| What I am saying that it is agreed that ultrasound does have an impact. The failure in the provision of evidence, is with those that claim it is safe. Its not for me to prove it is harmful. Ask yourself, how can a treatment that breaks kidney stones or burn tumours also be 'safe'? It may be that the impact is negligible, but that is not safe. In the womb especially, a slight impact may have a large effect on a growing foetus. Ask yourself too, what level of radiation is safe? How much microwaving? Is any? So am I fearmongering, or is this a valid concern? I think it is clearly a valid concern. I do not simply accept medical consensus over the reasoning of my own mind. I can see use cases where the information that is provided by ultrasound is useful and outweighs the risk. I think that casual, repeated usage of ultrasound for pregnant women, for the 'gender reveal'/colour scans or whatever, with powerful machines, is ill advised though. I don't recommend anyone undertake any unnecessary medical procedures. I also think that an adult that has awareness of the scope of a potential impact, can do what they want - its their choice to do as they want. I object to inflicting avoidable harm (albeit the harm might not be obvious) to individuals that cannot consent - eg infants, foetuses. FWIW, I do have kids, and - to my regret - I did scan them before they were born. I wouldn't do it now, knowing what I do. |
The same way taking a bath can be safe, but a tsunami is not.