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To Vaccinate Or Not to Vaccinate: a Qualitative Description of the Information Available on Popular Search Engines Regarding the Vaccine Debate
Butler University Digital Commons @ Butler University Undergraduate Honors Thesis Collection Undergraduate Scholarship 2016 To Vaccinate or Not To Vaccinate: A Qualitative Description of the Information Available on Popular Search Engines Regarding the Vaccine Debate. Madeline Rhinesmith Butler University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.butler.edu/ugtheses Part of the Communication Technology and New Media Commons, and the Health Communication Commons Recommended Citation Rhinesmith, Madeline, "To Vaccinate or Not To Vaccinate: A Qualitative Description of the Information Available on Popular Search Engines Regarding the Vaccine Debate." (2016). Undergraduate Honors Thesis Collection. 343. https://digitalcommons.butler.edu/ugtheses/343 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Undergraduate Scholarship at Digital Commons @ Butler University. It has been accepted for inclusion in Undergraduate Honors Thesis Collection by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Butler University. For more information, please contact [email protected]. To Vaccinate or Not To Vaccinate: A Qualitative Description of the Information Available on Popular Search Engines Regarding the Vaccine Debate. A Thesis Presented to the Department of Science, Technology and Society College of Liberal Arts in Sciences and The Honors Program of Butler University In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for Graduation Honors Madeline Louise Rhinesmith April 25, 2016 TABLE OF CONTENTS ABSTRACT 1 INTRODUCTION 2 LITERATURE REVIEW 6 METHODS 12 TABLE 1 15 RESULTS 21 TABLE 2 22 DISCUSSION 23 TABLE 3 24 CONCLUSION 30 REFERENCE LIST 32 Abstract The current study looks at the assumption that that more information, along with improved access to that information could lead to more informed decisions through evaluating and critically reflecting on the vaccine debate. -
(No Jab, No Pay) Bill 2015 Submission
16 October, 2015 The Committee Secretary Senate Standing Committees on Community Affairs PO Box 6100 Parliament House CANBERRA ACT 2600 Dear Committee Secretary, Re: Submission to the Senate Community Affairs Legislation Committee Inquiry into the Social Services Legislation Amendment (No Jab, No Pay) Bill 2015 I am a Solicitor who has practiced in areas of law that have pertained to the issue of vaccination. Consequently, having conversed with professionals in various scientific and medical fields of practice on this issue and prepared matters for hearing based on their expertise, I make the following submission to emphasize the extent that the proposed legislation breaches fundamental human rights and the government’s responsibilities to it’s families and children. According to the Social Services Legislation Amendment (No jab, No pay) Bill 2015 Explanatory Memorandum and Statement of Compatibility with Human Rights: “This Bill will introduce a 2015 Budget measure relevant to families. This Bill amends the immunisation requirements for child care benefit, child care rebate and the family tax benefit Part A supplement. The changes will tighten the existing immunisation requirements for these payments, reinforcing the importance of immunisation and protecting public health, especially for children. From 1 January 2016, this measure makes these payments conditional on meeting the childhood immunisation requirements for children at all ages. Exemptions will only apply for valid medical reasons, or if the Secretary has determined in writing that a child meets the immunisation requirements. The Secretary will be able to determine that a child meets the immunisation requirements after considering any decision-making principles set out in a legislative instrument made by the Minister. -
The National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program: Awareness, Perception, and Communication Considerations
The National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program: Awareness, Perception, and Communication Considerations Developing a Comprehensive National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program Research Report Presented by Banyan Communications and Altarum Institute For the U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration Division of Vaccine Injury Compensation June 2010 Table of Contents 1. Introduction and Background ................................................................................................................. 1 a. VICP BACKGROUND: RELATED LEGISLATION ................................................................................................. 2 2. Review of the VICP Literature ................................................................................................................. 4 a. METHODOLOGY ............................................................................................................................................. 4 b. VICP PERCEPTION AND REACTION ................................................................................................................ 4 c. VICP MESSAGING AND PROMOTION ............................................................................................................. 7 3. Scan of the Field: VICP Players, Media, and the Online Environment .................................................... 12 a. METHODOLOGY ............................................................................................................................................. 12 b. VICP AND -
Disability in an Age of Environmental Risk by Sarah Gibbons a Thesis
Disablement, Diversity, Deviation: Disability in an Age of Environmental Risk by Sarah Gibbons A thesis presented to the University of Waterloo in fulfillment of the thesis requirement for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in English Waterloo, Ontario, Canada, 2016 © Sarah Gibbons 2016 I hereby declare that I am the sole author of this thesis. This is a true copy of the thesis, including any required final revisions, as accepted by my examiners. I understand that my thesis may be made electronically available to the public. ii Abstract This dissertation brings disability studies and postcolonial studies into dialogue with discourse surrounding risk in the environmental humanities. The central question that it investigates is how critics can reframe and reinterpret existing threat registers to accept and celebrate disability and embodied difference without passively accepting the social policies that produce disabling conditions. It examines the literary and rhetorical strategies of contemporary cultural works that one, promote a disability politics that aims for greater recognition of how our environmental surroundings affect human health and ability, but also two, put forward a disability politics that objects to devaluing disabled bodies by stigmatizing them as unnatural. Some of the major works under discussion in this dissertation include Marie Clements’s Burning Vision (2003), Indra Sinha’s Animal’s People (2007), Gerardine Wurzburg’s Wretches & Jabberers (2010) and Corinne Duyvis’s On the Edge of Gone (2016). The first section of this dissertation focuses on disability, illness, industry, and environmental health to consider how critics can discuss disability and environmental health in conjunction without returning to a medical model in which the term ‘disability’ often designates how closely bodies visibly conform or deviate from definitions of the normal body. -
Autism Financial Aid and Grant Resources
GRANT RESOURCES ACT Today! SOS Program ACT Today! SOS is a program dedicated to supporting the immediate and imperative needs of those impacted with autism. ACT Today! Grant Programs established in 2005 do provide access to vital and effective treatments for autism through our quarterly grant cycles. www.act-today.org/SOS AutismCares AutismCares supports individuals with autism and their families during natural disasters and other catastrophic life events. www.autismcares.org Autism Care and Treatment Today! ACT Today! is a nonprofit501(c)(3) organization whose mission is to increase access to effective autism treatments. Our goal is to help facilitate treatment by providing the necessary resources including funding, information and referrals to individuals with Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASDs) and their families. www.act-today.org Autism Consortium: Raising A Child with an ASD All too often, parents of children with ASD incur unexpected and immense out-of-pocket costs for treatments and services. Through the generosity of foundations and, sometimes, public funding, applicable grants might help parents offset these costs. The Autism Consortium has compiled a list of grant opportunities. Be sure to read each option carefully and understand that specific criteria pertain to each. www.autismconsortium.org Autism Escapes Autism Escapes will serve as an Angel Network for families of children with autism. Its primary purpose is to arrange air travel on private jets for families in need of medical care for their children. www.autismescapes.org Disabled Children's Relief Fund Disabled Children's Relief Fund (DCRF), a non-profit 501(c)(3) organization provides disabled children with assistance to obtain wheelchairs, orthopedic braces, walkers, lifts, hearing aids, eyeglasses, medical equipment, physical therapy, and surgery. -
Anti-Vaccine Activists, Web 2.0, and the Postmodern Paradigm –Anoverview Of
Vaccine 30 (2012) 3778–3789 Contents lists available at SciVerse ScienceDirect Vaccine j ournal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/vaccine Anti-vaccine activists, Web 2.0, and the postmodern paradigm –Anoverview of tactics and tropes used online by the anti-vaccination movement ∗ Anna Kata McMaster University, Psychiatry and Behavioural Neurosciences, 555 Sanatorium Road Hamilton, Ontario, Canada L9C 1C4 a r t i c l e i n f o a b s t r a c t Article history: Websites opposing vaccination are prevalent on the Internet. Web 2.0, defined by interaction and user- Received 26 May 2011 generated content, has become ubiquitous. Furthermore, a new postmodern paradigm of healthcare has Received in revised form emerged, where power has shifted from doctors to patients, the legitimacy of science is questioned, and 25 September 2011 expertise is redefined. Together this has created an environment where anti-vaccine activists are able to Accepted 30 November 2011 effectively spread their messages. Evidence shows that individuals turn to the Internet for vaccination Available online 13 December 2011 advice, and suggests such sources can impact vaccination decisions – therefore it is likely that anti- vaccine websites can influence whether people vaccinate themselves or their children. This overview Keywords: Anti-vaccination examines the types of rhetoric individuals may encounter online in order to better understand why the anti-vaccination movement can be convincing, despite lacking scientific support for their claims. Tactics Health communication Internet and tropes commonly used to argue against vaccination are described. This includes actions such as skew- Postmodernism ing science, shifting hypotheses, censoring dissent, and attacking critics; also discussed are frequently Vaccines made claims such as not being “anti-vaccine” but “pro-safe vaccines”, that vaccines are toxic or unnatural, Web 2.0 and more. -
Responding with Empathy to Parents' Fears of Vaccinations
FeaTURE REVIEW “I’ve Heard Some Things That Scare Me” Responding With Empathy to Parents’ Fears of Vaccinations by Kenneth Haller, MD & Anthony Scalzo, MD had suffered a recent persistent cough for a few weeks but had experienced no fever. Despite her age, the baby had not received any immunizations on the advice of the family’s chiropractor. Abstract The family also said that they had The Lancet’s “read some stuff on the Internet 1998 publication of about shots and autism,” and they “Ileal-lymphoid-nodular felt the baby would be better off not hyperplasia, non-specific colitis, getting immunizations than “taking and pervasive developmental a chance” that vaccines might harm disorder in children” by Andrew her. The baby’s nasopharyngeal swab Wakefield, et. al., positing a was positive for pertussis, as was her causal relationship between follow-up culture. She required oxygen MMR vaccine and autism in by nasal cannula for five days and was children, set off a media storm sent home after she was weaned to and galvanized the anti-vaccine room air. The parents were counseled movement. In this paper, that the baby would likely still have a centuries-old fears of vaccination cough for many weeks to come. and the history of autism as a This was one of three pertussis medical diagnosis are considered, cases seen by the clinic medicine and an affective, family-centered attending during one month on approach to dealing with inpatient service, the first time in his parental fears by physicians is career that he had seen more than one proposed. -
AUTISM ONE / GENERATION RESCUE 2010 CONFERENCE MAY 24-30, 2010 Chicago, Illinois
GENERATION RESCUE AUTISMONE AND GENERATION RESCUE autism is reversible JOIN FORCES TO HELP CHILDREN Chicago 2010 Conference Monday, May 24 – Sunday, May 30 AUTISM ONE / GENERATION RESCUE 2010 CONFERENCE MAY 24-30, 2010 chicago, Illinois REDEFINING AUTISM In order to find effective solutions, you need to correctly define the problem. Mainstream medicine hasn’t accurately identified the problems underlying an autism diagnosis. The doctors, researchers, and therapists at the Autism One/Generation Rescue conference correctly define the problem. That way, they can help you, your child, and your family find the solutions. KEYNOTE SPEAKERS: JENNY McCARTHY & SARAH SCHEFLEN The most comprehensive autism conference special features for 2010 include: internationally, the Autism One/Generation Rescue conference gives you choices from content areas such as: l prediction/prevention track l expanded seizures presentation track l biomedical research and treatments l expanded pANDAs coverage l educational, behavioral, communication, l environmental issues & chronic and adjunct therapies diseases symposium l complementary alternative medicine l expanded advocacy track & training l government, legal, and personal issues and advocacy l Student scholars for Autism program l adolescent, adult, and Asperger’s issues Choose from among 140+ speakers including: Daniel Barth, phD Brian King, LcsW Narasimham parinandi, phD Ken Bock, MD Miroslav Kovacevic, MD William parker, phD Britt collins, Ms, OTR/L susan Kratz, OTR, csT Alexander Rotenberg, MD, phD sydney Finegold, MD M. elizabeth Latimer, MD Kendal stewart, MD Jay Gordon, MD Jeffrey Lewine, phD Kyle van Dyke, MD Louise Kuo Habakus, HHp Roy Leonardi, edD Anju Usman, MD Martha Herbert, MD, phD valerie Maclean Andrew Wakefield, MD Laura Hewitson, phD Beth Alison Maloney William Walsh, phD Harumi Jyonouchi, MD Woody McGinnis, MD Amy Yasko, phD Jerry Kartzinel, MD Nancy Mullan, MD savely Yurkovsky, MD HOpe Is ALWAYs ReAL .. -
Environmental Health Issue
FIFTH EDITION 2006, Volume 45 R5 Environmental Health and Autism In thIs Issue: Time To GeT a Grip By martha r. Herbert, m.D., ph.D. Beyond Behavior—Biomedical Diagnoses in Autism spectrum Disorders By Margaret L. Bauman, M.D. transforming the Public Debate on neurotoxicants By Elise Miller, M.Ed. ADVERTISEMENT ADVERTISEMENT Autism does not have to be a life sentence You’re not about to give up on your child. Neither Are We. Since , the Autism Treatment Center of America™ has provided innovative training programs for parents and professionals caringifor children challenged by Autism Spectrum Disorders and related developmental difficulties. • Practical Tools • Powerful Results • Limitless Hope c Help your child improve in all areas of over p learning, development, communication and hoto skill acquisition. : © W I Join us for our internationally-acclaimed ll T ERR Son-Rise Program® Start-Up, a y comprehensive weeklong training program for parents and professionals. We don’t put limits on the possibilities for your child. Free 25-Minute Initial Call 877-766-7473 We’ll give you the keys to unlock their world. HOME OF THE SON-RISE PROGRAM® SINCE 1983 South Undermountain Road Sheffield, MA - USA Telephone: -- • E-mail: [email protected] www.autismtreatment.com Copyright © 2006 by The Option Institute & Fellowship. All rights reserved. 02.06-6 CONTENTS December 2006 page 18 SpOTlIGHT Time to Get A Grip By marTHa r. HerBerT, m.D., pH.D. Does an environmental role in autism make sense? How do we decide? And if environment is involved in autism, what do we do about it? These are challenging questions. -
The Thimerosal Controversy
The Thimerosal Controversy Aimee Sutherland, VRG Research Assistant April 2013 Background In the early 1920s, a major public health concern was vaccine contamination with bacteria and other germs, which could result in the death of children receiving the vaccines from tainted vials. In the book “The Hazards of Immunization”, Sir Graham S. Wilson depicts an occurrence of contamination that happened in Australia in 1928 in which twelve out of twenty-one children died after receiving the vaccine for diphtheria due to multiple staphylococcal abscesses and toxemia (FDA). This incident spurred the development of preservatives for multi-dose vials of vaccine. In 1928, Eli Lilly was the first pharmaceutical company to introduce thimerosal, an organomercury compound that is approximately 50% mercury by weight, as a preservative that would thwart microbial growth (FDA). After its introduction as a germocide, thimerosal was often challenged for its efficacy rather than its safety. The American Medical Association (AMA) published an article that questioned the effectiveness of the organomercury compounds over the inorganic mercury ones (Baker, 245). In 1938 manufacturers were required to submit safety-testing information to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Although preservatives had already been incorporated into many vaccines, it was not until 1968 that preservatives were required for multi-dose vials in the United States Code of Federal Regulations (FDA). In 1970s the American population, increasingly concerned about environmental contamination with heavy metals, began to have reservations about the safety of organomercury and the controversy regarding thimerosal ensued after. The Controversy In 1990s, the use of thimerosal as a preservative became controversial and was targeted as a possible cause of autism because of its mercury content. -
Dear Committee Secretary, Senate Standing Committees on Community Affairs
From: To: Community Affairs, Committee (SEN) Subject: Social Services Legislation Amendment (No Jab, No Pay) Bill 2015 - Submission Date: Thursday, 1 October 2015 12:31:52 AM Social Services Legislation Amendment (No Jab, No Pay) Bill 2015 - Submission Dear Committee Secretary, Senate Standing Committees on Community Affairs I am writing in response to the proposed legislation that would mean parents making a conscientious choice around vaccination would no longer be eligible for Family Assistance. Firstly there is no such evidence or ‘science’ to prove that this move would decrease the level of contractable childhood illnesses at all in Australia. Furthermore there are scientists and experts in the field who are questioning the safety and efficacy of vaccines and I put to you that where there is risk and where there are questions there must be a choice. To disregard such information and questions marks definitive changes in our freedoms as we know them now. And this poses fundamental questions of human rights and needs to be considered more deeply. I believe vaccinations have a place and can be used responsibly to slow disease where necessary. I am not saying I don’t believe in them. And I am not saying that I don’t believe in the science. I don’t believe all the science is being represented by the mainstream media and considered by the Australian government. I will firstly address efficacy and secondly vaccine injury, both with direct quotes and references from doctors and scientists and reputable investigative journalists. NY Times 25th November 2013. “But scientists say the problem of surging whooping cough cases has more to do with flaws in the current vaccines than with parents’ resistance. -
Autism Organizations Updated 9-21-17
Autism Speaks (US) https://www.autismspeaks.org/ Sponsors autism research and conducts awareness and outreach activities aimed at families, governments, and the public Autism Speaks Canada http://www.autismspeaks.ca/ Autism Society https://www.autism-society.org/ Provides advocacy, education, information and referral, support, and community at national, state and local levels. Autism Science Foundation http://autismsciencefoundation.org/ Mission is to support autism research by providing funding and other assistance to scientists and organizations conducting, facilitating, publicizing and disseminating autism research. Autistic Self Advocacy http://autisticadvocacy.org/ Seeks to advance the Network principles of the disability rights movement with regard to autism. Run by and for autistic people. Autism Research Institute https://www.autism.com/ Mission is to improve the health and well- being of people on the autism spectrum through research and the education of professionals, those who are affected, and their families. Autism Cares Foundation http://autismcaresfoundation.org/ Guiding vision is to enrich the lives of those with autism. Global Autism Project www.globalautismproject.org/ Trains teachers to work with children with autism globally. National Autism Association http://nationalautismassociation.org The leading resource on autism-related wandering prevention and response. Temple Grandin’s Resources http://www.templegrandin.com/ Autistic teacher, animal trainer, author, holds Ph.D Asperger/Autism Network http://www.aane.org/ providing information, education, community, support, and advocacy Asperger 101 https://aspergers101.com/ provide optimum support and expanding opportunities for lifelong growth and fulfillment Spectrum News https://spectrumnews.org/ News and expert opinion on autism research. Autism Citizen https://autismcitizen.org/ Create acceptance of autism through education, public speaking, conferences, etc.