Polio

nsacpi

Expects Yuge Games
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It will be interesting to see if the folk libertarian "muh rights" movement leads to reconsideration of long-accepted practices with respect to other vaccines and various mandates for those vaccines.

Of course anti-vaxxer movements have been around for a while. Mostly in left wing enclaves like Marin County and Santa Monica.

But there has been a chance in the social locus of the movement in the wake of covid.
 
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I counted the first 10 threads that didn't make it to a second page.

9 out of 10 threads were started by the lecturing buffoon.

Imagine being one of this guy's students.
 
The New York case was identified as a revertant polio Sabin type 2 virus, indicating that it was derived from someone who received the oral polio vaccine, which contains a live but weakened form of the polio virus.

Officials say this suggests that the virus originated outside the US, where the oral vaccine is still administered, but they are investigating the origins of this particular case.

Health officials said Thursday that the person had not traveled outside the US before or after they were diagnosed.

Typically, people who catch polio can spread it to others for about two weeks. Officials said the individual is not expected to be contagious right now because they are past that window of time and have normal immune function. But others may have been exposed before the case was diagnosed.

The oral polio vaccine is no longer authorized for use in this country. In the US, only the inactivated polio vaccine has been given since 2000.

Rockland County is home to an ultra-Orthodox Jewish community in which vaccination rates have historically been very low. In 2018 and 2019, Rockland County was the epicenter of a major measles outbreak that continued for nearly a year and sickened 312 people. County health officials reported at the time that only 8% of people there had been vaccinated against measles, mumps and rubella before the outbreak began.

https://www.cnn.com/2022/07/21/health/new-york-polio/index.html
 
Polio is an infection caused by the poliovirus. About 1 in 4 infected people have flu-like symptoms including sore throat, fever, tiredness, nausea, headache and stomach pain. As many as 1 in 200 will develop more serious symptoms that include tingling and numbness in the legs, an infection of the brain or spinal cord, and paralysis, according to the US Centers for the Disease control and Prevention.
 
polio-vaccination-rates-1980-2014.png
 
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