
How To Minimise The
Risks Of Vaccination
by Dr Vernon Coleman and Donna
Antoinette Coleman
1. If you (or a
member of your family) are having a vaccination, make sure you keep details of
the date and time and location at which the vaccination was performed, the name
of the doctor giving the vaccination, the name of the vaccine, the manufacturer
and the lot number. All this information will be invaluable if you develop
health problems as a result of the vaccination.
2. Before you allow a
doctor to vaccinate you or your child ask these essential questions (and write
down the answers):
a) How dangerous is the disease for which this vaccine
is being given?
b) How effective is the vaccine?
c) How dangerous is the
vaccine?
d) Which patients should not be given the vaccine?
3. Ask
your doctor to give you written confirmation that he/she has personally
investigated the risks and benefits of the vaccine and that, having looked at
the evidence, he/she believes that the vaccine is safe and essential for
you.
4. Before your child is inoculated make sure that he/she is in very
good health as a healthy immune system will increase their chances of surviving
the vaccination without any brain damage or ill effects. If your child is not
well or has recently had an illness, it is best to wait until your child has
made a full recovery before having them vaccinated.
5. We suggest that
you videotape your child for a few months before each vaccination and for
several months afterwards. If your child develops autism then you have the
evidence to show that it may have been caused by a vaccination.
Taken from Health Secrets Doctors Share With Their Families
by Vernon Coleman & Donna Antoinette Coleman, published by the European
Medical Journal at £12.99 and available from the shop on this website and from
all good bookshops everywhere.
Copyright Vernon Coleman 2005
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