Answer for question 4248.
Feb. 20th, 2015 05:59 pm[Error: unknown template qotd]*Sigh* First, vaccines have no correlation to autism whatsoever. Second, even if they DID, autism is way better than measles or mumps. I know too many successful people whose autism is actually a benefit to their research and their work to be scared by it. Sure, autistic people have some challenges that other people don't, but, well, who doesn't?
As far as what vaccines I'd like to see developed, the only real answer is HIV. It's orders of magnitude more widespread than any other deadly viral disease.
Well, if anybody could come up with category-based vaccines, that'd be cool, too -- one vaccine that protected you against the entire CATEGORY of influenza viruses, that would be cool. And a vaccine against the entire category of rhinoviruses would be convenient.
As far as what vaccines I'd like to see developed, the only real answer is HIV. It's orders of magnitude more widespread than any other deadly viral disease.
Well, if anybody could come up with category-based vaccines, that'd be cool, too -- one vaccine that protected you against the entire CATEGORY of influenza viruses, that would be cool. And a vaccine against the entire category of rhinoviruses would be convenient.
(no subject)
Date: 2015-02-20 08:02 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2015-02-20 08:35 pm (UTC)What do rhinoviruses have in common? Not really a heck of a lot, as far as I can tell. From what a friend told me, if it's a virus that gets into your body by permeating the mucus membranes, and then your body responds to it by activating your mucus membranes and raising your body temperature to try to block it and cook it out, that's a rhinovirus. So I'm not sure how you'd try to fight a cold in general.
Yeah, so for THAT dream, you're not even as FAR as having to worry about the mutations -- they've ALREADY got nothing in common with each other. :)
(no subject)
Date: 2015-02-20 10:02 pm (UTC)AUGH.
AUGH.
Wrong paradigm. Doesn't matter what I personally believe. It matters rather a lot more what the actual facts of the matter are.
(no subject)
Date: 2015-02-20 10:29 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2015-02-20 11:02 pm (UTC)Autism is a disability, not a quirk that enhances people's careers, although of course there are some talented people with autism who benefit from some traits of the condition regarding the work they do. However, these tend to people whose communication/social/other abilities have been less damaged by their autism, and most people with autism are unable to work.
This is not me saying vaccines = autism. I am replying to you as the argument that autism is just a quirky trait really upsets me. I've had both measles and mumps, they are not worst than a life-changing disability.
(no subject)
Date: 2015-02-21 01:01 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2015-02-21 04:53 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2015-02-21 11:18 am (UTC)There's also people who are severely disabled and need 24 hour care.
You won't know them as they live in care homes and don't go to college etc...
Back to my original point, a lifelong disability is not better than a short childhood illness. I'm sure even your more able friends with ASD would agree with this.
(no subject)
Date: 2015-02-21 05:30 pm (UTC)I think that when we cope with lifelong conditions ourselves--in my case, recurrent depression--it's easier to assume that other people would be okay with adapting their lives to such conditions. But that actually isn't true. Most people would prefer a short-term serious illness to a long-term disability, however "minor."
I have been fully vaccinated and will continue to vaccinate as needed. My workplace is vaccinating 20,000+ people against meningococcemia starting next month. It's a B-strain vaccine for people aged 25 and under, but if issues here continue I'll be heading to the doctor to get the multi-strain vaccine that's approved for up to age 55. Clearly, I agree with the facts: vaccines don't cause autism. But to assume that being diagnosed with autism wouldn't be so bad, well, that's a bit scary!
And I haven't even gotten into the fact that your friends "seem" "not-disabled" to you. You yourself might not seem disabled to people on the street, or even to your friends at times--right? And yet I'm fairly certain you meet the legal definition? Do correct me if I'm wrong about that. But I was under the impression that those receiving disability were considered, well, disabled?
(no subject)
Date: 2015-02-21 06:29 pm (UTC)Also, if your priority is to reduce autism, you really ought to reduce the number of pregnant women who catch rubella (german measles.) Vaccination helps.
(no subject)
Date: 2015-02-21 11:17 pm (UTC)But I disagree with the original poster's flippant views about autism.
Yes sometimes measles can be dangerous, in the majority of cases it's not.
Saying that measles and mumps are worse than autism just isn't true.
(no subject)
Date: 2015-02-21 11:25 pm (UTC)