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9 minutes ago, Francie, said:

Read your link it says 2years for pediatric care,it does not specify what care or which vaccinations an it definitely doesn't mention 2 to 4 month old babies,an there was 2100 mothers surveyed,that nowhere near represent the whole of the USA an can not be extrapolated to the claim which the article states that there was a drop in childhood vaccinations,your article is shit an false

It says immunizations FFS, what do you think they are talking about, lollipops and rusks? Lol

Your myth has been well and truly busted, next.

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I don’t know enough about vaccines to debate the pro’s and con’s, but I am old enough to remember going to school with poor buggers wearing leg irons because of polio, a disease all but eradicated in

That Japan has the fourth lowest sudden infant death syndrome,after they amended there child vaccine schedule in 1994,it is not mandatory for children to be vaccinated when there born tho still recomm

I’m not sure if it makes a difference, I think it might, but Sweden has free universal health care, Japan has mandatory health insurance, America has neither. Cheers.

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Just now, Pardus said:

It says immunizations FFS, what do you think they are talking about, lollipops and rusks? Lol

Your myth has been well and truly busted, next.

No it has not you can't pull the wool over my eyes your article does not mention 2 to 4 month old vaccinations,I already posted a bit of it,were does it state 2 to 4 month old immunisations,show me it doesn't.

An they only surveyed 2000 women ffs so does that mean the same for every mother in the US in 2020,does it my arse,you have no answer mate

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Just now, Pardus said:

The COVID-19 pandemic has decreased uptake of pediatric preventive care, including IMMUNIZATIONS

 

Here it is just incase you missed it.

Mate your not as smart as you think,go an read your own article,

Do you know how many immunisations there are in the USA,ffs there's at least 30 for children,but yet again your article does not specify which,an doesn't say nothing about 2 to 4 month old babies ffs an last time I'm repeating this ONLY 2000 WOMEN WERE SURVEYED,THAT IS A FRACTION OF THE MOTHERS IN THE USA IN 2020.

you cannot admit when your wrong

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1 minute ago, Francie, said:

Mate your not as smart as you think,go an read your own article,

Do you know how many immunisations there are in the USA,ffs there's at least 30 for children,but yet again your article does not specify which,an doesn't say nothing about 2 to 4 month old babies ffs an last time I'm repeating this ONLY 2000 WOMEN WERE SURVEYED,THAT IS A FRACTION OF THE MOTHERS IN THE USA IN 2020.

you cannot admit when your wrong

Are you really that dense mate, when they talk about SIDS who do you think the article is aimed at? Let me give you a hint, it's the demographic that suffer from SIDS you stupid boy! Lol

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Read this again from your article,are you blind or playing stupid,2 years of age an 12 years of age it says,mentions nothing of 2 to 4 months old of which were discussing,your intentionally acting stupid,everyone will see,your only fooling yourself mate.

Iv a football match to coach il drop in later to see if your cognitive dissonance has cleared up lol

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The COVID-19 pandemic has decreased uptake of pediatric preventive care, including immunizations. We estimate the prevalence of missed pediatric routine medical visits and vaccinations over the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic. We conducted a cross-sectional online survey of 2074 US parents of children ≤12 years in March 2021 to measure the proportion of children who missed pediatric care and vaccinations over the first 12 months of the COVID-19 pandemic. Poisson regression models were fitted to estimate adjusted prevalence ratios (aPR). All analyses were weighted to represent the target population. Overall, 41.3% (95%CI 38.3–43.8) of parents reported their youngest child missed a routine medical visit due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Missed care was more common among children ≥2 years compared to <2 years (aPR 1.82; 95%CI 1.47–2.26) and Hispanics compared to non-Hispanic Whites (aPR 1.31; 95%CI 1.14–1.51). A third of parents (33.1%; 95%CI 30.7–35.5) reported their child had missed a vaccination. Compared to the 2019-20 flu season, pediatric influenza vaccination decreased in 2020–21 (51.3% vs. 62.2%; p < 0.0001). A high proportion of US children ≤12 years missed routine pediatric care during the COVID-19 pandemic. Catch-up efforts are needed to ensure continuity of preventive care for all children.

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1 minute ago, Francie, said:

Read this again from your article,are you blind or playing stupid,2 years of age an 12 years of age it says,mentions nothing of 2 to 4 months old of which were discussing,your intentionally acting stupid,everyone will see,your only fooling yourself mate.

Iv a football match to coach il drop in later to see if your cognitive dissonance has cleared up lol

I think you need to go back to English class mate, it clearly says that children below two are less likely to miss their vaccines than those two and above, and that the survey was carried out on children under 12.

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7 minutes ago, Pardus said:

I think you need to go back to English class mate, it clearly says that children below two are less likely to miss their vaccines than those two and above, and that the survey was carried out on children under 12.

Copy the text an paste it then to we see.

An even if it does say that,which it doesn't,only 2000 mothers were surveyed,it does not count for the rest of the mothers.

In 2020, there were 3,613,647 births registered in the United States, according to the CDC stacks.

so more or less 3.5 million mothers take away the twins,so you measly survey of 2000 mothers does not talk for the other 3.5 million mothers,so your article is worthless.

Right away to coach a match,have fun lol

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So, let's put things in to perspective. The US has approximately 380 SIDS deaths per one million live births, Francie is getting carried away over nothing as usual after reading what Karen shared on FB.

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