread of infection.

I've had a few seizures before about 10 years ago (was about 20). I don't think I'm epileptic anymore. I've no permanent damage luckily. I've also had the flu vaccine well before and after - I know it didn't cause it. Still there's some serious and rare side effects from the vaccines. Trust me, one seizure is one too many .... and they hurt like a ...... It can completely debilitate you. I'm normal now - I, ironically am able to run marathons. I'm training for more too.

I just feel the H1N1 vaccine was rushed to market, I'll let the other 20+ million Canadians that feel like taking it as guinea pigs for the rest of the population. I'm NOT TAKING IT EVER. If there's a couple million dropping like flies, then I'll reconsider. After working breifly in a few gov't agencies (Health Canada included) - there's no way in hell this vaccine could have been approved unless there's some conflict of interest. IMO the Avian flu had a higher mortalitly rate and possibility of spread of infection.

The avian flu of the last decade was never transmitted from human to human.

If you consider that the H1N1 flu vaccine is otherwise identical to the seasonal flu vaccine then it is one of the most tested vaccines ever. Every year they have to tweak the vaccine for specific strains and the H1N1 vaccine is the regular flu vaccine tweaked for H1N1.

Not vaccinating children (or any other person considered at risk) against a potentially deadly virus is idiotic.

I was talking about the general populace here, not risk groups. For risk groups (like small children) it may still make sense, but creating fear to get as many ordinary people as possible to take it even though they don't really need it is just an attempt to make quick money.

The side effects which can crop up from it being obviously poorly tested is another reason against it.

The side effects which can crop up from it being obviously poorly tested is another reason against it.

Luckily the H1N1 flu vaccine is one of the most heavily tested vaccines ever. It's the same vaccine we use every year for the seasonal flu only it has been tweaked for H1N1. The seasonal flu needs to be tweaked each and every year in a similar fashion so this is nothing new.

should someone who is 16 get it you think?

I mean I have never got a flu shot before. and im fine

It depends on what people you come into contact with. The protection offered from the vaccine will help the high-risk people you come in contact with even more than yourself. Of course, you may just want to make sure that you don't end up sick in bed for a few days so it can also be a convenience thing.

It depends on what people you come into contact with. The protection offered from the vaccine will help the high-risk people you come in contact with even more than yourself. Of course, you may just want to make sure that you don't end up sick in bed for a few days so it can also be a convenience thing.

I dont really come into high risk people. just people at school. I mean we have a place where there are babys but im never in there so i dont think that matters.

dont really mind much if im in bed for a few days.

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Claude Tag: Anthropic launched its new AI teammate for Slack, enabling teams to delegate tasks to Claude directly within Slack channels. What makes it different is that it's designed to operate as a shared assistant for an entire team rather than a single user. Challenging US dominance: The UK government has funded £60 million ($70 million) to Oxford and UCL to keep the country in the AI race by building open-source, low-hardware alternatives. The two organizations will share the money over six years. Paying for AI development: One cost is the loss of human jobs. Oracle laid off about 21,000 employees (13% of its workforce) amid increasing AI adoption. The software giant said that AI advancement and adoption "may continue to result in reductions to our workforce." GitHub strips features: It removed the ability to manually detect an AI model from its Copilot Free and Student plans. In other words, its automatic routing system is the only way to choose a model. Are you a copycat? Anthropic accused Alibaba of creating about 25,000 fraudulent accounts to copy Claude's capabilities at scale. It told US lawmakers that operators linked to Alibaba generated 28.8 million exchanges with Claude between April 22 and June 5, 2026. Reserve my memory: The semiconductor company Micron revealed that AI companies are spending billions to lock up its memory years in advance. Its customers have locked in $22 billion worth of memory supply commitments. Another AI battle: A publisher group that collectively owns 400 newspapers sued OpenAI and Microsoft for scraping their content to build AI chatbots such as ChatGPT and Copilot without compensation. Anthropic AI ban: The US government partially reversed the Anthropic AI ban, allowing it to restore Claude Mythos 5. However, it can only be deployed for a limited set of US organizations that operate and defend critical infrastructure. This week in Microsoft News In some of the hottest stories of the week: Windows 10 quietly gained a year of support and updates, Windows 11 KB5095093 released with a long list of features, and Windows 11 26H2 is finally getting the ability to disable web search results in Windows 11 Search. You can check out Taras's freshly baked Microsoft Weekly roundup to catch up on all the interesting stories this week. This week in science news Image by Pascal Küffer via Pexels Catch up on some of the latest science and out-of-this-world updates that arrived throughout the week: 13 billion-year-old secret: Scientists found that the universe's first molecule (helium hyride) reacted with hydrogen much faster in cold temperatures than previously believed. It's a new breakthrough that changes our understanding of early star formation. Cosmic Living Fossil: Astronomers found CR3, a surprisingly pristine 11.5-billion-year-old galaxy dubbed a "living fossil." It suggests the universe's first generation of stars formed much later than previously assumed. Einstein's 100-year-old theory: Thanks to relativity, researchers calculated that clocks on Mars tick 477 microseconds faster per day than on Earth. This minute gravitational difference is crucial for synchronizing future interplanetary space missions. Don't panic: NASA's James Webb Telescope finally eliminated the threat of asteroid 2024 YR4 striking the moon in 2032. The rocky giant will give us a safe fly-by without causing any harm. This week in gaming? The latest issue of Pulasthi's Weekend PC Game Deals curates several exciting games on sale this week. RollerCoaster Tycoon 3 Complete Edition and Voidwrought have replaced the old titles in this week's Epic Games Store giveaway. For Xbox Free Play Days, the new titles include House Flipper 2, Blades of Fire, and Assetto Corsa Competizione. Steam Summer Sale 2026 kicked off with discounts for everything from the newest games and retro gems to all sorts of DLC packs, until July 9. Meanwhile, NVIDIA GeForce NOW added support for several new titles, including Dark Scrolls, SAND: Raiders of Sophie, and EMPULSE. That said, here are some more stories from the gaming world: Age of Empires Mobile comes to PC, here's how to carry over progress from your phone Xbox Insiders get Xbox 360 achievements and Gamertag character upgrades Grand Theft Auto VI pricing revealed alongside Ultimate Edition and pre-loading details Sony announces Bungie layoffs that will affect "significant number of employees" From the review corner This week, Steven published a review of the TerraMaster F4-425 Pro AI-powered NAS, featuring an all-metal exterior on the lines of the four-bay F4-425 series. Powered by the octa-core Intel Core N350, the TerraMaster F4-425 Pro is highly energy-efficient, operates quietly, and offers three M.2 slots. On the flip side, OpenClaw support requires removing security hardening (SPC), AI requires a paid subscription, the software feels like a beta, and the rubber feet constantly come unstuck. ZimaBoard 2 1664 Starter Kit Another NAS setup reviewed this week is the ZimaBoard 2 by IceWhale Technology. It comes in a small footprint with great modern hardware through a combo of Intel N150 and DDR5 memory support. On the downside, the memory is not upgradeable, ZimaOS is a bit barebones, factory reset requires USB flashing, and there is no automatic backup via the mobile app. Synology's BeeCamera software Christopher wrote his review of the software that powers BeeCamera Plus and said "the BeeCamera app is a great way to add private home monitoring to your network but there are some limitations." It's free with an easy setup process, fast response time, and good AI and detection features. However, there is no desktop version; it only works with Synology cameras, some configurations are difficult to set up on a phone, and it lacks the features of the surveillance station. More price drops! We got you covered with some hot tech deals all week. For some reason, if you missed out on a great discount, here is a summary of some recent deals that are still alive: Onkyo Dolby Atmos AV receivers are really solid deals 4TB TEAMGROUP MP44Q, 2TB T-Force G50, and 2TB WD My Passport SSDs drop to great prices Edifier S3000MKII hi-fi audiophile grade bookshelf speaker is at its lowest price now The best controller for XBOX and PC is down to the lowest price Limited time Prime Day deal cuts price of this Hisense 65" 4K smart TV in half To view all of our recent deals, click here. So, these were some of the biggest tech news and other updates from this week. There will be more issues of our 7 Days series in the coming weeks and months, so stay tuned. You can also support Neowin by registering for a free member account or subscribing to extra member benefits, along with an ad-free tier option. Have a great weekend!
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