Dear PROVE Members,
We are so grateful when articulate and intelligent parents
from PROVE write letters to educate the public. I wanted to share a few that were just printed in the Fort Worth
Weekly newspaper. They can be seen
online at www.fwweekly.com/issues/2001-04-12/letters.html. You are truly making a difference - keep up
the great work everybody!
Dawn
Shots in the Dark
To the editor: “We may eat our words about vaccines one
day in the medical community.” So said Tom Winkler in Beth Enoch’s recent story
on the vaccine safety debate (“Public Good, Private Pain,” Mar. 29-Apr. 4,
2001). It certainly wouldn’t be the first time the medical community laid down
the moral law to an under-informed and trusting public before newer research disproved
its absolutes. My mother was told it was absolutely fine to smoke cigarettes
and have cocktails while pregnant. Nutrition was once regarded as unnecessary
in maintaining good health. Thalidomide? Anyway, a little humility would go a
long way with many in the medical field. If only doctors and politicians could
embrace educated families instead of feeling threatened by them, we might be
able to find an appropriate compromise in the vaccine debate.
Kathie Sever
Austin
To the editor: I first want to commend the Fort Worth
Weekly for a well-written and well-rounded article. I agree with the
philosophical exemption for parents. As adults, we have the right to accept or
deny any medical treatment posed to us without fear of government punishment.
Yet, to make this same decision concerning our children concerning
vaccinations, we are attacked as uninformed, ignorant adults, and our children
are punished by not allowing them to attend public schools. But as an informed conscientious
parent, I should not only be allowed to make proper medical decisions but be
expected to.
There is not enough unbiased medical research governing
reactions to vaccines. And until I am comfortable with the levels of risks
versus benefits, I and I alone should be making the decisions for my children without
the influence of the government.
Tracy Valdez
Fort Worth
To the editor: I would like to thank you for your article
addressing parents’ consent to vaccinate. This would not mean near as much to
me if I hadn’t gone through the “Private Pain” of my own son’s passing a mere
20 hours after receiving four vaccine shots required by the government. Ironically, six months after my son died,
the Centers for Disease Control issued a warning about giving three of those
vaccines at the same time. They warned it could cause reactions as severe as
death. A little late for our family to heed their warning.
I heard an individual tell a group that in one year, there
were 59 cases of polio in the United States; all but one were actually caused
by the vaccine itself. This does not sound like the “Public Good.” My son is a
martyr. The pharmaceutical companies should be treated like the tobacco
companies. Thank you for addressing both sides of the issue, unlike the
television stations that spin everything around.
Tim Morren
Plano
ALL
INFORMATION, DATA, AND MATERIAL CONTAINED, PRESENTED, OR PROVIDED HERE IS FOR
GENERAL INFORMATION PURPOSES ONLY AND IS NOT TO BE CONSTRUED AS REFLECTING THE
KNOWLEDGE OR OPINIONS OF THE PUBLISHER, AND IS NOT TO BE CONSTRUED OR INTENDED
AS PROVIDING MEDICAL OR LEGAL ADVICE. THE DECISION WHETHER OR NOT TO
VACCINATE IS AN IMPORTANT AND COMPLEX ISSUE AND SHOULD BE MADE BY YOU, AND YOU
ALONE, IN CONSULTATION WITH YOUR HEALTH CARE PROVIDER.