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Charts That Show How Well Vaccines Work
Those mortality charts pushing sanitation and clean water are pure propaganda
One of the cornerstone arguments used by anti-vaccine influencers is that vaccines don’t work.
They often claim that it was only sanitation, clean water, improved hygiene, and better nutrition that stopped people from getting and dying from things like measles, diphtheria, pertussis, polio, and even smallpox.
Charts That Show How Well Vaccines Work
Of course, those arguments are all propaganda and are easily refuted.
For one thing, if it was just sanitation and clean water systems that eradicated all of those diseases, why didn’t it do it at the same time for all diseases?
Instead, we saw diphtheria cases and deaths drop to their lowest levels after the introduction of the DPT vaccine in 1948.
We saw pertussis cases and deaths drop to their lowest levels after the introduction of the pertussis vaccine in 1948.
We saw polio cases and deaths drop to their lowest levels after the introduction of the polio vaccine in 1955.
We saw measles cases and deaths drop to their lowest levels after the introduction of the measles vaccine in 1963.
We saw Hib cases and deaths drop to their lowest levels after the introduction of the Hib vaccine in 1988.
We saw chicken pox cases and deaths drop to their lowest levels after the introduction of the chicken pox vaccine in 1995.
We saw meningococcal C cases and deaths drop to their lowest levels after the introduction of the meningococcal C vaccine in 1999.
We saw invasive pneumococcal cases and deaths drop to their lowest levels after the introduction of the Prevnar vaccine in 2000.
Time and again, it was once a vaccine was introduced that cases and deaths were finally brought under control.
That’s something you can’t hide in mortality charts!
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An extension of vaxopedia.org, an A to Z guide to vaccines by Vincent Iannelli, MD, a board certified pediatrician.