| I don't know what they think. How would I? Do you think the anti-vaxxer viewpoint is covered by the media, do we ever discuss it here on HN, is it something that's a part of mainstream debate? No, it isn't. These people never really get taken seriously regardless of what claims they're making. The moment a position starts being labelled quack/crank/dangerous misinformation, you're already at the point of "coarse" characterisations, or mis-characterisations. So now look what's happened. Apparently there are two kinds of anti-vaxxer, the ones worried about "proven risks" and then the real cranks making "paranoid claims". But the sort of anti-vaxxers who would have been refusing to give their child Pandemrix before it was understood to be linked with higher narcolepsy rates would have come across as paranoid, wouldn't they? They'd have had to say something like: "I don't know. It's a new vaccine. It might be dangerous. I'm not sure swine flu is dangerous, I'd rather not vaccinate my child." and they'd have got an answer from us HN-reading types of the form: "Swine flu is very serious, the WHO has declared a global pandemic and clinics are being overwhelmed with infected people. Vaccines are well understood and very safe. Experts say the MMR scare was just debunked crank science. If you don't vaccinate your child you're an ignoramus who is putting both your child and other people at risk, you shouldn't even really have a choice. I will report your tweets to Twitter for misinformation." And we'd have been wrong and they'd have been right. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2009_swine_flu_pandemic#Histor... "The Mexican government closed most of Mexico City's public and private facilities in an attempt to contain the spread of the virus; however, it continued to spread globally, and clinics in some areas were overwhelmed by infected people ... In late April, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared its first ever "public health emergency of international concern," or PHEIC,[38] and in June, the WHO and the U.S. CDC stopped counting cases and declared the outbreak a pandemic" |
They fail to trade off the risks appropriately.
No one can claim vaccines are "safe". They induce a host immune response so that the immune system is primed to fight a subsequent infection. The immune system can cause damage to the host, which is why we have a whole catalogue of autoimmune disorders, many of which can be modulated by infectious diseases and parasites. There is a risk a vaccine could induce a host immune response which causes damage. But it's a small risk.
You have to trade off the risk of vaccination with the risk of being infected with the disease, and the risk to society at large through spread of the disease when vaccination rates are too low.
In pretty much all cases, the risk of the disease is many orders of magnitude higher than the risk of the vaccine. If there's a 0.000001 chance of the vaccine causing problems vs a 0.0001 of dying or suffering long-term damage from the disease then the choice is obvious: get vaccinated.
Unless the "anti-vaxxers" are basing their arguments upon quantitative data, then I'll continue to view them as crackpots with little knowledge or understanding.
(I'm an immunologist, by the way.)