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Isn’t it too late for a lot of and/or some of the current vaccines?The reason why vaccines that don’t use human cell lines haven’t been developed is lack of $$$.
If we Catholics truly…TRULY…want to push for the development of vaccines with no moral issues, then we need to be willing to chip in the bucks to the research facilities.
I’m not saying this to be a smart aleck or to belittle the “non-vaccinators.” I think it should be a legitimate project for the Catholic Church in the U.S.–raising funds through our local parishes that would go to research facilities and researchers who would use those funds to develop vaccines that do not use the cell lines of aborted fetuses.
That’s only a small part of the problem. When last I checked, there were only 2 of the long list of “required” childhood vaccines that were not also available from a morally required source and one of those is Chicken Pox, a vaccine that is widely debated for lots of reasons besides the source of the vaccine itself. In almost all cases, a patient (or parent) can request a different manufacturer’s vaccine be given and not have to deal with the ethical problems of aborted child sources. There is no ethical issue with human lines, only those lines that are obtained immorally (ie from abortions).The reason why vaccines that don’t use human cell lines haven’t been developed is lack of $$$.
If we Catholics truly…TRULY…want to push for the development of vaccines with no moral issues, then we need to be willing to chip in the bucks to the research facilities.
I’m not saying this to be a smart aleck or to belittle the “non-vaccinators.” I think it should be a legitimate project for the Catholic Church in the U.S.–raising funds through our local parishes that would go to research facilities and researchers who would use those funds to develop vaccines that do not use the cell lines of aborted fetuses.
Precisely.That’s only a small part of the problem. When last I checked, there were only 2 of the long list of “required” childhood vaccines that were not also available from a morally required source and one of those is Chicken Pox, a vaccine that is widely debated for lots of reasons besides the source of the vaccine itself. In almost all cases, a patient (or parent) can request a different manufacturer’s vaccine be given and not have to deal with the ethical problems of aborted child sources. There is no ethical issue with human lines, only those lines that are obtained immorally (ie from abortions).
A coordinated effort to increase awareness of these ethically sourced vaccines should be a priority, not just of the Church but of everyone. Parents should have information so that they can make informed choices.
Just curious, when did you check, what are the 2 vaccines, and what is your source? Because everything I read says there are 3: rubella, hep A, and varicella. Thanks.That’s only a small part of the problem. When last I checked, there were only 2 of the long list of “required” childhood vaccines that were not also available from a morally required source and one of those is Chicken Pox, a vaccine that is widely debated for lots of reasons besides the source of the vaccine itself. In almost all cases, a patient (or parent) can request a different manufacturer’s vaccine be given and not have to deal with the ethical problems of aborted child sources. There is no ethical issue with human lines, only those lines that are obtained immorally (ie from abortions).
A coordinated effort to increase awareness of these ethically sourced vaccines should be a priority, not just of the Church but of everyone. Parents should have information so that they can make informed choices.
I used Children of God for Life as my source. I don’t recommend their site but they keep up to date on the vaccine availability issue. The only ones they list with no ethical alternative, updated Jan 2015 are varicella and shingles as well as a respiratory immunization that I have never seen on the list of “required” vaccines. Some of the alternates are not available in all countries. But that doesn’t mean they **couldn’t be **if there was a demand for them.Just curious, when did you check, what are the 2 vaccines, and what is your source? Because everything I read says there are 3: rubella, hep A, and varicella. Thanks.
I use Children of God too, and according to their info (cogforlife.org/vaccineListOrigFormat.pdf), currently in the United States there are no ethical alternatives for varicella, hepatitis A, and rubella. Although it is true that ethical alternatives do exist for rubella and hep A, most American parents are not able to take their children to Japan or Europe to get a vaccine. So while we can and should protest and petition for the ethical rubella and hep A to be available here, in the meantime there are effectively no alternatives to those shots in the US.I used Children of God for Life as my source. I don’t recommend their site but they keep up to date on the vaccine availability issue. The only ones they list with no ethical alternative, updated Jan 2015 are varicella and shingles as well as a respiratory immunization that I have never seen on the list of “required” vaccines. Some of the alternates are not available in all countries. But that doesn’t mean they **couldn’t be **if there was a demand for them.
That’s why I said education was key. If parents were requesting the ethical vaccines, doctors would get them and drug companies would market them.
The use of such vaccines, it said, carries out “a form of very remote mediate material cooperation” with evil, however practicing Catholics are permitted to use the vaccines, it said, in the absence of ethical alternatives.
The academy said Catholics have a responsibility to push for the creation of morally just, alternative vaccines, but it also said they should not to sacrifice the common good of public health and the well-being of young children and pregnant women because there is no substitute.
I do not believe they are a significant voice. When one looks up any group, agency or medical organization that is established and is engaged in all fields of medicine (not just organized for anti-vax purposes) the opinion is unanimous. If one is doubtful, then simply look at the number of polio, smallpox and rubella cases over the century as vaccinations became universal, and before this antivax thing started.There are those in the medical community who believe that vaccines offer little or no benefit.
Here is the SNOPES report explaining this internet rumor:Reportedly according to the CDC the recorded number of deaths from measles in the U.S.A. since the year of Our Lord 2004 is . . .
cdc.gov/measles/vaccination.htmlMeasles is still common in other countries. The virus is highly contagious and can spread rapidly in areas where people are not vaccinated. Worldwide, an estimated 20 million people get measles and 146,000 people die from the disease each year—that equals about 400 deaths every day or about 17 deaths every hour.