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Do not get the whooping cough vaccine in pregnancy and read the packaging

20 replies

lpcstudent · 13/03/2014 09:58

The currently administered vaccine called Repevax is recommended during pregnancy by the NHS. It can cause all sorts of problems. The packaging of the manufacturer( can be found via google) states that it is not recommended during pregnancy and there have not been any tests done to prove its safety and efficacy. You may wish to join this site;
www.facebook.com/pages/Stillbirth-informationsupport-Whooping-Cough-Vaccine/157729507744686?fref=ts

OP posts:
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Kanyewest123 · 12/06/2014 10:42

I have had five shots of it and am perfectly fun!!!

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mousmous · 12/06/2014 10:46

no medicines is tried on pregnant women. would not be ethical. however there is data with many but the package leaflet tends to be on the cautious side.
if worried talk to gp or pharmacist who have more scientific info.

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rinabean · 12/06/2014 10:57

Whooping cough also not recommended

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OrangeMochaFrappucino · 12/06/2014 10:58

I'm fun too, kanye :) I had the vaccine and have a healthy 9wo. I weighed up the risks and it seemed like the right choice.

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fantastickfox · 14/06/2014 07:59

I had the vaccine with last two pregnancies and everything was fine. Personally I would much rather protect my baby against whooping cough, as I'm sure would most people. Scaremongering over vaccines is something which leads to epidemics like the measles epidemic in Wales recently in which people did actually die.

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magpiegin · 14/06/2014 08:04

A quick google shows there is currently a Whooping cough epidemic in California. I'm being vaccinated on Thursday, no way am I going to put my tiny baby at risk of such a horrible illness when she is born.

Some lovely scare mongering there OP.

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Eminybob · 14/06/2014 08:24

I haven't read your link, but from the title of it I assume it's some sort of still birth as a result of the vaccine scaremongering? Am I right?

As far as I know, every nhs trust recommends and administers this vaccine to pregnant women to protect their unborn children against potentially a devastating illness. I would like to think that if there was a verifiable link to still borns then this would have been investigated. These people are health care professionals, they know what they are doing.

Please don't post this kind of shit on this site op, where there are thousands of pregnant women who you have either already had the vaccine, so may now therefore be panicking, or ones who haven't so now may choose not to and put their babies at risk of getting whooping cough.

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Peanut14 · 14/06/2014 08:37

I agree with EminyBob it is very irresponsible to post misleading information like that. I also got the vaccine, the pros far outweighed the cons.

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meditrina · 14/06/2014 08:40

Sadly, some women will have stillborn babies.

When a vax programme is in place, some of those women will have been immunisaed.

This does not prove a causal link.

In no cases (AFAIK) has the vaccine been implicated as a factor.

Nor has there been a rise in the number of still births.

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allisgood1 · 14/06/2014 08:47

The vaccine hasn't been used on pregnant women long enough to determine it's safety fully. Women should be aware of this and also do your own research on the number of cases of whooping cough in your area. Then make an informed decision.

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slightlyglitterstained · 14/06/2014 08:56

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

meditrina · 14/06/2014 09:01

It's easy to find the number of cases (HPA produces weekly NOIDS reports) and the number of deaths.

Immunisation isn't recommended when the number of cases is low enough for the epidemiologists to conclude there's no significant risk. I've no idea how a typical person without medical (and ideally epidemiological) experience or qualification would know how to judge the risk (or indeed run the modelling).

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AnythingNotEverything · 14/06/2014 09:01

Utter bollocks OP. I trust the NHS. Whooping cough is horrible for small babies.

If anyone is concerned they should speak to their midwife or GP, not trawl the internet for anecdotes dressed up as data, which is what these anti vaccine reports tend to be.

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magpiegin · 14/06/2014 09:06

If anyone is concerned about the vaccine after reading this please do not base whatever decision you make on the link from the OP. Do your own independent research and speak to your GP and midwife not some biased page on the internet.

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Trooperslane · 14/06/2014 09:09

I had it.

I have a very healthy 10 month old.

I trust the NHS too.

Agree very irresponsible OP Hmm

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Me23 · 14/06/2014 09:22

Here is a leaflet about the vaccine from gov.uk. www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/138194/DoH_8153_-whoopingCough_factsheet_12pp_07.pdf

Agree op irresponsible.

I'm a midwife, I'm pregnant and will be having the vaccine.

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HoneyBadger80 · 20/06/2014 19:24

hi all

Just wanted to add I had the whooping cough injection and it made me personally VERY ill.

It affected my asthma and gave me severe flu type illness which the flu jab which I had been warned about never gave me. I had it in April and have just been prescribed codeine linctus as I still cant shake the persistant cough it allowed to settle on my chest.

Not sure if I had the choice to have it again whether I would or not- I cant stress just How ill it made me....but as others have said...id rather suffer a horrid couple of months as an adult than potentially put my baby at risk.

If I felt like death as an adult then I don't think I could imagine what it would be like to suffer it as a newborn.#

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HoneyBadger80 · 20/06/2014 19:29

Just noticed it was with reference to stillborn babies being affected by the injection- should have read the post properly first.
Strike my response from the record!

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Motherof6nanof2 · 28/09/2015 16:24

While you all trust, the deaths keep rising, maybe you should research whooping cough and see nearly 100% of babies/children catch it off their parents or family who have been vaccinated. Plenty of studies to show it sheds and new studies showing stillbirth has risen.
Pregnancy adequate human data on use during pregnancy are not available
Effects on fertility
No human data are available
Use in Lactation
The safety of BOOSTRIX when administered to breast-feeding women has not been evaluated.
It is unknown whether BOOSTRIX is excreted in human breast milk
Genotoxicity
BOOSTRIX has not been evaluated for genotoxicity
Carcinogenicity
BOOSTRIX has not been evaluated for carcinogenicity
au.gsk.com/media/217189/boostrix_preservative_free_pi_006_approved.pdf

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babyiwantabump · 28/09/2015 16:32

I suppose you wouldn't give your kids the MMR either Hmm

Awful scare mongering .

I had the whooping cough vaccination when pregnant with my DS now 21 months and will have it again in this pregnancy .

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