Autism and Vaccines: How Bad Science Can Spread a Rumor


What happens when everyone jumps on the bandwagon before it has a chance to get going? It goes no where, but if there is a big enough audience and a voice loud enough to garner attention, well then you might just have yourself one big blame game.

That's what the world has come to. Mothers are the audience and the screaming voice was Jenny McCarthy. You might all remember McCarthy as the dimwitted, gross-out celebrity from MTVs earlier days, but now she's a mom on a mission, a mission with no basis in fact. You see, Ms. McCarthy's has an autistic child, unfortunately for her she jumped on the Autism-Vaccine study performed by Dr. Andrew Wakefield. The study, which was a complete fabrication, said that there was a direct link between autism and vaccines. Which not surprisingly, sent the whole online doctor community into a frenzy. Prescription online services do not offer vaccines, but prescription online services were equally as outraged over the doctors study.

Some of the worst damage has been done by McCarthy herself, who jumped on the bandwagon and helped to perpetuate a story that simply is not true. Parents are pulling their children off of vaccines, in fear that they're children will become autistic. It's a complete nightmare for online doctors and prescription online patients.

Mothers everywhere have heard these rumors, they've seen them on TV or in the newest supermarket tabloid. It's inescapable and it's a pain for doctors online who do real research and truly help patients. Prescriptions online are one thing, but this doctor started up a firestorm when he decided to falsify some studies.  The science behind his study was no good. But, it did not matter, because people continued to spread the rumor on Facebook or Twitter, all the while not listening to online doctors telling them that the study was worthless.

Of course no one heard anything about the truth. They were too busy “fighting” the FDA or the US government, as well as fighting modern medicine or the public school system. Thankfully they did not turn on prescriptions online. Of course they fail to realize their words have little value. The value lies in their collective voices, if someone repeats it long enough, then you'll probably remember it. The same principles are applied to advertisements, which may be all this amounts too, these people could just be trying to keep their names in the spot light. And what a way to make other people suffer for your own selfishness.

These people are not going to go anywhere soon, not as long as this junk science is allowed to stand. Online doctors and prescriptions online need to take a stand against bad science. If you get prescriptions online, then you might want to ask your online doctor about the study. Hopefully they will know more than Jenny McCarthy.

Get a Prescription Online from and Online Doctor at www.QuickRxRefills.com.

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