MMR vaccinated in 1985. Within two weeks was deaf on my left side from encephalitis.
Over the last 40 years have personally met more than 100 people with the same deafness from the same vaccination in that year, across multiple countries (UK, ZA, OZ, NZ, Canada).
It was this vaccine injury that made me avoid the MRNA jab until there was long term data (+-4 years). Didn't need to wait that long to make my mind up on its safety.
> MMR vaccinated in 1985. Within two weeks was deaf on my left side from encephalitis.
Encephalopathy has been reported after MMR vaccination at a rate of less than 1 per 1 000 000 doses administered. Epidemiologic reviews conclude that the observed rate is no higher than background rates of encephalitis in unvaccinated populations, making a causal link uncertain.
Measles infection itself carries a risk of encephalitis in about 1 in 1 000 cases—roughly 1 000 times higher than the vaccine-associated rate. Beyond acute encephalitis, measles can also lead to late‐onset “subacute sclerosing panencephalitis” (SSPE), a fatal degenerative brain disease years after infection.
Something worth bearing in mind with the risk of catching Measles: "Vaccine Amnesia"
https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20211112-the-people-with-...
So aside from the direct risk of the disease, the indirect risk is that all your prior immunisations are now possibly compromised.
MMR vaccinated in 1985. Within two weeks was deaf on my left side from encephalitis.
Over the last 40 years have personally met more than 100 people with the same deafness from the same vaccination in that year, across multiple countries (UK, ZA, OZ, NZ, Canada).
It was this vaccine injury that made me avoid the MRNA jab until there was long term data (+-4 years). Didn't need to wait that long to make my mind up on its safety.
Really dodged a bullet avoiding that trash.
> MMR vaccinated in 1985. Within two weeks was deaf on my left side from encephalitis.
Encephalopathy has been reported after MMR vaccination at a rate of less than 1 per 1 000 000 doses administered. Epidemiologic reviews conclude that the observed rate is no higher than background rates of encephalitis in unvaccinated populations, making a causal link uncertain.
Measles infection itself carries a risk of encephalitis in about 1 in 1 000 cases—roughly 1 000 times higher than the vaccine-associated rate. Beyond acute encephalitis, measles can also lead to late‐onset “subacute sclerosing panencephalitis” (SSPE), a fatal degenerative brain disease years after infection.