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Doctors "Fire" Vaccine Refusers

phantomfive writes "In a study of Connecticut pediatricians published last year, some 30% of 133 doctors said they had asked a family to leave their practice for vaccine refusal. Pediatricians are getting tired of families avoiding vaccines, which puts their children at higher risk of disease. From the article: 'Pediatricians fed up with parents who refuse to vaccinate their children out of concern it can cause autism or other problems increasingly are "firing" such families from their practices, raising questions about a doctor's responsibility to these patients. Medical associations don't recommend such patient bans, but the practice appears to be growing, according to vaccine researchers.'"

83 of 1,271 comments (clear)

  1. Seems reasonable.. by GreyLurk · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Don't like my medical advice? Fine, go somewhere else. Seems perfectly reasonable and rational. If I were these doctors, I wouldn't want to feel responsible for the health of a child whose parents were demonstrably not interested in keeping their child healthy.

    1. Re:Seems reasonable.. by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It arguably goes further than that: Depending on the nature of your practice, you might have patients who are dependent on herd immunity(immunocompromized, vaccine component allergy, etc, etc.) Would a doctor be responsible in keeping people who are voluntary infection risks around the rest of their patients?

      If it were merely a matter of not taking good advice, I'd be a trifle ambivalent, certainly legal; but seems a bit tasteless. However, the infection risk makes it more like firing a medical assistant who won't wash their hands: it isn't just their health they are risking...

    2. Re:Seems reasonable.. by x1r8a3k · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Generally I would agree, but it depends on where is the line drawn? I have never gotten a flu shot. Is that enough to turn me away?

      The other concerning part is only in TFA though about a child who had a preexisting condition that was exacerbated by vaccines, and was still refused by several doctors without even discussing the issue.

    3. Re:Seems reasonable.. by DarKnyht · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I find it ironic that one of the groups that are dependent on herd immunity (Vaccine Component Allergy) is one of the ones that said doctor will kick out of his practice. My son is highly allergic to eggs, which is in many vaccines. We were informed by our doctor that if we did not allow him to inject our son with something that he is highly allergic to we would no longer be allowed to be a part of his practice.

      It isn't that we don't want our son to be immunized, it is just we would rather not give him something that results in violent reactions. Especially at the young age that he is.

      --
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    4. Re:Seems reasonable.. by trewornan · · Score: 5, Funny

      One of the few benefits of having a cold is the pleasure of passing it on to cow-orkers, don't take that away from me.

    5. Re:Seems reasonable.. by MightyMartian · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I doubt the doctors in question would throw you out, if the allergy is legitimate. You are not the kind of people being referred to, it's the completely retarded anti-vaccers who are the target of this. It is they who are putting your child at risk. Have a complaint, take it up with the evil fucking monster Andrew Wakefield.

      --
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    6. Re:Seems reasonable.. by jandrese · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If your doctor wasn't willing to make an exception for the child that is allergic to the vaccine, then you're better off with a new doctor anyway.

      --

      I read the internet for the articles.
    7. Re:Seems reasonable.. by kidgenius · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Your case is a little different. You have a valid, medical reason for not being able to have your son get all his vaccines. The autism-vaccine link has been shown to be non-existent. Thus, that is not a valid, medical reason for refusing vaccinations. A doctor should only be able to "fire" patients that don't have a medical reason.

    8. Re:Seems reasonable.. by Dahamma · · Score: 5, Informative

      No, of course not. Any doctor will tell you that flu shots are only moderately effective anyway, and of course have to be given every year based on guesses as to the season's strains. The slippery slope argument is the sort of FUD that is feeding the anti-vaccine kooks...

      These are pediatricians, so they are more worried about things like MMR, DTaP, meningiococcus, etc. Vaccines that don't just reduce the chance of a moderately annoying winter bug, but have unquestionably saved the lives of millions of children worldwide since their invention.

      And from TFA: "Her older child had gastrointestinal trouble and regressed development after receiving vaccines, she said, which she believes were related to the shots." This is the same "proof" by anecdote people wrongly use in the autism argument. Sure, one doctor signed a waiver, but same thing with painkiller addiction, it only takes one doctor willing to sign a prescription, they just have to look hard enough (or be a celebrity and no one will ask)...

    9. Re:Seems reasonable.. by viperidaenz · · Score: 5, Funny

      What exactly is Orking a Cow?

    10. Re:Seems reasonable.. by rrohbeck · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Are you saying the doctor would risk an anaphylactic shock after you told him your son is allergic to eggs? Bullshit.
      He'll either select a vaccine that's made without eggs or one that is known not to cause an allergic reaction in egg protein sensitive patients.
      Again, bullshit. Just like all the other antivaxxers.

    11. Re:Seems reasonable.. by Nimey · · Score: 4, Funny

      It's a practice known to the State of Utah to be sinful.

      --
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    12. Re:Seems reasonable.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      I find it ironic that one of the groups that are dependent on herd immunity (Vaccine Component Allergy) is one of the ones that said doctor will kick out of his practice. My son is highly allergic to eggs, which is in many vaccines. We were informed by our doctor that if we did not allow him to inject our son with something that he is highly allergic to we would no longer be allowed to be a part of his practice.

      It isn't that we don't want our son to be immunized, it is just we would rather not give him something that results in violent reactions. Especially at the young age that he is.

      Our son is as well. The allergist gives him his shots under a controlled and measured process.

    13. Re:Seems reasonable.. by AngryDeuce · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Because there exist people that can't get vaccinated for various reasons, such as allergy or compromised immune system. Every person that buys into the anti-vaccine propaganda bullshit and doesn't have their children vaccinated weakens herd immunity. This means that the people with no other protection but herd immunity are being compromised by utter stupidity.

      Ask most people that could have their children vaccinated but chose not to: "Would you allow your child to travel to a place where there is no herd immunity without vaccinating them first?" I have (I have several extended family members who are anti-vaccination fools) and almost every time they respond "Hell, no!" A few even wear their hypocrisy like a badge of honor..."I refuse to put my children through any risk of complication whatsoever since I know everyone else will risk their own children and my child will be safe anyway." They fully realize how herd immunity works, and that it's a shared risk, but they totally don't give a shit and are perfectly happy being selfish little fuckwits.

      It's ridiculous how ignorant people are of history that we're going to end up having to suffer another major epidemic to squash this stupid anti-vaccination bullshit.

    14. Re:Seems reasonable.. by devilspgd · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The biggest joke of it all is this: Even of vaccines do cause the things people guess that they might, you're still better off getting vaccinated.

      With Autism rates up around the 5.5 in 1,000 range (that's under half a percentage), even if every single autism case is caused by vaccines, you're still better off getting vaccinated and taking a tiny chance of autism over order-of-magnitude greater odds of dying in an epidemic when once hits your area thanks to the loss of herd immunity that generally keeps us protected.

      This ignores the fact that autism rates for those who are vs are not vaccinated seem to work out to be the same, and that no study has actually managed to link vaccines with autism.

      --
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    15. Re:Seems reasonable.. by 19thNervousBreakdown · · Score: 4, Informative

      Immune systems do not work that way!

      http://www.cdc.gov/flu/about/qa/misconceptions.htm

      --
      <xml><I><am><so><damn>Web 2.0</damn></so></am></I></xml>
    16. Re:Seems reasonable.. by StikyPad · · Score: 4, Informative

      Are you saying the doctor would risk an anaphylactic shock after you told him your son is allergic to eggs?

      Sure. Everything has a risk -- death is a potential risk of almost any medical treatment -- but the risks are usually far outweighed by the significant potential benefits. You risk death during almost any surgery, but the risk is so small in healthy individuals that it shouldn't be a deciding factor.

      Also, some vaccines, like the flu vaccine, are only made with eggs. Fortunately, the amount of egg protein present in the vaccine is so small that reactions are very rare. Typically it means waiting around for 30-60 minutes after vaccination to look for signs of a reaction, which can then be treated before it escalates. The odds of having a reaction that's unresponsive to treatment are so staggeringly small that no one should use it as a deciding factor (with the disclaimer that this is not medical advice).

    17. Re:Seems reasonable.. by spiffmastercow · · Score: 4, Interesting

      How old is your son? My son is also highly allergic to eggs (we have to carry the epi pen everwhere we go), and he's had all his age-scheduled shots so far with no problem, and he's almost 2. Which ones does your son need that don't have a non-egg version?

    18. Re:Seems reasonable.. by fatphil · · Score: 4, Funny

      Don't delay for too long - as the proportion of vaccines that contains thiomersal decreases (something it's been doing for a decade now), the number of reported cases of ASDs has increased! That mercury was clearly keeping autism at bay!

      --
      Also FatPhil on SoylentNews, id 863
    19. Re:Seems reasonable.. by Fastolfe · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Sorry, but I question the accuracy of any quote that involves a doctor requiring that they knowingly inject a vaccine into someone known to be allergic to that vaccine. No doctor would ever require that their patients submit to being killed. So I have no reason to believe the rest of the story.

      It seems quite likely to me that many parents make claims of allergies when they really just fear vaccines but don't want to tell their doctor that. Or, in this situation, maybe the doctor's office wasn't actually aware of the allergy, and the parents are tacking on a bit of hyperbole to their story.

  2. serves 'em right by ak_hepcat · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If some anti-vax moron doesn't want to use the help provided by the doctor, then the doctor doesn't need to keep them cluttering up his clinic.

    That's his right.

    It's also the right of the anti-vax moron to die faster, so hopefully they'll be weeded out in short order and we can get back to living better with medicine.

    No. Really. You anti-vax'rs are morons. Self-indulgent, blinded, murderous morons.

    --
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    1. Re:serves 'em right by scubamage · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The problem is that vaccines rely on herd immunity. One idiot can bring down a large portion of our house of cards because our immunities against these diseases simply aren't that strong.

    2. Re:serves 'em right by raburton · · Score: 5, Interesting

      > The problem is that vaccines rely on herd immunity.

      Yes, this is an important point that not much has been made of in the comments so far. There are people who cannot be vaccinated or in whom the vaccine will not produce the desired immunity. So long as these people don't come in to contact with the disease they'll be fine, but if you don't want to get your child immunised and send them to school with some poor kid with a crappy immune system or on chemo or something then you might end up killing them too.

      Are there schools that ban unvaccinated children from attending? I think that'd be a more effective way than kicking them out off the doctors list.

  3. Re:It is about time by scubamage · · Score: 5, Informative

    FYI not all hippies are against it. I'm an old hippy, and I think people who are refusing them are goddamned idiots.

  4. Re:as well they by no1home · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Tin-foil comes in maroon? Can I get it in purple instead?

    On a side note, I agree that it's the doctors' right to see what patients they want (as long as the decision is not based on certain criteria like race/color/religion/gender/etc). Stupidity is not a protected group.

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  5. Re:...why? by rwven · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think it's more of a Doctor desire to not work with idiots, and to instead save room in the schedule for the parents actually concerned with their kids' health.

    There are free vaccine clinics EVERYWHERE due to the fact that there are WAY more than enough vaccines to go around. My family has even used them a number of times. I'm sure the doctors are not concerned with the $10-15 per shot they would get since there are easy ways to vaccinate your kids and not have to pay it anyway.

  6. Like not supporting users not using antivirus by mehrotra.akash · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Its not different than a tech support company refusing data protection to customers not using anti virus

  7. Good! by deweyhewson · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Doctors aren't always right (like anybody in any profession), but this isn't about the doctors themselves. It's about the science.

    And the scientific evidence has shown time and time again that there is no link between vaccinations and autism, and that the benefits of eradicating these types of diseases far outweigh the potential mild side effects of taking them.

    As such, I have no problem with the idea of doctors who practice said science turning away patients who want to be in denial about it.

  8. New Sign in the Doctors Office... by OhSoLaMeow · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No Shirt, No Shoes, No Vaccine: No Service. Go waste some other doctor's time. It's hard enough for doctors to make a living with Medicare cutbacks, insurance cuts, etc.

    --
    They can take my LifeAlert pendant when they pry it from my cold dead fingers.
    1. Re:New Sign in the Doctors Office... by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 5, Informative

      When talking about the wealth of doctors, you need to take into account FAR more than raw salary.

      1) Medical school typically results in a few hundred thousand dollars of debt incurred, ON TOP of whatever debt the doctor may have incurred during their undergraduate program
      2) Undergraduate debt does not begin to get paid off during medical school - instead, debt increases (see 1) )
      3) After graduating medical school, a doctor must atcomplete residency (I believe this is typically a MINIMUM of 3 years) before they can practice. The typical salary for a medical resident (based on looking at the info packets for one of the local family medicine residency programs in my area) is well below the salary for an entry level engineer straight out of undergraduate school. (e.g. an engineer makes a higher salary four years earlier - note the time value of money here.). This is despite the fact that the resident has four more years of school during which they were racking up debt
      4) Once the doctor finally finishes residency, they have to pay for malpractice insurance. This is a MAJOR cost driver for doctors.

      4) is a major kicker here - Permitting a patient who has refused vaccination to spend time in the waiting room endangers other patients who cannot be vaccinated for whatever reason (such as immunocompromised patients) - opening up the doors for malpractice suits from those patients.

      --
      retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
    2. Re:New Sign in the Doctors Office... by madmark1 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Actually quite a few do have trouble, and are most definitely NOT rich. You see, the ones doing the vaccinations would be family practice doctors, or pediatricians, neither of which earn those giant salaries, which are reserved for brain surgeons, heads of surgical centers, and the like. This is the giant myth of our health care system, that doctors and practitioners are raping us all, it isn't the insurance companies, really.....

      And to throw some reality at the 1% part, to qualify by most methods as being in the 1% of wage earners, you must make between 503,000$ and 536,000$. The average family practitioner makes$204,000, according to several sources. This puts them a pretty far distance from 1% territory. The highest salary reported in a recent survey for a family practitioner was $299,000. They aren't all struggling, by any means, but still not 1%. Pediatricians, by comparison, reported salaries between$125,000 and $231,000, with the average at $174,000. They make even less.

      These figures also only take into account those doctors who make a salary, as opposed to those who may be in private practice, and living on the profits from their business. They usually make much less.

    3. Re:New Sign in the Doctors Office... by Arancaytar · · Score: 5, Informative

      Influenza kills half a million people per year. Since influenza mutates like crazy, it is also constantly developing new strains that require new vaccines, and occasionally strains that are particularly deadly (like the one in 1918, which killed up to a hundred million).

    4. Re:New Sign in the Doctors Office... by vilain · · Score: 5, Interesting

      PRIVATE PRACTICE, a tv show about a complementary medical practice in L.A. had an episode about a family of 'non-vaccinators' who returned from a trip overseas (India or Malaysia) with one of their kids very sick. The family sat in the waiting room for 5 minutes as the sick child eventually convulsed and died from measles. The pediatrician in the practice had delivered both of the kids and knew the mom didn't believe to vaccinations. The mom was in full-grief denial mode as only a sudden death can do. Meanwhile the staff is jump around canceling all the appointments for the next 48 hours and contacting all the patients that were in that day to make sure they and their kids were up-to-date for measles vaccine. The big issue of that show was that the mom didn't want to vaccinate the remaining child even though there was a very strong chance he would come down with Measles and it might kill him. Meanwhile these people are carriers and should have been quarantined. Why the LA Health department didn't swoop in and take over is beyond me, but I didn't write the show. The moral issue of the show was "when are the parent's beliefs about what's right for their child get overridden by what's medically advised. In the case of blood transfusion and 7th Day Adventists and other religious cults, the courts will intervene. In this case, the doctor risked their medical license by forcibly vaccinating the remaining child against the mom's wishes. If that case ever came to court, I wonder what a jury would do. The California AMA would probably award the doctor a medal for averting a cluster outbreak of measles. In any case, not having these kinds of patients in your medical practice makes life a lot easier. It's also why lots of doctors don't accept Medicare patients if they don't have to. Billing is a major headache.

    5. Re:New Sign in the Doctors Office... by geekoid · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yes it is life threatening.
      Since Non vaccinated people are a vector for mutation,l they put everyone at risk.

      --
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    6. Re:New Sign in the Doctors Office... by geekoid · · Score: 4, Insightful

      But if you get killed walking to the store, that doesn't put everyone you past that day at risk of being killed while walking. Non vaccinated people kill other people.

      And more miles are walked then people get the flu.

      Also, that's in vaccinated population. In a non vaccination population the number will be 100s of thousand daed compared to an average of 35000 dead over ten years.

      I mean,. think about it " This vaccinated group has less deaths then walking, so clearly that don't need to be vaccinated."
      So your comparison is not only wrong, it's really fucking stupid.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    7. Re:New Sign in the Doctors Office... by Ocker3 · · Score: 4, Informative

      In the case of blood transfusion and 7th Day Adventists and other religious cults, the courts will intervene.

      *Citation needed* I was raised SDA in Australia, and lived in SDA communities in Cali, strangely enough one centered around Loma Linda University Medical Centre, a very highly regarded hospital. You can bet that everyone in that community got their shots, it was a prerequisite for going to Loma Linda Academy, run by the SDA church. There may be some fringe SDA families who are against modern medicine, but it's very much not a feature of core SDA values. Health is a core value of the SDA church, by which they mean exercise, eating good food (many SDAs are vegetarian, or eat meat very sparingly), and generally staying healthy. No prohibitions against medicine at all, in fact the SDA church runs a string of hospitals around the world, and they all strive to have the best modern medicine available.

  9. Unintended Precedents by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I think vaccine deniers are dangerous fools, and I wish I were religious if only for the comfort of believing in a Hell waiting to accept "Dr." Wakefield.
    But before we jump on this particular bandwagon, perhaps we ought to ask:

    Can a doctor "fire" a patient for continuing to smoke?
    For continuing to drink? How are we defining "drink?"
    For continuing to overeat?
    For continuing to eat lots of red meat? Fried food? Salt?
    For not being on the caveman diet?

    1. Re:Unintended Precedents by zifferent · · Score: 4, Insightful

      In answer to your questions, yes.

      --
      cat sig > /dev/null
    2. Re:Unintended Precedents by Kozz · · Score: 4, Informative

      How many of those behaviors are capable of having a potentially deadly outcome of the doctors other patients while this smoking-drinking-fried foods guy sits in the waiting room?

      --
      I only post comments when someone on the internet is wrong.
  10. Re:Consider me fired. by Galactic+Dominator · · Score: 5, Funny

    You should have said "Goodbye, cruel world".

    --
    brandelf -t FreeBSD /brain
  11. Re:...why? by Garridan · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Perhaps, they think this will help convince the family that the vaccines really are important. They're choosing to make this choice in face of losing long-term profits. That points to a deliberate ethical decision, and not grubbing after a $40 fee.

  12. Turnabout is fair play by JoeZeppy · · Score: 5, Interesting

    If pharmacists are allowed to refuse to dispense birth control based on their convictions, and churches can refuse to cover it due to their convictions, doctors should be allowed to refuse to treat idiots based on their convictions. Welcome to the free market, bitches.

    1. Re:Turnabout is fair play by yodleboy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Well, this isn't exactly the same as a Catholic pharmacist refusing to fill birth control scrips because the man in the sky said sex is bad. The doctors are making this decision based on solid scientific evidence, not some blind faith in something that can't be proven. Vaccines save lives. Un-vaccinated people are a risk to those with compromised/under developed immune systems. Those are facts and parents that refuse to accept them are welcome to find a free love, herbal pediatrician that will make them feel good while taking their money.

      I love it when these parents say "well my kid has no vaccines and has never gotten ". Yeah no shit Sherlock, it's because the rest of us are not spreading it around thanks to our vaccines. The day there's a new strain that flies around killing the un-vaccinated they'll say "Why didn't someone do something or warn us?!?"

  13. Re:It is about time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The unfortunate thing is the kid doesn't and really can't have any say in it.

    Once your an adult.. fine.. wanna refuse chemo because you've discovered the healing power of celery colonics, it's your health! The poor kid is at the mercy of the parents, and while the idea of the authorities dictating how a child is raised makes me very uncomfortable.. that's almost what I'd like to see.

  14. Re:That makes things worse. by WoollyMittens · · Score: 5, Insightful

    On the contrary, the doctor has avoided harm to his other patients. Every new born baby or person with a weakened immune system is at risk from the preventable infections his unvaccinated patients bring into his clinic.

  15. US-Europe cultural difference ? by julienr · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Maybe it's the difference between the US and Europe, but here in Europe, not all doctors recommend all available vaccines. I wouldn't trust my doctor if he would recommend that I (or my children) get a vaccine against flue for example.

    I try to avoid drugs as much as possible because I think most non-severe illness (headache, flue, etc...) can just be cured by getting some rest and trusting your body. From my experience, the people I know that take the most drugs are the ones that are the most ill (and I'm talking non-server illness here, of course I'd take drugs if I had a cancer). I don't now if there is a causality, but I would tend to think so.

    So yeah, I have kind of the same approach to vaccination : I take vaccine for sever illness, but I would never vaccine against flue before I'm 90 years old.

    Now, I've lived in the US for some time and I've been shocked by the amount of drugs people take everytime they feel somewhat bad. I think there is a middleground between the "listen to your body, it will cure cancer by itself" bullshit and the "omg, I have a headache, let's eat these 3 pills". Same for vaccine.

    1. Re:US-Europe cultural difference ? by Suddenly_Dead · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Maybe it's the difference between the US and Europe, but here in Europe, not all doctors recommend all available vaccines. I wouldn't trust my doctor if he would recommend that I (or my children) get a vaccine against flue for example.

      If your doctor recommended a flu shot, he/she thinks you're in an at-risk group. Influenza is not a harmless infection, it kills 250,000 to 500,000 people in a typical (non-pandemic) year.

      Now, I've lived in the US for some time and I've been shocked by the amount of drugs people take everytime they feel somewhat bad. I think there is a middleground between the "listen to your body, it will cure cancer by itself" bullshit and the "omg, I have a headache, let's eat these 3 pills". Same for vaccine.

      A flu vaccine isn't like antibiotics or painkillers or anti-depressants or other drugs that may be harmful is needlessly prescribed. A vaccine introduces your immune system to a foreign element, which it then remembers so, if introduced to it again (in a live virus), it will be able to attack it more immediately. Getting a flu vaccine needlessly isn't going to weaken you or cause you to be more likely to be sick.

    2. Re:US-Europe cultural difference ? by StikyPad · · Score: 4, Insightful

      From my experience, the people I know that take the most drugs are the ones that are the most ill

      Selection bias much?

  16. OK genius by backslashdot · · Score: 5, Interesting

    A person who thinks a vaccine causes autism is liable to start blaming their doctor for whatever other ailments crop up in their kids life. Which is only no big deal if you don't have a family yourself or reputation.

    Why would any doc want that?

  17. Re:as well they by DanTheStone · · Score: 4, Funny

    I'm fairly certain several types of doctor can discriminate against patients by sex.

  18. If they don't trust vaccines... by Galaga88 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If somebody doesn't trust vaccines, why are they going to a doctor in the first place?

    The sound science behind vaccinations is by and large the same sound science that doctor is going to be using when he diagnoses you and prescribes a treatment. You can't reject one without rejecting the other.

  19. Good for them by macwhizkid · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think people today are generally spoiled by good customer service at large retailers like Amazon or Best Buy, where the business writes off 1-2% of asshole customers who consume most of the customer support resources as the cost of doing business.

    The problem is, that doesn't extend to small businesses, where one bad customer can quite literally eat up a majority of the proprietor's time and energy, and the business doesn't have the depth to just send the customer free stuff to make them happy. Had that happen with a scout troop I volunteer for a couple times, where one obnoxious parent consumed hundred of hours of volunteer time before they were told to leave.

    If I were a physician, I'd certainly trade one marginal (in the economic sense) customer for the freedom from losing sleep at night about whether their child is dying from one of any number of untreatable disastrous diseases. If my patients are going to argue with me about whether vaccines are, in fact, the greatest medical development for humanity in the past two centuries, how on earth am I supposed to be able to get them to consent to any other medical science?

  20. This years darwin award goes to... by CmdTako · · Score: 5, Informative

    anti-vax morons "Boys who did not receive the measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine during the mid 1990s are now collecting in large numbers in secondary schools and colleges and this provides a perfect breeding ground for the virus" http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/03/100330082722.htm

  21. Re:Always torn on these cases by UnknowingFool · · Score: 5, Insightful

    A doctor's responsibility is to all of their patients. Parents who are not vaccinating their children are not just risking their children. These children may be brought into close proximity to patients that cannot be vaccinated (very young) or whose immunity has worn off (the very old). As such it puts more than themselves at risk.

    --
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  22. Re:Herd Immunity.. I don't think that means what y by b0bby · · Score: 4, Informative

    I think what the parent post meant is that all vaccines have some percent of people who don't have the desired antibody response, so you want to keep the unvaccinated numbers as low as possible in order to protect them. There are also the populations of very young/very old/immune compromised who can't be vaccinated. It's these groups most at risk from the willful vaccine refusers.

  23. Re:as well they by Whorhay · · Score: 4, Funny

    "Stupidity is not a protected group" Wait, I thought you said they couldn't/shouldn't discriminate based on religion.

  24. People don't realize doctors can be sued for . . . by Tanman · · Score: 5, Informative

    . . . patient stupidity.

    If a doctor recommends a vaccine for a child, and the parents refuse the vaccine, then the child catches the flu and dies. Guess what? The doctor is open to litigation. It is a sad state of affairs, but the end result of that lawsuit is probably either settlement out-of-court or a judgment against the doctor. After all, why didn't the doctor educate the parents how they were wrong about autism risks? Why didn't the doctor show studies to the parents so they could have made a more educated decision? The fault will not be on the parents' heads -- at the very least the doctor will have to pay an attorney to defend from the inevitable lawsuit.

    Why should a doctor saddle up with 1) Patients that refuse care and 2) Legal risk. If I were a family physician and I had people putting themselves or dependents at risk against my medical advice (A.M.A.), I would "fire" them, too. In the end, we aren't talking about emergency care here. We are talking about medical maintenance, and they can find someone else.

  25. I would be the same goes for smoking by fsterman · · Score: 4, Interesting

    My family doctor will give new patients 6 months to stop smoking or he refers them elsewhere. His line is that his job is to keep patients healthy and that he can't do that if they are smoking. These are caretakers, and they will inevitably come to care about their patients. If they wanted to make money, they would have gone into a specialized field.

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    Is there anything better than clicking through Microsoft ads on Slashdot?
  26. Re:That makes things worse. by necro81 · · Score: 4, Informative

    If they're making an offer that cannot be refused without an adverse threat, such as this one, it's not voluntary

    What is this, The Godfather? What "adverse threat" (i.e., harm) is the doctor putting on the patient? And is that any greater or lesser than the threat the patient is putting on themselves. Pediatricians aren't putting severed horse heads in their anti-vax patients' beds. They are simply ending a relationship that is a liability to their practice, and trying to send a forceful message to their patients that they are (in the doctor's opinion) making a big mistake. If the pediatrician hasn't been able to persuade the parent that vaccines are a good idea and that Jenny McCarthy is a moron, then it is probably for the best for both parties to go their separate ways. It is not like patients are without options: "firing" is not a universal practice, nor one endorsed by the profession as a whole; there are always other doctors, and probably some more sympathetic to their vaccine concerns. We aren't talking about acute cases, either: if an emergency shows up, the doctor will still care for them.

    This is not an uncommon thing among professionals: here is my advice, take it or leave it, but if you leave it, don't expect me to clean up your stupidity.

  27. Re:Consider me fired. by Mitchell314 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Chicken pox is a mere "nuisance" to most people, for some it can be dangerous.

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    I read TFA and all I got was this lousy cookie
  28. Re:Consider me fired. by hemo_jr · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If you are willing to let your children die, and possibly infect and kill other children, that are not yours, and are too young to get vaccinated, you are to be both pitied and feared.

  29. Re:as well they by JobyOne · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's also arguable that the antivaxxers are goddamn assholes, and I believe it's perfectly acceptable to refuse service to those you find to be goddamn assholes.

    The doctor is a highly trained expert providing a service. When faced with people who refuse to acknowledge that expertise (whether it's refusing vaccines or blood transfusions or whatever) I think they're perfectly within their rights to say "you're a pushy asshole, and if you won't let me do my job properly then GTFO."

    --
    Porquoi?
  30. Re:as well they by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The problem is a thorny one of liability and ethics. Being forced by law to take responsibility for a patient that specifically refuses to take your medical advice is not a solution.

    I have had (dental) patients in the past who give me a list of requirements on their first visit - no x-rays, no fluoride, no amalgam, etc. Those patients are gently shown the door. I may not necessarily disagree with their reasoning but the trust necessary for an effective doctor-patient clearly does not exist from the start.

    And who knows what cockamamie lawsuits they'll file? I've actually had patients insinuate that they will sue if treatment doesn't happen exactly as they expect. Buh bye.

    Not worth the headaches.

  31. Re:Consider me fired. by oh_my_080980980 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Actually it's more dangerous when you are an adult then when you are young.

  32. Wrong! by Radtastic · · Score: 5, Informative

    "Adults have the greatest risk for dying from chickenpox, with infants having the next highest risk. Males (both boys and men) have a higher risk for a severe case of chickenpox than females. Children who catch chickenpox from family members are likely to have a more severe case than if they caught it outside the home. The older the child, the higher the risk for a more severe case...." http://health.nytimes.com/health/guides/disease/chickenpox/possible-complications.html

    --
    You stereotypers are all the same...
  33. This attitude can be found in other doctors, too by BenEnglishAtHome · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I love my endocrinologist. I have diabetes and she's superbly competent at helping me manage it.

    However, her initial speech to patients is fairly straightforward.

    "We'll discuss alternatives and your specific circumstances. Then I'll tell you what to do. You'll do it. I'll know if you do what I tell you because you'll bring in your meter and I'll download all the info in it at every checkup. I'll do the blood work. I'll know if you're following my directions. If you don't follow my directions, you won't have to worry about disappointing me. You'll just have to find a new endocrinologist because I'll fire you as my patient."

    I appreciated the straightforwardness. I think some patients would be mighty put off but that's why some doctors and some patients are a bad mix and should go their separate ways.

  34. Re:as well they by snowgirl · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Tin-foil comes in maroon? Can I get it in purple instead?

    On a side note, I agree that it's the doctors' right to see what patients they want (as long as the decision is not based on certain criteria like race/color/religion/gender/etc). Stupidity is not a protected group.

    No less, it's reasonable for a doctor to be able to refuse to treat a patient who continuously refuses treatment. At that point, the doctor is simply saying, well, if you don't want me to treat you, then I won't treat you.

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    WARNING! This girl exceeds the MAXIMUM SAFE standards established by the FDA for BRATTINESS
  35. Re:those dangerous fools have statistics behind th by jklovanc · · Score: 5, Informative
  36. Re:Bad reason to get vaccinated by Rich0 · · Score: 5, Informative

    why should I take even the tiny risk of having a vaccination to protect some idiot who refuses to get vaccinated themselves?

    Simple - some people are unable to be vaccinated due to perfectly valid medical issues. They still benefit from herd immunity as long as the herd actually has it.

    One person might be highly allergic to eggs and might not be able to get some particular vaccine as a result. However, if everybody around them isn't allergic to eggs wouldn't it be nice if they were vaccinated, thus greatly reducing the chance that any of them will get sick?

    Some medical issues really do involve a tragedy of the commons. One is vaccination. Another big one is antibiotic use.

  37. Re:...why? by ShavedOrangutan · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I can see this as nothing but a good thing for a doctor.

    I've always wondered why dentists give away toothbrushes. You'd think they would hand out candy after the visit.

    --
    Godaddy is a scam and a ripoff.
  38. Re:not "idiot" but "questioning" by snowgirl · · Score: 4, Informative

    BTW, some of these diseases really are quite extinct in the US.

    And that's why US children no longer get a smallpox or polio vaccine. When the disease has been eradicated, we don't vaccinate against it anymore. However, the stuff we're still vaccinating for is still kicking, and that's why we still vaccinate for it!

    --
    WARNING! This girl exceeds the MAXIMUM SAFE standards established by the FDA for BRATTINESS
  39. Re:Always torn on these cases by slimjim8094 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What the fuck? "they're causing many narcolepsy cases" - [citation needed] to the max. I don't even know of any mechanism by which a vaccine could have anything to do with narcolepsy.

    Then you go and revise history. It was a pandemic, even though not everybody got sick (pandemic has a specific definition that was met). And it was on par with the average flu in terms of mortality, but it was affecting the young and able-bodied disproportionately - a characteristic it shared with the 1918 flu epidemic, which was also an H1N1 strain. Young and able-bodied are both more resistant to infection in the first place, and more capable of spreading it, so there was absolutely cause for alarm.

    It was probably overhyped (mostly by the media) but it was not "many kids getting their lives ruined". From what I can find, one person died from an anaphylactic reaction, but that says more about the environment in which they were vaccinated because we know how to treat anaphylaxis. About 30 people had temporary problems possibly resulting from the vaccine, but they all recovered.

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  40. Re:Consider me fired. by hipp5 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    My mom is a nurse, and her best friend was paralyzed from the flu shot. How's that instead of a @#$@ three days of down time?

    And for every person paralyzed by the flu shot a greater number have been saved by it. No one is saying vaccines don't have risks, but that the benefits outweigh those risks. There's a reason we look at statistics instead of anecdotes.

  41. Re:not necessarily autism by rahvin112 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Do you have any idea how many children and others were killed by these virulent diseases? To put this in perspective, before vaccinations the list of top ten killers in this country was entirely populated by diseases which today have vaccinations. That same list today is comprised of heart disease and cancer instead of measles and mumps. These diseases kill, and when they don't kill they maim severely, or sterilize, or blind, or like polio make you paraplegic including freezing your lungs so that you have to spend the rest of your life in an Iron lung or you die.

    Of course there is a higher mortality, some of the side effects of vaccinations are death. You CAN get real polio from the vaccine. But the odds of a side effect or getting the actual disease are incredibly small, in the range of 1 in a million or billion. But the odds of catastrophic results from not getting the vaccine are FAR higher. With all these vaccination avoiders there is going to be an pandemic some day and all those people who didn't vaccinate their kids are going to be burying them. Almost every one of these childhood vaccinations are diseases that kill adults that get the disease. We've already had several major outbreaks of measles that have killed a significant number of people, I vaguely recall one in a nearby state that killed nearly 700 people. If the CDC and state health officials hadn't quarantined people it probably would have went pandemic. Herd immunity is gone at this point, if you are relying on it to protect your kid you have no idea how many people are refusing vaccines.

  42. Re:It is about time by gstoddart · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's not that simple. Research is showing a correlation to the large number of vaccines as a child and autism. We don't know for sure.

    Horseshit.

    The doctor who made that claim has been shown as being fraudulent.

    There is simply no reputable evidence to believe this. But it's still propagated by people who refuse to accept that the evidence was fabricated -- but now that people believe it, you can't get rid of it.

    --
    Lost at C:>. Found at C.
  43. Re:Bad reason to get vaccinated by SuricouRaven · · Score: 4, Informative

    Because willfully endangering other people to eliminate a tiny, tiny risk of discomfort to yourself makes you, basically, a selfish dick.

  44. Re:Consider me fired. by thewiz · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It can also be deadly. A friend of mine gave me the Chicken Pox which, within 2 weeks, lead to bacterial endocarditis, spinal meningitis, pneumonia and Reye's syndrome. Note that the US didn't start using the Chicken Pox vaccine until 1995; it hit me in the 1970's. Fortunately my parents found the doctors I needed and I'm alive today.

    I wonder how many children die every year because their parents don't want to get them vacinated.

    --
    If "disco" means "I learn" in Latin, does "discothèque" mean "I learn technology"?
  45. Vaccine refusers generally bad patients anyway by goffster · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They tend to "know better what is right for my child" on many
    other issues. Their children come in sicker than others because
    of the herbal remedies they try first and fail. "I thought
    I'd clear up the pneumonia with elderberry extract"

  46. Re:Consider me fired. by iamhassi · · Score: 5, Informative

    Chicken pox tends to be more severe the younger you get it.

    Screw Chicken Pox, I'm worried about whooping cough, which is on the rise in the US since 2004, no doubt due to people refusing vaccines. Ten California infants died in 2010 from whooping cough even though we've had a vaccine for whooping cough since the 1920s.

    The man that started the whole "vaccines kill", Dr. Andrew Wakefield, lost his medical license when it was discovered Wakefield was paid by lawyers who wanted to sue vaccine manufactures to publish a fake report claiming vaccines kill children.

    Parents refusing vaccines are misinformed. Doctors are asking parents to do something to save their children's lives and protect their other patients and the parents refuse. I'd tell them not to come back too.

    --
    my karma will be here long after I'm gone
  47. Re:Consider me fired. by Jhon · · Score: 4, Informative

    As someone who HAD the chickenpox as an adult, I ended up in the hospital with lesions on my lungs and most of my mucosal tissue. I had them under my eyelids, on the bottoms of my feet, under my toe nails -- in fact, there was just one place I did *NOT* have them -- and for that I am eternally grateful.

    Actually, while I was sick with them (106 fever), I saw on the news the NEW Chickenpox vaccine announced. I threw my shoe at the TV.

    They ARE dangerous and potentially deadly.

  48. Re:Consider me fired. by adjuster · · Score: 4, Informative

    Let's make it a law because after all we wouldn't want people to believe they own their OWN bodies, and actually have the temerity to say what does or does not go into it.

    Yes. I want this. I want to live in a society where people are forced to give up this bullshit "freedom" to refuse vaccines. I'll vote for that all day long. If you don't like it then I don't want you living in my society. Go somewhere else. Assuming we have vaccines that are scientifically vetted and tested I'd be happy to live in a society where vaccination is mandatory. Maybe you think my opinion is strong but THE FUCKING IDIOTS WHO REFUSE TO VACCINATE THEIR CHILDREN ARE MAKING THE WORLD LESS SAFE FOR EVERYONE ELSE. They're the selfish bastards...

    I.E. if someone else was to get sick via a non-vaccinated person then in theory they were also NOT vaccinated. Hence they only people suffering would be those who chose not to get the shot.

    You're a fucking idiot. You don't understand "herd immunity". Infants can't be vaccinated immediately, but they're susceptible to disease. Some people have health problems that prevent them from being vaccinated. Sometimes the vaccines just don't work. When the vast majority of people (the "herd") are vaccinated then enough immunity exists to prevent the disease from gaining a foothold and spreading. As soon as there are enough people who aren't vaccinated herd immunity breaks down and the world becomes unsafe for infants, those who cannot be vaccinated, or the unlucky few who the vaccine doesn't work on. If my child died as a result of a preventable disease that they contracted while too young to be vaccinated and I found out they were infected by an the child of an anti-vax nutjob I think I'd have little choice but to kill the anti-vax parents. I'm quite sure I'd have a hard time staying my hand. People who are that anti-social and selfish don't deserve to live.

    --
    The Attitude Adjuster, I hate me, you can too.
  49. Re:Consider me fired. by vlad30 · · Score: 4, Funny

    If my child died as a result of a preventable disease that they contracted while too young to be vaccinated and I found out they were infected by an the child of an anti-vax nutjob I think I'd have little choice but to kill the anti-vax parents. I'm quite sure I'd have a hard time staying my hand.

    Wholeheartedly agree with the above

    People who are that anti-social and selfish don't deserve to live.

    I just felt a shudder in the Force as millions of slashdotters were suddenly silenced

    --
    Your'e all thinking it, I just said it for you
  50. Re:Consider me fired. by hipp5 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Nice straw man.

    According to Wikipedia, "On average 41,400 people died each year in the United States between 1979 and 2001 from influenza."