Sawbones: A Marital Tour of Misguided Medicine - Sawbones: Medical Update: Vaccines

Episode Date: September 9, 2025

With all the changes going on in the CDC, Dr. Sydnee and Justin check back in with an update on vaccines and vaccine mandates, as well as dispelling some common vaccine myths that unfortunately come u...p again and again.Music: "Medicines" by The Taxpayers https://taxpayers.bandcamp.com/Equality Florida: https://www.eqfl.org/

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Sawbones is a show about medical history, and nothing the hosts say should be taken as medical advice or opinion. It's for fun. Can't you just have fun for an hour and not try to diagnose your mystery boil? We think you've earned it. Just sit back, relax, and enjoy a moment of distraction from that weird growth. You're worth it. All right. Sorry is about some books.
Starting point is 00:00:30 One, two, one, two, three, four. Two, three, three, we came across a pharmacy with its windows blasted out. Pushed on through the broken glass and had ourselves a look around. The medicines, the medicines, the Escal and McCormack. For the mouth Hello everybody and welcome to Sawbones Marital Tour of Misguided Medicine I'm your co-host, Justin McElroy.
Starting point is 00:01:10 And I'm Sid, it'll come as no surprise to any of our listeners that it's been a busy time in here in the States. Here in the States. Here in the States. I bet it's probably been busy. That's true. That's true.
Starting point is 00:01:26 That's not an exclusionary thing. Yeah. to be busy other places, but things have been on the political front changing quite a bit here in the stateside. It has. And I will say on a personal note, it has been very busy here, which is why we weren't with you last week. Can I blame you for being out of town? And Labor Day. It's both. Yeah. It was Justin and Labor Day's fault. And both our kids got sick at the same time and had to come home from school early.
Starting point is 00:01:51 That's true. That was a rough one. I think the important thing we can all agree on is that it was not my fault. It was not your fault. Yeah, I was in no way to blame. We are all agreed that you are not to blame. I was ready. I had an episode ready to go. Yep.
Starting point is 00:02:05 Yep. Not your fault. Not my fault. But we did want to kind of update. So I tend to stay pretty plugged in to health care news because, you know, I'm a doctor. And you know what? You're listening to Sawbones. So you may also.
Starting point is 00:02:22 But there's a lot coming at us fast right now, I think, in terms of, um, you know, science and medicine and specifically vaccine, law, coverage, recommendations, things are shifting very quickly. And so I think it's worth, I think that's part of what we do here, is talk about that because what is concerning to me, if you are listening to this show, you probably know that vaccines are safe and effective. And you probably already, I don't want to say believe, because it's not a belief, it's a fact. You probably already know that. And, use that to guide your decisions. Sure.
Starting point is 00:03:00 But I think that it is worth addressing some of the misuse, the abuse of science and research that I'm seeing in the conversation around vaccines right now. Because I think no matter how much you know something, if you are an open-minded person, and especially if you're a scientist, then you recognize that things change, that we do see change. changes, right? I mean, medical recommendations have changed so dramatically in the years that I've been practicing. There are definitely things that I was told were one way in medical school that we then had, you know, further studies and understanding, and we critiqued our knowledge of and came back to a different conclusion at some point. So part of science is being open to the idea that things can change. And so if you start hearing the, you know, Secretary of Health and Human Services, RFK Jr., if you start hearing him cite studies that contradict the things that
Starting point is 00:04:03 you thought you knew or the things that maybe we talk about on this show, I think it is very valid if you stop and go, now wait a minute, is that right? Or at least wonder, where did that come from? Where is this? Right. Where are we getting that? Yeah. And so I think it's important to, as misinformation is thrown at you, make sure that we combat that. Right. Because the truth is that nothing that has been said recently by RFK Jr. or any of his cadre of vaccine skeptics, as they would call themselves, I would say they are spreaders of disinformation and misinformation that endangers public health. That's even more, yeah, that's more firm than me. Yes. But nothing that they have said, no studies that they have cited, have changed the fundamental.
Starting point is 00:04:56 mental truth, that vaccines are safe and effective, that vaccine mandates are important. And they're not just, I would not just say that they are good public health policy. They're ethically necessary. Yes. I agree. And there is nothing, and even as he cites studies, and you're going to hear a lot more of this, because you are going to have people that he is appointed to the advisory council on immunization practices, they are going to have letters after their name.
Starting point is 00:05:26 that indicate that they have degrees in things. Right. MDs and PhDs. They are going to sound like people you are supposed to trust and believe about science policy. And they're going to cite studies that sound like studies that sound like research. And so I think it's important that we are prepared to critique that. Right. You know?
Starting point is 00:05:47 So first of all, RFK was asked to come testify before the Senate because of everything that's going on at the CDC. I mean, and even even the president himself said that the CDC is being, I believe he said, ripped apart, shredded, torn apart, something to that effect. Nothing good. Nothing good. And the reason I think that the main impetus for this is that the guidelines on the new COVID vaccine, the next booster that is supposed to be available to you now that has been FDA approved. But the counsel on immunization practices is not going to meet about it until a separate. September 19th, I believe. So perhaps that's why, at least I know in this area, there's nowhere I can get it. I couldn't get it right now. The controversy is that the new guidelines suggest that only people who are 65 and older or are at increased risk for severe disease should be getting, are recommended, that's the wording, are recommended to get the COVID vaccine. Okay, what does that mean?
Starting point is 00:06:52 There's two ways to answer that question. What that means from their standpoint, when we say recommended, I mean, from a scientific medical standpoint, that means we think this is the patient population that will benefit the most and whose benefits will outweigh risks of getting this vaccine. If it isn't recommended, and we're not saying, I mean, and saying like not recommended for or just not making a comment on. So like everybody under 65 who doesn't have a risk factor. What that means is that for those people,
Starting point is 00:07:28 we don't have enough evidence to say if the benefits outweigh the risks, so we're not going to recommend it for you. Okay. That's what that means from a medical standpoint. Now, I am not saying that that is right. I am not saying that is true. But that is what those recommendations
Starting point is 00:07:46 are supposed to make you believe. Okay. as a person in the public. What it means from a more practical standpoint is the concerning part because we all know that RFK Jr. is an anti-vaxxer. We know that the CDC has been gutted in many ways. And a lot of people who try to follow scientific method and practice good evidence-based science to arrive at the recommendations, a lot of those people have been fired, have left,
Starting point is 00:08:15 have been pushed out. We know that. Yeah. We know that the entire Council on Immunization Practices was fired and replaced with a bunch of conspiracy theorists and skeptics, and we've gone over all the people who are on that. So for you to say, well, I don't believe these recommendations because I know they're coming from people with ill intent. And so I'm going to do my own thing. That would be, that'd be fine, right? And that's RFK's point.
Starting point is 00:08:37 You can still get it. I didn't recommend it for you. But if you really want it, you can still get it. Yeah, except. Except. Insurance companies don't have to cover vaccines that. aren't recommended. Mm-hmm.
Starting point is 00:08:49 This has been a struggle. I think a good example of this was the HPV vaccine, Gardasil. Mm-hmm. So when Gardasil was first introduced, the guidelines said it's recommended up to age 27. And also, it was only for women. It was only initially, you know, for assigned female at birth and up to 27. And the reason was, one, we were trying to, they were trying to target who was most likely to get cervical cancer. So they're trying to target people with cervixes and not people who
Starting point is 00:09:23 might also carry and spread the disease to people with cervixes, just people who had them. And then two, people who were unlikely to have been exposed to HPV at that point. So what they're saying is most people by the age of 27, if they were going to get exposed to the virus, probably have. They're also kind of guessing that like you probably had sex by then. That's sort of intrinsic to this data. So if you were a 28-year-old with a cervix who had never had any kind of sexual activity, who has never had sexual intercourse, the likelihood that you've been exposed is pretty low. And so you would be a good candidate for the vaccine. But because it wasn't recommended for you, it wasn't going to get paid for.
Starting point is 00:10:02 And the Gardasil vaccine, when it was first introduced, was really expensive. So this was already like an issue, right? And now they've expanded recommendations and that's changed over time. But it really illustrates why that recommendation can impact. your accessibility to a vaccine. I could give it to a 28-year-old back then, but they would have had to pay, I believe, at the time it was like 350 bucks. So if we are saying that you can only get the COVID vaccine, if you were 65 or older or have a risk factor for severe disease, everybody else could have to pay out of pocket for it. Right. So that's one accessibility issue.
Starting point is 00:10:36 And I'm not sure the exact cost of this new vaccine, but I know Elizabeth Warren referenced it in the Senate committee that it was probably around 200 bucks. so if you for a lot of people you may as well say it doesn't exist right if you have to pay $200 for every member of your family who doesn't qualify to get the vaccine to get it the average American family cannot afford that right so it is not accessible um that is exactly why they can convene this Senate panel is because this is going to dramatically increase the number of people who contract COVID because fewer people can get the vaccine and so then we are going to see more severe complications of COVID, and we are likely to see more COVID deaths
Starting point is 00:11:19 as a result. Now, I will say so that we're not just providing information that freaks you out, I would encourage you to visit the CDC website and look at what is on there that they list, that the CDC currently lists, as risk factors for severe disease. It is more than maybe you would assume, and there may be something on there that does apply to you. And so if you are someone who is concerned, I want to get the COVID vaccine, but I'm afraid I don't fall into that category. You should check out the list because there's stuff that I think we would kind of assume, like if you have any kind of chronic lung disease, if you have asthma, if you have any diabetes, heart disease, things like that, those sort of chronic illnesses, those you may assume.
Starting point is 00:12:01 But there are also a lot of things on there that you might not assume. So if you check the list, there again, some pretty obvious things like cancer or kidney disease, liver disease, lung disease, all those things that you may have guessed. There are also, if you have any sort of dementia, Parkinson's is a risk factor. There are a list of different types. It's interesting because they also include people with certain types of disabilities. So cerebral palsy, learning disabilities, Down syndrome, ADHD is listed on there. Sickle cell, HIV, heart disease.
Starting point is 00:12:39 and there are also people who have who have more sedentary lifestyles. How do they word it? It's like low physical activity. Whoa, did you see my, did you hear my ears perk up just then? I said, I hear sedentary lifestyle. I'm like, hello, maybe I just found my way in. Finally, it's all paying off. Sitting bad for my health, hmm, doesn't sound like it.
Starting point is 00:13:03 It sounds like Papa's going to get himself a free COVID vaccine from the couch. There are a lot of mental health conditions are listed, mood disorders. Whoa, I'm about to get it double free. Yes, physical. Did you say mood disorders? Right. Physical inactivity. Your BMI, and I understand BMI, there are so many criticisms we could level at body mass index
Starting point is 00:13:27 as a way of dictating any sort of health concerns. But for this purpose, based on your BMI, you may be eligible for a COVID vaccine. So there are a lot of pregnant people. are high risk. So that would qualify you for a COVID vaccine. And ACOG, the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology, still does recommend that. So, and smoking. So there's lots of. Now, hold on, maybe a bridge too far to pick up smoking for this, but I'm, listen, whatever it takes. There are, the concern for me personally is that. You have just one concern. Well, I mean for my, like, as I was thinking for myself. For Sydney. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:14:09 So I'm using myself as an example here. So I am under 65 and not to overshare, but other than the fact that I probably could get more physical activity, right? Like probably, probably honestly. Other than that, I don't qualify for the COVID vaccine. I heard one about mood. Wasn't there one about mood? I don't have any. I could have swore there was one about mood.
Starting point is 00:14:32 I don't have anything diagnosed, Justin. So you can, you have diagnosed me. You don't have anything diagnosed. No, I got you. I got you. But I had this concern for myself because even if I wasn't a health care worker, I would want to get the COVID vaccine. But I also am a health care worker. And I know I am going to be exposed to COVID this season.
Starting point is 00:14:53 I guarantee I will be. I work in a shelter for people experiencing homelessness. Mask use is very rare. A lot of people don't have regular access to health care services. So when they are sick, they are not getting tested anywhere else, but in my office. me and we are also all in one big communal shelter all the time. So I am going to be exposed to COVID. I want to get the booster. Right. I am not eligible. So I will say that this is something that I think check this list, see if any of this stuff applies to you. Hopefully their insurance
Starting point is 00:15:29 companies will decide to cover it anyway, but then we're hoping for the goodwill of insurance companies. Right. Yeah, right. in that case, but when RFK Jr. makes a claim that the vaccine is still accessible to all who want it, that's a lie. It's a lie unless everyone who wants it has $200. It's a barrier, right? Like accessible is a barrier, just like a legal is a barrier. You know what I mean? Like it's the same way when we talk about like drugs, like the fact that the fact that they are against the law. is a barrier but they're still accessible right these are still accessible in the same in the sense that anything else is but the barriers are what you have to look at and this is a huge barrier like it it might as well especially since the people that are not it's this this thing where like the people who are not eligible to get the the price reduced to free are the people
Starting point is 00:16:30 who physically are statistically in the least amount of danger and are therefore least incentivized. So like you're asking people not just to like pay it, but pay it because it helps other people to reduce the spread of COVID. Exactly. And and there is the fear that which is the reason we subsidize it in the first place, you friggin' dolts, like to remove as many barriers as possible because it's not just, it's not just for your personal health. This is an issue of public health. That's the thing about public health. Public health, and this is something that I think sometimes freaks people out. The idea of public health, we are concerned for the idea of the public. It's not about you, the individual. So we remove all the barriers we possibly can to incentivize people to go
Starting point is 00:17:15 get the vaccine. Yes, it's good for the individual who gets it. Of course, there is that benefit too. But it's for the broader good as well. That's why we do it. He fundamentally, I mean, he doesn't understand science or medicine, so it's not shocking that he also doesn't understand the concept of public health. But he's the Secretary of Health and Human Services. And he fundamentally does not understand public health. And his defense of all this is that we've never proven the vaccine was safe and effective in people under 65 who don't have a risk factor for severe disease. And these are lies.
Starting point is 00:17:47 He also says that we don't, we didn't test the vaccines in healthy individuals. Well, hello, I'm a member of a vaccine trial. Justin and I both participated in. And I participated in it as a healthy, quote unquote, healthy individual who did not qualify for any of the vaccines under the current guidelines, who went and got the vaccine. So, I mean, yes, we did. We tested it in a broad swath of the population. All of the vaccines were. We have tons of science to say that they are safe and effective in this broad generalization of the public. And again, he couldn't even tell you how many people died of COVID in America. This is on
Starting point is 00:18:27 the CDC website. So 1.2 million people died of COVID so far. And he can't, I mean, he is, he's misrepresenting that data. And it's on the CDC website. He could have looked at it. Yeah. So maybe he doesn't believe the stuff on the CDC website, which I mean, I'm fair. Well, he says he doesn't. I mean, he says that the CDC has been misguiding the public and confusing people and that we,
Starting point is 00:18:51 the CDC was responsible for the worst public health guidance during the COVID pandemic. It's why we had a disproportionate number of deaths in the U.S. And that masks never worked. I mean, he's still on that. So. Hey, here's what I'll say. Back in January, I bet you thought you couldn't get through a week of this. But look, you're already through eight months. Good on you. Cranking it. There we go. You're doing it. You're doing it. I mean, I'm talking to everybody, not just you. Everybody. I want to unravel some more of the stuff that's happening around vaccines. Because this isn't, this isn't, the COVID vaccine is not the only concerning thing to pay attention to. But before we do that, we do have to go to the billing department real quick. Let's go. What else is happening out? What else is happening out there, Sid? What else is moving in a shaking?
Starting point is 00:19:45 So aside from the COVID vaccine, which I think that the reason this is getting a lot of attention is also a political reason, if you remember, it was Trump's administration, who was responsible for Operation War, warp speed, which delivered the COVID vaccine in a very shortened period of time. Not that we cut any corners, as we have talked about extensively on the show. The vaccine was safe and effective.
Starting point is 00:20:12 This technology had existed for over a decade. We just had to plug in the new virus. I mean, that's a great thing about MRNA platforms. Right. You have the technology ready to go, and all you need is the new threat to introduce to it so that you know what kind of vaccine to make. Revolutionary science used it to save. I don't know. What's the estimate? 20 million or something so far as the estimate, what we've saved with the COVID vaccine. So revolutionary, fantastic science. And there are many people who think Trump should get a Nobel Prize for it. I am not one of those people, but there are many people who do.
Starting point is 00:20:50 And so I think that this is getting a lot of political attention as well because they're trying to create a wedge between RFK and Trump because he is criticizing. Trump's maybe the only accomplishment that I would say yes I agree with this the COVID vaccine is good
Starting point is 00:21:11 a lot of us would say like yeah I mean he did the vaccine the vaccine's great like the vaccine is good we all agree on that one nothing else and so they're trying to drive a wedge
Starting point is 00:21:19 that's why this is getting so much attention like maybe they'll fire him and I will say there was a letter written to the presidential administration saying from 20 different medical organizations saying
Starting point is 00:21:29 please fire him he's an idiot he's going to destroy this country he's going to kill all of our kids please fire him i don't know if i just don't know if i'm trying to right size this whole thing in my head right because sometimes i understand the sky is falling mentality and i i do get that i try to look at the places where like there are still normalcy because i think it's important to track the changes and be aware of the changes and and and look at the changes i will i will be interested to see if i feel like they're we're
Starting point is 00:22:01 starting to see some like rubber meets the road moments with some of this stuff where it's like do you have the frigging fortitude's not the right word but like you how hard on this are you willing do you have the
Starting point is 00:22:17 you know how far on this are you willing to take it because there's a lot of people who know they're acting with ill intent there's a lot of people who know that this is a bunch of nonsense and now we are seeing the practical ramifications of it and it will be interesting to see as like moral if there is a stomach to like really you know go through with
Starting point is 00:22:38 with this stuff or you know what well where we're at i think i think if you watch the senate hearings which i've watched quite a bit of it i didn't watch the entire thing but i've watched quite a bit um it was not just democrats who were questioning and and i would attacking might be a strong word from the republican senators but very forcibly refuting what rfk was saying there were Republican senators who are saying this is wrong. This is like settled science. We do not need to reinvestigate autism and vaccines. This is coming from Republicans as well. So this isn't just a partisan issue at this point. I do think you're going to start to see. I mean, heck, I said it this morning. Jim Justice, who is our representative, if you can believe it still,
Starting point is 00:23:28 here in West Virginia. Jim Justice. We have two so he can be your representative, but I'll take the other, no, never mind. You want to take Capito? Oh, the Capitol. Yeah, no. But he said today, he made a comment
Starting point is 00:23:42 about how important vaccines are. I mean, today. Jim Justice knows how important vaccines are. Do you know who that is? That's Baby Dog, though. That's Baby Dog saying my, the Crown Jewel in my administration, as the first dog of West Virginia
Starting point is 00:23:58 was do it for baby dog the vaccine campaign that we detailed here on Sawbone so maybe he's looking at you know baby dog doesn't have a lot of great years left we pray he has more than Jim but you know you never know
Starting point is 00:24:13 and he doesn't know if this next COVID strain is going to be aimed at dogs maybe no actually I saw a huge sign when we're in Atlanta actually you know it's fascinating I saw a big I meant to tell you this I saw a big billboard in Atlanta in the year of Lord 2025 that said, dogs do not spread COVID. Good.
Starting point is 00:24:35 Not the dog goes. Not the dogs. Thank you. So the other issue that the senators had with, I mean, I think they have many, has to do with autism and vaccines. Vaccines do not cause autism. I don't know how many times I should say that as we discussed this. Lots of people.
Starting point is 00:24:55 A lot of people. say that and I like a lot of people smart ones I will say too that it you know I see such good journalism around this these days like anytime and I see this both on TV and as I'm reading news articles like fact checking RFK I I you see a lot of of journalists point out very quickly there is no study there is no research that shows a link between vaccines and autism right none and we have studied this. So every time RFK says we haven't looked at it, that's just a lie. I don't know how else to characterize it. Yes, we've looked at it. He's just lying because there's no one
Starting point is 00:25:37 above him to say you're lying. I mean, that's it. That's it, right? I mean, that's pretty much it. He referenced a study during the Senate hearing of that basically what he said was the CDC published data that showed there was no link between the MMR, the measles, month's Bella vaccine and autism. And then there was one scientist who teased something out of the data and pulled a study out and said, no, look, actually, it increases the rate of autism, specifically in black boys, children who were tested in this study. And that this study was suppressed by the CDC and now he's got this data. And so he references this, I mean, this dramatic story of like the CDC withholding data from the public, specifically to target, you know, black children. And
Starting point is 00:26:22 The study that he's referencing, if you go back, I mean, first of all, it was retracted and discredited because the methodological, like, the way that it was put together, the way the data was collected, the way that it was analyzed, the lack of excluding for confounders, other variables that might have altered it. The study was done terribly. It meant nothing. It was a bad study and it was retracted and it should never been published in a journal. But the fact is, as we've talked about on the show, there are a lot of journals out there that have their own agenda. Right. And so if you look at like who RFK trust, Dr. Mawson, Dr. Anthony Mawson, who is a vaccine critic published a study comparing vaccinated and unvaccinated. children. In one group, it was homeschooled children, and he's done multiple studies. And these are the
Starting point is 00:27:23 ones that Kennedy is most frequently citing. Mawson also wrote a book. He's made a big career off of being a doctor who doesn't trust vaccines. Which there's money in it, you know, if you, if you're willing to trade your credibility in Soloway, well, at very short-term gain, my friend. You follow the money. He established the Chalfant Research Institute. It's a charity that operates out of his home. It received contributions of 150,000 from the National Vaccine Information Center, which is a group whose mission, there's an anti-vax group. He's also connected, he's had study funded by Generation Rescue, which is a nonprofit that Jenny McCarthy is associated with. If you remember, Jenny McCarthy of singled out fame.
Starting point is 00:28:17 I don't know. What else? Devastating. I'll just go on. No, you don't even say anything else. Hates vaccines. The former Miss Jim Carrey. Former Missed the mask. Anyway.
Starting point is 00:28:32 The former Miss Cable guy. So he said this is who he's citing his studies from. The journal that published the study was science, public health policy, and the law. Um, it says it's peer reviewed, but, uh, the, um, the people that are associated, the journal's, uh, editor and chief is a longtime ally of Mr. Kennedy's who describes himself as in a year long, years long fight across 20 states for vaccine exemptions. So it's an anti-vax journal is my point. Yeah, right. So like, just, like just follow the money. And if you look at like these organizations, like the children's health defense, which Kennedy has been a. lawyer for before, and he is very much associated with, and this is an anti-vax group who spreads disinformation about vaccines. If you look on their board, they have people who sell supplements to try to fix the vaccine injuries that you have. It's the money. It's money. Like spike detox supplements. They're going to get that spike protein out of you, the evil spike protein from
Starting point is 00:29:41 COVID that all the vaccines. So anyway, you just follow the money. So these studies are deeply flawed The thing about data is that collecting it is part of the battle, and you have to know how to collect it appropriately, right? Right. You have to know how to get the right answers from the right study population with the right diversity among it, right, depending on what you're looking at. And then you have to know what to do with the data. You have to know how to tease out all the stuff that's going to lead you to other conclusions. If you don't know what you're doing, you can come to the wrong conclusion, right? And if you want a specific answer, you can probably make it happen.
Starting point is 00:30:24 It is interesting that it is a big issue with AI, actually, because AI you would think would be very good at data analysis. But it's actually very bad. I was reading as an entertainment study about the entertainment industry, and they have all this data about, from focus groups like you would think that you'd be able to program into the thing like here's the movies that were popular last year here's how tastes are evolving
Starting point is 00:30:53 calculate for us what the next big hit will be right but looking at data and synthesizing data is something that the AI routines are really bad at which to me shows you how much like art
Starting point is 00:31:07 is a part of that is a part of data the synthesis how much of that is like storytelling through data. Right. No, you're exactly right. And that's, it's so important to understand that because like this study, this is a great example. So if we compare kids who are not vaccinated and kids who are vaccinated and then how do
Starting point is 00:31:29 we do, okay, if we're going to do this without going house to house, kid to kid. So we collect data from a medical record to see, is there a diagnosis code for autism spectrum disorder on this child. That's how we're going to decide if they have autism or not. So because we need to know, did they get vaccinated and do they have autism? If you're not going to ask that question, you're going to look for the diagnosis code in an electronic medical record. Okay. So in order for that diagnosis code to have been put in there, the child would have had to be taken to a doctor, evaluated by them, and then diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder. Now, typically, this is not something we do in one appointment, right? You wouldn't go to a walk-in clinic and walk out with a
Starting point is 00:32:14 diagnosis of ASD. That would be, that would be inappropriate, right? Like, this is something that we take time and we collect information and, you know, we have certain screening tools. Like, there are things we do. Well, would you guess that a child who is completely unvaccinated, whose guardians have made that choice to not have them vaccinated? Do you think there's a chance that maybe they haven't had as much contact with physicians as a child who's received every single one of their childhood vaccines. Yeah. Don't you think that's possible?
Starting point is 00:32:48 So don't you think the likelihood that they would have been sitting in a doctor's office enough times to have that diagnosis made and recorded in their medical record? Don't you think that likelihood would be less? Yeah. But they didn't control for how many times the kid was taken to a doctor. If you never take your kid to a doctor or any other. sort of healthcare professional, yeah, they're not going to get diagnosed with ASD or anything else because you didn't take them to a doctor. But none of that was controlled for in the study. But the problem is
Starting point is 00:33:18 most people, like if you didn't go to medical school or to, you know, pharmacy school or to nursing school or to any of the science-based healthcare tracks, right? If you didn't go have an education in any of that, if you're not an epidemiologist, you wouldn't know to tease that out of the data. And so when someone says to you, the CDC suppressed a study that showed that the MMR vaccine causes autism and black boys, you might believe it. You may, and especially if we talk about marginalized communities, a population like in the U.S., the black community, who historically have been lied to, abused, mistreated, you know, systematically oppressed by our medical, by our health care system who already have historical basis to be skeptical about
Starting point is 00:34:11 institutions, you know, doctors, the CDC, all the NIH, the federal government, all of it. And then you present them with that, you might be inclined to believe it's true or to at least question, or to at least wonder, should I get my child vaccinated then. Yeah. And that is the problem is RFK has been doing this so long. He knows. He knows how. He's wrong. He's lying. I mean, I assume he's lying. I don't know if he, I don't know what he believes. I don't know if he knows. Who knows? We can't see in the contents of somebody's heart. You can only judge by their actions. And his actions are truly, truly despicable. They're dangerous. It's malicious. These children are going to be harmed by this. But I think it's important that we're all well versed in these times. tactics because they're going to use bad science, and it's not going to look like bad science on the surface. It is bad science, but we're going to need to be smart about understanding why it's bad science. Because you can't just say, well, that's a lie because they're going to hold up the study.
Starting point is 00:35:17 And they're going to say, well, it was a double-blinded placebo-controlled. Why don't you want placebo-controlled? That's what they're going to say about vaccines. Why don't you want placebo-controlled? because it's unethical if we have a vaccine that saves lives to not give it to half of the study population is I mean we don't do that we don't do those studies because they're unethical Sid it occurs you and I have talked a lot about feelings of helplessness I think in recent in recent months and sort of combating that and trying to stay you know I think that it is unrealistic maybe to say like positive or optimistic or hopeful or whatever. I don't know how helpful that is to anybody,
Starting point is 00:36:01 but I do think that it is important and not be overwhelmed to paralysis, I think. So how have you been sort of like processing what's been happening? How are you like contextualizing it for yourself? What's been your mindset? Well, I will say a couple of things that have given me, I hope may be too big a word, but I'll use it, hope. One, as I mentioned previously, the pushback on this sort of total misinformation, especially when it comes to vaccines, is bipartisan. It is not just Democrats first Republicans, because right now, if that's the battle, the Republicans are going to
Starting point is 00:36:45 win. Right. It's not. It is a bipartisan effort to trust evidence-based science and push back against these lies. So that's a hopeful point. It's also good, that's a good note to remember that if you have a representative that does not agree with you politically, there still may be daylight for you to call and make those, you know, make your voice heard to that representative that could be swayed on this because I don't, I think that you've got to look for those sorts of individual battles at this point. And I think that it's important to remember that as people are seeing these, like the measles outbreaks in real time. And unfortunately, I feel like we're going to see a lot more of these, not just measles, but other preventable childhood illnesses in Florida soon. Amplifying those stories, I think, is helpful. It is. And I think it's, I mean, unfortunately, part of the problem, part of why we have so much pushback on vaccines is that I have never seen a child with diphtheria.
Starting point is 00:37:48 Thank goodness. It's, I didn't, my kids were not in an iron lung. you know? Yeah. And so I think as we have like, as we're, as we're starting to see that stuff return, you are going to hear more public outcry. And you are going to have people who maybe agree with RFK politically who will not stand for this, you know, for childhood illness and death, unnecessary preventable childhood illness and death, which is what we're going to see. So I think that's one thing. I think the other thing is all of the major medical organizations are continuing to put out their good, evidence-based, scientific, medical advice. So you can go to AMA, AAPF, AAP, the ACOG. The American College of Obsectioneric and Gynecology are always such, I can't say bad A's. How about that? Can I say that? I can't say that a word. They're cool. They're always out there fighting. And I'm, you know, I'm family practice. We're part of the AAP. We tend to be a little more chill. I know. But like we're all united on this. If you read all of our statement, If you go to those websites, if you go to those medical organizations, infectious disease society of America, you can find good, solid information on what vaccines you should get, what the risks and benefits are, who should get them. That information is still widely available.
Starting point is 00:39:09 You don't have to go to the CDC for everything. And right now, I don't know that I would recommend that as your primary source of medical information. I think the important thing is that if you look at those organizations that are continuing to fight, even though it doesn't it does feel so imbalanced in power like at the very least you're keeping them fighting and they can't fight it if you're fighting everyone all at once it's a lot harder than you know if no one's fighting back so i think that like continuing to remember that even a fight is a use of their resources and is keeping them occupied from doing some other heinous crap like every every little bit i think is helpful and those of us who work in health care this is really uh and i'm going to speak to physicians because I'm a physician, so I feel like I have the right to. We tend to be, as a collective, really wimpy about this stuff. We don't stand up and speak out. We're exhausted.
Starting point is 00:40:04 I know. I know we're burnout. I know we're overworked and constantly living in fear of, you know, insurance companies and pharmaceutical companies and getting sued and all of the stuff that comes with practicing health care in the U.S. that sucks. I know. I totally get it. But this is where we have to fight back.
Starting point is 00:40:24 This is where we have to stand up and say, absolutely not. I will not accept this. I know better than RFK Jr. I know better. And you do too, my colleagues in medicine. You know better. It feels to me if you're a physician and you have any sort of public platform or you just know people in your day to day life that you speak to, it feels like a, it feels like you are duty bound to be speaking up about this. you need to let your voice be part of the conversation, I think, because the more voices that
Starting point is 00:40:58 are speaking reason and logic, like, I feel like the onus is on you to speak up a little bit. And you can do that in your practice with your patients. I mean, that's the thing. Like, at least I know my patients, I think, like, and trust me, I think they do. And I can continue to give them good solid advice based on evidence-based medicine that I believe a lot of them will hear more loudly than these false voices. Right. In Washington right now. Right. Thank you so much for listening to our podcast. We appreciate you. I wanted to mention, we haven't mentioned in a little bit, immunized.org is a group that we've
Starting point is 00:41:39 worked with a lot that has a ton of great information about immunization. And you know, you support them through several of the merch purchases on our website so that's we're all working together here on this thing macroydmerch.com is that website if you want to check out some stuff there thank to the taxpayers for these their song Medicines is the intro and outro program and thanks to you for listening that's going to do it for us until next time my name's just a macroy i'm sidney mackroy and as always don't drill a hole in your hand All right. Maximum Fun.
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