This study adds to a growing list of published peer-reviewed papers that compare the health of vaccinated children to the health of unvaccinated children. These studies suggest we have long underestimated the scope of vaccine harms, and that the epidemic of chronic illness in children is hardly a mystery.
Unvaccinated children are healthier than
vaccinated children, according to a new
study published in the International Journal of Environmental
Research and Public Health. The study — “Relative Incidence of Office Visits
and Cumulative Rates of Billed Diagnoses Along the Axis of Vaccination” — by
James Lyons-Weiler, PhD and Paul Thomas, MD, was conducted among 3,300
patients at Dr. Thomas’ Oregon pediatrics practice, Integrative Pediatric.
This study adds to a
growing list of published peer-reviewed papers (Mawson, 2017; Hooker and Miller, 2020) that compare the
health of vaccinated children to the health of unvaccinated children. These
studies suggest we have long underestimated the scope of vaccine harms, and
that the epidemic of chronic illness in children is hardly a mystery.
The study the CDC refused to do
Since 1986, the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has been legally obligated to conduct
safety studies and issue a safety report on children’s vaccinations every two
years. In 2018, it was determined they had never done so. It is therefore
incumbent upon non-governmental groups to do the work the CDC refuses to do.Best
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As the leading governmental organization driving vaccination
among Americans, the CDC refuses to incriminate themselves in the epidemic of
childhood chronic illness. It is a classic case of the fox guarding the
henhouse. They are complicit in creating an evidence vacuum to deliberately
manage against the possibility of the public turning against vaccination.
Since the Lyons-Weiler and Thomas study demonstrates that
vaccinated children have more chronic illness and were also more likely to get
respiratory infections, those who downplay vaccine risks will be sent into
another round of apoplectic machinations to attempt to invalidate the results.
Despite the rigor with which this study was conducted, expect
critics to do anything but cite opposing science. They cannot. It simply has
not been done. Instead, expect critics to draw from a hackneyed playbook to
draw the attention away from these scientific findings by directing ad hominem
attacks on the authors, criticizing the journal where it was published, and claiming
that the study design was not sound.
When research highlights anomalies that diverge from a dominant
scientific paradigm, it’s important to remember that the playground of science
is not in proof, but in the accumulation of evidence that bolsters an emerging
paradigm. The Lyons-Weiler and Thomas study strengthens this emerging paradigm
that vaccines may cause more harm than previously documented and characterized.
A perfect pediatric practice to
study health outcomes among varying rates of vaccination
Thomas’ pediatric
practice follows The Dr. Paul Approved Vaccine Plan,
allowing for fully informed consent and parental decision-making in vaccination
choices for their children. The plan was developed to reduce exposures to
aluminum-containing vaccines and to allow parents to stop or delay vaccinations
if some telltale signs of vaccine injury were starting to appear. Conditions like
allergies, eczema, developmental delay or autoimmune conditions are typical
signs that a child’s immune system is not processing vaccines normally.
These conditions serve
as early indicators to help the parent and pediatrician consider slowing or
stopping vaccination. As such, Dr. Thomas’ practice has an incredible mix of
children who range from fully vaccinated, to partially vaccinated, to not
vaccinated at all, making it the perfect pediatric practice to mine for
insights into side effects of vaccination.Buy New $32.99(as of 05:20 EST
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Study results based on relative
incidence of office visits
The Lyons-Weiler and Thomas study was conducted among pediatric
patient records spanning 10 years, from Thomas’ practice in Oregon. Instead of
using odds ratios of diagnoses in the two groups, the authors found that the
relative incidence of office visit was more powerful. Even after controlling
for health care exposure, age, family history of autoimmunity and gender, the
associations of vaccination with many poor health outcomes were robust.
Unvaccinated children have less
fever, seek 25X less pediatric care outside well-child visits
The study found that vaccinated children in the study see the
doctor more often than unvaccinated children. The CDC recommends 70 doses of 16
vaccines before a child reaches the age of 18. The more vaccines a child in the
study received, the more likely the child presented with fever at an office
visit.
The study had unique data that allowed the researchers to study
healthcare seeking behavior. Unlike increases in fever accompanied by increased
vaccine uptake, which is accepted as causally related to vaccination, increases
in vaccine acceptance was not accompanied by a major increase in
well-child visits. In fact, regardless of how many vaccinations parents decided
their children would have, the number of well-child visits was about the
same.
Any concerns that the non-vaccinated or less-vaccinated children
would avoid the doctor are unfounded, and puts the jaw-droppingly large
difference in office visits in perspective — outside of well-child visits,
children who received 90 to 95% of the CDC-recommended vaccines for their age
group were about 25 times more likely than the unvaccinated group to see the
pediatrician for an appointment related to fever.
Compared to their unvaccinated counterparts, vaccinated children in the study were three to six times more likely to show up in the pediatrician’s office for treatment related to anemia, asthma, allergies and sinusitis. The striking charts below show age-specific cumulative office visits for various conditions among the fully vaccinated compared to the unvaccinated.
No ADHD among unvaccinated
In a stunning finding sure to rock the psychiatric community, not a single unvaccinated child in the study was diagnosed with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD,) while 0.063% of the vaccinated group were diagnosed with ADHD. Likely due to the vaccine-friendly plan parent-doctor dyad decision-making at Dr. Thomas’ practice, the overall rates of ADHD and autism in the practice were roughly half the rates found in the general population of American children.
Low levels of chicken pox and whooping cough in vaccinated and unvaccinated
Regarding the question of whether or not vaccines prevent the infections they are intended to prevent, a quarter of a percent of the vaccinated were diagnosed with either chicken pox or whooping cough, while a half percent of the unvaccinated were diagnosed with chickenpox, whooping cough, or rotavirus.
Significantly, there were no cases of measles, mumps, rubella, tetanus, hepatitis or other vaccine-targeted infections in either the vaccinated or unvaccinated, during the entire 10.5 year study period.