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I have been reading about the obligatory treatment of
rhesus-negative first-time mothers of rhesus-positive babies to
prevent their developing antibodies to a possible rhesus-positive
future child. This entails some risks, due to errors and
allergies, but saves society the cost of caring for severely
impaired children, and of course benefits the children. However,
many women do not plan to have another child - should they be
required to be sterilized if not rhesus-treated? Or to consent
in advance to an abortion in case of a rhesus-positive fetus?
My schizophrenic uncle was tranquilized. He and other
mentally ill were subjected to shock treatments against their
will. (These treatments do benefit many people, but not all).
Then there is Turing, the great mathematician, 'an unabashed
homosexual during the twilight period when homosexuality was
still illegal in Britain. As a result he was arrested and forced
to receive masculinizing hormone treatments, which slowly
undermined his health until he finally committed suicide...'
Presumably this benefited both individual and society.
A Canadian friend told me how he falsified vaccination
records for his children, because he was afraid that they might
be harmed by the vaccination. If an AIDS vaccine is developed,
should it be obligatory for everyone, even those of us who don't
practice the risky behavior which spreads it, or to all children,
in case they don't know enough to act sensibly? What if a
certain low percentage of the vaccinated become ill as a result?
My neighbor with two kids buys bottled water to avoid
fluorine, which she worries is harmful. If a few people are
allergic to it, and only children benefit, should it be added to
everyone's water? How about adding iodine to table salt? A few
people are allergic, and many people don't need it.
Premature babies, many of whom are premature because they
have some genetic defect, or were injured in utero, are kept
alive at tremendous expense. Should parents be forced to pay?
Should smokers, whose habit causes society to pay for the
costs of increased health care and fires, be forced to attend
smoking-cessation programs rather than just pay higher premiums?
How do you weigh individual rights against society's rights?
59 responses total.
Should water be chlorinated or ozonated, as that introduces traces
of potentially harmful materials into the water supply?
The answer to most of you questions is to do what is best for the "greater
good". It is the basis of our democracy (though often bypassed). It is also
proper to recognize the rights of the minority by doing what is possible
to mitigate adverse effects of what was done for the greater good.
The answer to some of your questions is that the minority are
mistaken. I don't believe that any adverse effects have been demosntrated
from water fluordination, apart from discolored teeth at too high a
concentration (which occurs naturally in some communities, with no other
negative health effects). If people are mistaken, it is up to them to
make choices, not for society to accomodate them.
Vaccination is usually developed until the risk from the vaccination is
tiny compared to the risk of not vaccinating. This is a clear case of
the greater good having to be followed, though it is also worthwhile to
continue the development of the vaccines to reduce whatever risk remains
even further.
And some of your examples were horrible errors on the part of the
"care givers". People make errors. What is then important is to correct the
errors, and try not to repeat them.
It is not necessary to make vaccinations mandatory. Available and
affordable will suffice. If the vaccine is good, and someone doesn't want
to get the disease, then it will behoove him to get vaccine, and most
of the people will get vaccinated. This should be sufficient to reduce
the incidence of the disease even in those who do *not* get vaccinated,
if communicability is the main worry.
The problem here is that for whatever reason, the powers-that-be too
often do not inspire trust.
Re #1 and fluoride. Please see www.cadvision.com/fluoride/calgary/htm, with its many links, summarizing recent evidence that fluoride, a toxic metal which accumulates in teeth and bones, not only has little or no benefit (in a few studies it reduced caries 1%, but this was probably due to the fact that it caused children's teeth to erupt later), but causes, as shown by careful scientific studies, increased fragility and even cancer of the bones (skeletal fluorosis), weaker dental enamel ( dental fluorosis) , damage to the nervous system, reduced testosterone levels, sperm damage and reduced birth rates (by statistical studies with controls), but apparently not allergies. Greater amounts are absorbed by kidney patients, athletes, diabetics, consumers of caffeine (including Coke), and those living at high altitudes. Fluoride is also present as a contaminant from pesticides. Only about 1% of western Europeans drink fluoridated water and there are little or no statistically significant differences in dental caries. Early studies showing health benefits were poorly designed, inconsistent. There are 242 documents found by Alta Vista on the search +fluoridation +controversy. One of them claims fluoride is being promoted by industries which produce it as a byproduct. I apologize for my error regarding allergies, but my neighbor has a point. Anyone want to research the other issues and report to us? I am curious what problems are caused by iodine, I may be wrong on allergies again.
Fear mongering. For one thing, www.cadvision.com/fluoride/calgary/htm does not exist. For another, dentists, who lose business because of the effectiveness of fluoridation, are strongly in favor of it, because they support good dental hygiene. I submiy that almost all of your statements are balderdash. The world is full of these baloney-mongering conspiracy-theorists, who prey on ill advised and poorly educated people, though I cannot imagine for what end, except to oppose "authority". Rather than a hoax site, consult the Center for Disease Control, at http://www.cdc.gov/nccdphp/oh/flintro.htm Incidentally, fluorine is not a metal.
It's there. Try calgary.htm instead of calgary/htm in the address.
Thanks for the correction, Michael. I checked for iodineroblems with lynx altavista + iodation + toxic (4 documents) and for iodine allergy with +"iodized salt" +allergy (and almost entered a slash instead of a period for a website there). The statements on fluorine, etc., are not my personal opinions but are taken from other people's writings, and presumably they know at least as much about the subject as the average grexer. Iodized salt has either potassium iodide or potassium iodate added. The former is unstable to heat, light, acid, moisture and impurities, and is used in the USA and Canada. All other countries listed at website www.idrc.ca/mi/idddocs/iodman.7.htm add potassium iodate. Doses are based on per capita salt consumption in each country, which averages 3-25 g/day. The minimum required is about 1, the recommend maximum 2. Michigan soil is particularly low in iodine so people used t get goiter (but who eats locally grown food nowadays?). One article said not to eat lots of kelp because too much iodine can also cause goiter, hypo- or hyperthyroidism. The maximum normally ingested is only 20% of the lowest possibly toxic level. BUT, some people have allergies/sensitivity to iodine. They should avoid putting Betadine on fresh body piercings, purifying water with iodine tablets when abroad, or having diagnostic radiology with radioactive iodine. Some people with asthma and dermatologic allergy should avoid foods containing bromide or iodide, which the author says includes salty nuts, cheeses, seafood, tomatoes, melons and dark greens (and they should eat more vitamin A and protein). I had heard iodide was added only to the table salt sold retail, not to processed food, so the salty nuts may be okay. Misti, I think it was, said the iodine in cheese may come from a disinfectant used in milking. Methyl bromide is used to fumigate buildings for termites and cockroaches but is said to rapidly dissipate. I have not found reference to problems with residual bromine (or could it be methyl bromide) in bleached white flour, although it may affect what is left of the vitamins after refining (most of which are not added back, such as B6). Cooking vegetabies in chlorinated water destroys vitamins, and chlorine reacts with organic compounds in water to form carcinogens. It can be removed with a carbon filter, along with the organic compounds. I had not heard of ozone leaving any residues. The AA water department treats the water with ozone now, but then adds chlorine at the end just in case of any microbes leaking into the system. The chlorine concentration of 3 ppm is the same used in swimming pools, and the water, especially when heated, liberates free chlorine, which can bleach swimmers' hair and is not healthy. The Calgary article seemed very much based on good science research. Is iodized salt labelled as possibly causing allergies?
Re fluoridation, Rane's article is the surgeon general's speec on the 50th occasion of fluoridation, in 1995. A lot seems to have happened since then, see some news summaries for late 1997 at www.sonic.net/kryptox/press/news97b.htm and other related sites for kryptox. A Sept. 17 1997 article reported a suit filed against the FDA stating that fluoride contributes to magneisum deficiency. The EPA filed an indictment against the National Academy of Sciences, stating that none of the studies in support of fluoridation was a randomized control study. There was a serious arithmetic error in an earlier study. Several towns are now attempting to stop fluoridation. The Calgary article was January 18, 1998, and cites specific research. Having read all three websites, and any others that seem relevant, would grexers want to leave the fluoridation decision up to the central government? Or should individuals be allowed to choose whether to add fluoride to their diet, and how much? In disputed cases like this, is it better to do something or nothing?
The types of assertions stated in #3 and in www.cadvision.com/etc (thanks, Michael, for the correction) are refuted, with specific references, in http://www.bda-dentistry.org.uk/press/pr1997.html. These refutations come from reputable scientists backed by major scientific associations - "and presumably they know at least as much about the subject as the average grexer". Potassium iodide is not particularly "unstable", though it will decompose and the iodine value lost if in an acidic medium, and heated. There is really no definitive reason for choosing between the iodide or the iodate. I think the iodide may not taste as good as the iodate, though at the concentrations used it is tasteless to most people. (Actually, I like the taste of iodine - I acquired the taste using it to steriize water when I was backpacking in the Sierra Nevada.) All in all, I think public health authorities have made the right decision in fluoridating public water supplies. There is no evidence for detrimental effects except in a very few instances, and the public health benefits are well documented and very evident. (I know how much dental caries have been reduced by fluoridation - I have a mouth full of amalgam, and most young people I know today have no or few fillings. Our daughter did not need a filling until she was 15 - I am very thankful for that.) I think the controversy arises because the public health benefits of fluoridation are *imposed* and, at the same time, are not as immediate as those of chlorination or ozonation (where we would have massive illness and death if they were discontinued). I agree that those that don't like a benevolent government providing more than roads might object to a general public health measure on which, in a sense, they were not consulted (other than by electing the representatives that were convinced by the evidence that fluoridation is a good thing). However, I agreed with the desirability of fluoridating the water supply before it was done, based on the results of many studies, so I had no objection. So, count me as a grexer in favor of water fluoridation (though I know you tried to swing opinion with your ominous reference to the "central government").
This item has run amok. What we have is called managed care, but it is all about managed costs. What we need to do is to put people on schemes that are intended to eliminate or saverely reduce cost in the future. This is getting to the root of what causes sickness. This might be allergy related like item one, or about rethinking flouidation and other public heath policies. To think like this is much harder to do that the few words that I have just typed in. This requires cooperation between patient and doctor as well as with corperations and the goverment. What is the problem with such a scheme? Someone gets screwed - if we find a way to eliminate bacteria buildup in the mouth then dentist get a pay cut. We stop smoking and long term care facilities get less insurance money. Stop drinking and smoking and the cardiologist goes on vacation for life. This is the real problem. Health problems are good for the GNP.
Heh. I think there are plenty of health problems to accommodate all the cardiologists (and all the other doctors, for that matter) even if we eliminate smoking and drinking. If people stop having the heart problems they are having now, then they'll live longer, and then they'll have other heart problems, or liver problems, or lung problems, etc. A good friend of my wife's doesn't have his kids vaccinated. He says the schools require either vaccination records, or that he sign a waiver form. I think he's wrong; myself, I want my kids to have all the generally available vaccinations. But those are his kids, and no one cares about their well being the way that he does, along with his wife. I'm glad he has the choice.
They appear to wish to separate themselves from society on some matters (by which they can impose upon society dangers of spreading infection to others) while taking advantage of society in other regards. Things like universal vaccination, water fluoridation, sewage treatment (just in case some people want their metabolic wastes not to be treated as it is an infringement on their personal liberty), are *social compacts*, reached after discussion by majority vote, with full consideration of minority opinions, but arriving at a decision. If people are unwilling to participate in the social compact, they are free to argue against it, but why should they be free to disregard it when doing so endangers others? I have no problem with people de-fluoridizing their water - its their teeth that will suffer - but I think their rights in such regards extend only so far "as their neighbor's nose".
Rane, thanks for finding more recent info on fluoridation (which I will go read). I think each public health case has to be analyzed differently. One difference is monetary. Dental health is a private economic burden, goiter from lack of iodine or disease due to bacteria in water is paid for through insurance, which affects all of us. Vaccination also reduces health care costs paid for by insurance. When there is a controversy, should one try to minimize total costs, or minimize total harm to individuals, or maximize total benefit? There are no easy answers. In the case of iodine, we are free to buy iodized salt, uniodized salt, or no salt. Chlorine can be filtered out at the water tap, for 'pennies a gallon', which also removes carcinogens. But how do you defluoridate water (or did you mean 'stop fluoridating water'). I am not supporting either side of the argument, but it is clear that there is a fair amount of opposition, and people can easily and cheaply buy fluoride toothpaste or fluoride mouthwash if they want fluoride, while it is not that cheap to buy bottled water if they don't want it. (A gallon a day would be at least $200/year). I think the issue here is that society has chosen to make the decision as to children's health, since they can't make their own, and their parents are presumably not well informed. What percentage of people have to disagree with some public health policy to change it? Does anyone know what was involved in the fairly recent ban of lead in solder? How long was this disputed first, and is it nationwide? What sorts of decisions on health should people be allowed to make for themselves? Legal suicide, legal addictive drugs? When does it make sense to sell a potentially dangerous product but put on warning labels (not only alcohol and cigarettes but many cleaning products), and when should it be banned? How much is government policy influenced by business interests, as in government recommendations on eating meat? How much protection should be imposed on us?
Everyone wants some of what society offers, but not all of it. Everyone wants to take the best part, and leave off the rest, and not contribute what everyone else thinks they should. I've seen many items on M-Net and Grex from bicycle riders and mass transit commuters who resent paying for highways that encourage individual automobile use. Hey, most people want cars. I've read tons of text from people who didn't support the Vietnam War, and particularly, who didn't want to fight in it. But if you were going to live in this society in the 1960's, it was your duty, if drafted, to go into the Army. I've seen pamphlets, and read newspaper articles, by and about people who don't want to pay taxes to support nuclear war, the UN, the military, welfare, Congressional junkets, drug research, affirmative action, tobacco subsidies, Kenneth Starr's investigation... but it's all built into our system of government. It's all exactly the same as fluoride in the water "for the general good". We accept some that we don't like for some that we do. Why should anyone be allowed to not participate in any of it? It's part of the social compact, and many people can and do feel that any of those points is necessary to their safety, security and well being. Right, Rane?
That sums it up pretty well, with the addition that any of those decisions that create the social compact can be changed by democratic procedures. It is much better, however, if we don't have domagogues and truth-twisters having too much say in the process. A lot of dental health is covered by insurance. Mine is, though not completely for restorative procedures. So dental hygiene is also a societal burden because of dental insurance. Double-resin water softeners (total deionizers) remove fluoride. In the choice between fluoridating public water supplies, and having people deal with this themselves, public health is *much* better served by the former, simply because the adverse effects of not fluoridating is greatly delayed. It is like a lot of things people do that are not harmful "today" but will be in the long run. Smoking, for example. The motivation for public action to decrease the introduction of kids to smoking is very similar to that for floridation.
Jep, you lost me with the part about the war. As Rane notes, the social compact can be changed by democratice procedures. Nevertheless, IMHO, civil disobedience and tax protests are also legitimate means to attempt to influence the democratic process. As a society I believe it is in out best interests to allow a broad range of methods to influence that process. Otherwise, only wealthy or well-connected lobbyists will frame and influence issues and outcomes, and our "democracy" will be a mere shadow of the real thing. Indeed, I think that many Americans may already feel that the concept of "democracy" is losing its potency for those very reasons.
#14, I thought dental insurance, for those lucky few that had it, only covered cleanings and checkups. I have lots of motivation to take care of my own teeth. I am still awaiting the outcome of the controversy over fluoride. What I read was that yes, it does increase bone and tooth density, but it does this by weakening the structure. Before doing Internet research I was sure there was no scientific evidence against fluoride. (Sorry, I have not gotten aroudn to reading your second website, Rane, too busy with dowsing stuff). More facts on the rhesus treatment. At present, or at least a couple of years ago, the antibodies used to treat rhesus-negative women came from pooled serum, which could be contaminated by stray proteins (causing allergic reactions) and viruses such as hepatitis and AIDS. In this country, women were successfully suing doctors who did not administer the treatment. Is it possible that the law requiring treatment was supported by doctors who would rather be sued for causing allergic reactions (they could blame the producers of the preparation instead) than for not preventing the possibility of rhesus-reactions in second children? Why should a woman who does not intend to have another child be forced to be subjected to a risky treatment? (There is now a safer method of antibody production under development, or it may be in use already by now.) Was this law passed before AIDS became common? The rhesus treatment was developed prior to 1967.
My dental insurance has paid a small fraction for restorative work. It may formally be the required x-rays, but I don't have a breakdown.
I'm afraid #13 was intended as sarcasm. I don't agree with a lot of what Rane is saying. I didn't expect Rane to accept the equivalence of affirmative action and tobacco subsidies for the purpose of this discussion. I underestimated Rane's belief in big government. Myself, I generally oppose big government, and favor the rights of individuals over those of "society".
A lot of people think they are opposed to big government -- how far are you really willing to take it? Are you ideologically opposed to public health programs like flouridation or childhood vaccination? Do you think we'd be better off without public schools or a national highway system? Or is "big" government just the parts of government that you personally don't like? If your views are truly consistent, I congratulate you (though I don't agree with them..) So far, though, I've never met anyone who railed against "big government" who didn't exclude from that term all of the programs that they happened to like.
I believe in democratic government. Anyone that rales against "big" government labels themselves as a hypocrite and demogogue, since there is no definition of how big is big enough offered in the categorization. Government should be "big" enough to provide society with the services that are best provided nationally (or within a governmental jurisdiction), or when forcing people to fend for themselves will lead to unacceptable consequences (disease, areas of poverty, discrimination... and other things not conducive to the "public welfare", for which our government was founded to foster - read the constitution).
I reread #13, and indeed it is a good statement of how our nation was founded to function. I don't agree with some of the programs that are in place, which are named in paragraph 4. Our representatives did create them, but I think they should be changed. That's part of how our nation was founded to function too - by democratic procedures and institutions.
I'm like anyone else. There are things about the government I like, and things I do not like. I like the postal service (though it shouldn't be a monopoly), the highway system, and the military. I like the FBI -- the part that deals with real, serious crimes. I don't like the War on Drugs. I don't like Social Security, federal mandates for everything from seatbelt laws to state funded abortion, and federal funding for (approved) art. I don't like foreign aid, but since I don't understand it and it's importance to foreign affairs in general, I don't kick much about it. I don't like the role of the federal government in almost every major decision made by almost every American. It strikes me as an immensely strong indication of the extreme overfunding of the government. My car cost thousands of extra dollars because of federal mandates such as air bags -- with the effect that, in order to protect my kids from the safety features of the car, they cannot ride in the front seat, ever. If I'm ever to have a house, I'll spend more time and effort figuring out how to deal with the federal government aspects (loans, taxes, the swamp on the land where we want to build) than in what I want it to look like. My kid spends school time learning about drugs and alcohol, even though he's only 6, instead of anything of benefit to him, because there's a federal mandate that the schools have to teach that. Around a third of my income goes directly to the federal government, paid to the government by my employer before I can even sniff it. This is so I don't "cheat" the government by not giving it a fair share of my money. The president wants to take away some more of what money we have, which isn't as much as it could be because my wife doesn't work full-time, so she can be with the kids. He wants to give it instead to people who have someone else raise their kids. It's a penalty on parents who want to raise their own. But I certainly wouldn't say all of what the government does, even all of what I call Big Government does, is *bad*. There's obviously some benefit even to the things I listed that I don't like. There's not *enough* benefit, which is why I don't like them. If you listed the 100 things the government does that cost the average American the most and/or affect the average person the most, with a column of choices for what I want the government to do with those things, "More", "The Same" or "Less", I bet I would pick "Less" for at least 80 and "More" for 5 or fewer. I'll bet Rane would reverse those numbers. I'll further bet that most people would have at least 50 "Less" choices, and at most 20 "More" choices.
You can't have just the things you "like" and not have the things you "don't like". We are all in this together, and we like and dislike different things. How do you propose we work that out? By grousing about it? There is a procedure for working it out, and it is called the ballot box and access to your representatives. You write your letters saying what you would like to have done and I will write my letters saying what I would like to have done. We can even send out letters to each other (we are doing that, in a way, here). But I do hope "my side" wins... 8^}. Why don't you put up the list, and we can do our lesses and moreses.
I personally would like to see more money spent on foreign aid and less on highways (and have the train system improved instead) but before we get into this sort of a discussion, is anyone out there interested in public health and the rights of individuals/children/society? Why must children get vaccinated but not adults? (I got mumps at age 30.) What sorts of public health issues should be left up to local government (such as fluoridation) and which ones to national government (chlorination, iodation - by the way the US probably iodizes simply because it is cheaper than iodating), and why? In my opinion, controversial programs are best carried out by local government, in order to give more information on how well they work for a while. Are there any other public health issues that are locally controlled?
Most childhood vaccinations are "for life". That is why you hear less about adult vaccination than childhood vaccination. However I am still being vaccinated for flu (annually), tetanus (every 10 years) and...doesn't hepatitus have to be repeated now and then? You must not have been vaccinated for mumps as a child. In some cases, the vaccination is thought worse than the disease - I think chicken pox has been one of those up until recently.
Poll items on M-Net and Grex turn into discussion items instead. If I were to do such a poll here, I'd do it as a script. I doubt if I will, because finding the information would take time and effort, and writing the script would probably be beyond my capability.
When I was a child there was no vaccine for mumps, measles, or chicken pox, or hepatatis. I had the first three, along with German measles, and assume that most people my age have also had them (mumps was a surprise, I had it in Prague), but hepatitis can be lethal and I doubt I have had it. I hear it is or will be required for children, why not for adults? (I mean the vaccine of course, not the disease). It can be passed on from mothers to children (I don't recall how, in utero or breastfeeding), so you would think a policy that protected children would require adult vaccination. What I have heard it is is too expensive, at $60 a shot, on the theory that many adults don't need it. Isn't there some cheap way to test for natural antibodies? Are the laws governing restaurant inspections, of the sort that they publish in the A2 news (points off for storing dishes in the wrong place...) local, state, or federal? Can anyone think of locally made health laws?
A great deal of health regulation is local. Compare Washtenaw County's standards to those of another county. Ask a State health inspector why his inspections of Washtenaw County restaurants are relatively cursory, whereas in other areas he feels compelled to perform very thorough inspections.
Certain government regulations are nice, I should think. The problem with capitalism is that safety and health is not an issue if it does not increase one's profits. Certain government regulations make certain necessities economiccally necessary, if you expect to operate legally. I don't think the government should be overbearing, and I think it goes too far in certain places, but there are an awful lot of market restrictions and laws that are really, really, really good ideas.
Senna, what are some of these market restrictions that you mention?
like the ones which prevent the use of food additives which have been proven unsafe as cheap fillers to increase the volume and weight of food products without increasing cost accordingly. like the ones which prevent employers from sending workers into extremely dangerous work environments without providing appropriate safety equipment and firing them if they complain or refuse. etc...
Eric is thinking along exactly the same lines I am. Also, those that protect labor unions. I've often found unions to be have the habit of pushign the envelope quite a bit, but they *do* serve their purpose, and their existence is extremely important.
re: vaccinations ... Vaccination for any hepatitis was not generally available ten years ago, and the now-available vaccine doesn't protect againsst all varieties. The chicken pox vaccine has come in the last 5 years. Children enrolling in most schools need to show evidence of up-to-date vaccinations. They are not *required* to be vaccinated, as such. Adults presumably received theirs as children, or had the diseases .. for some jobs hepatitis vaccination is required, I have heard. I remember when the Sabin polio vaccine was new, in 1960-something. It wasn't required for anybody but we all went down to the high school for it, all 3 doses.
re 25: Yes, the Hepatitus B vaccine must be readministered periodically, if an individual's titer drops below a certain level. Typically, it's health-care providers and certian higher-risk groups of people who should get vaccinated against Hepatitus B. A word about childhood vaccines: as Rane said, they're very safe, as a rule. People who fail to get their children immunized against Rubella (german measles) run two risks: 1) their child becomes ill ; 2) their infected child infects others. It's #2 that's especially important here, because women in the early stages of pregnancy may give birth to children with congenital defects, if the women are exposed to Rubella in early pregnancy. And you don't want to know what people who die of diptheria or whooping cough go through. Health regulations concerning vaccination are typcally enacted and enforced at the state and local levels. It boggles my mind that people fail to get their kids vaccinated. It's as though some believe these childhood diseases have been eradicated. They haven't. Permitting infection gives the viruses an opportunity to evolve into something even nastier, by providing kids as growth medium.
When I was little, and there was no German measles vaccine, parents would send their kids (or at least daughters) to visit someone with it, so they would have it while young. I had it for a day at age 8, a slight fever. Do the kids who get hepatitis B vaccination get repeated vaccinations?
When I was little, we were vaccinated for smallpox and tetanus-typhoid-whooping cough as babies, and for polio in grade school (three different ways), but that was all. What are all the new vaccines available now? I read something in the paper about meningitis and vaccination. And has anyone heard anything about progress on an AIDS vaccine? Or a vaccine for the common cold?
To my knowledge, the hepatitus B vaccine isn't routinely administered to children. Hepatitus B is spread by contact with infected blood, primarily, and that's why anyone who handles blood products or re-uses sharps(a big no-no) is at risk for hepatitus B as well as AIDS and other blood-borne diseases. As to new vaccines, there are many new ones in use. There is a vaccine against viral pneumonia. Don't hold your breath waiting for a vaccine against the common cold. There are a multitude of different viruses that cause common cold symptoms, and those viruses are everywhere. They infect, multiply, and mutate. Furthermore, how are you defining a cold? By symptoms? Many of those symptoms overlap with allergic reactions, influenza infection, etc.
I thought there was some hepatitis vaccine required in children now, that adults could get for $60. Was I wrong?
Each time you get a cold, you're catching a different virus. My great grandmother simply doesn't get colds anymore, because she's had all of the ones she's regularly exposed to. It's pointless to make a vaccine for each one. It's pretty much impractical in the first place, since in most cases a cold is no more than an inconvenience. There are more important things to devote the public's money toward.
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