NY Times Deceives about the Odds of Dying from Measles in the US • Children's Health Defense

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Peter Hotez deceives New York Times readers about the odds of dying from measles in the US to persuade parents to comply with the CDC's vaccine schedule. On January 9, the New York Times published an article written by Dr. Peter J. Hotez titled "You Are Unvaccinated and Got Sick. His purpose in writing is to persuade parents to vaccinate their children according to the routine schedule recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). To that end, he purports to compare "the dangerous effects of three diseases with the minimal side effects of their corresponding vaccines." "To state it bluntly," Hotez writes, "being unvaccinated can result in illness or death. Vaccines, in contrast, are extremely unlikely to lead to side effects, even minor ones like fainting." He laments that "vaccination rates have fallen", resulting in a resurgence of measles globally. He cites the example of Samoa, where "almost 5,700 measles cases have been recorded since September, resulting in at least 83 deaths. Almost all of those who died were young children." In the US, he writes, "vaccine hesitancy is contributing to" measles outbreaks. Hotez presents data ostensibly to enable parents "to compare the risks of becoming ill with measles . . . to the minute chances of experiencing side effects from their corresponding vaccines." Hotez goes on to assert, "Moreover, new research reveals that, even when patients recover, the measles virus can suppress the immune system, rendering children susceptible to serious infections like pneumonia and the flu." "misinformation spread after an article implying a link between measles vaccinations and autism was published in The Lancet in 1998; it was retracted in 2010 over concerns about the validity of the results and the conduct of the study.

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