September 8, 2024

Acquanyc

Health's Like Heaven.

Vaccination is a well-accepted medical and public health practice

2 min read

Dr. Rick Iverson

Vaccinating healthy people to prevent disease is certainly not a new idea. In fact it was first proposed and tried over 500 years ago. The practice of vaccination is a well-accepted medical and public health practice.

In my lifetime smallpox has been eliminated in the whole world. Polio, diphtheria, tetanus, whooping cough, measles, rubella, and mumps have been eliminated or drastically reduced for those who have been vaccinated for them. They have been required for school attendance for many years in order to prevent outbreaks among healthy school children. In my over 40 years of medical practice I saw no life threatening or permanent side effects in spite of seeing literally hundreds of children and adults who received recommended and/or required immunizations.

The past one and a half years have presented new challenges for all of us. Not since the 1918 influenza pandemic have we experienced anything remotely like this. Within days of the first COVID-19 virus infections, researchers knew the exact genetic composition of this virus. That was a radical development. That gave scientists at several drug companies a tremendous head start in order to develop a vaccine for this virus. In addition, because of recent scientific discoveries they were able to take a radical new approach to find an effective vaccine for COVID-19. We anticipated that such a vaccine might be 50 or 60% effective. We were delighted to find that the new approach yielded vaccines in the 90% effectiveness range. In addition, serious side effects were rare.

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