Meet the Other Phone. A phone that grows with your child.

Meet the Other Phone.
A phone that grows with your child.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

General health

Mumsnet doesn't verify the qualifications of users. If you have medical concerns, please consult a healthcare professional.

Has your child got measles?

48 replies

Marie100 · 21/06/2011 22:13

Hello,
We are looking to expose our children to measles, mumps and rubella. Does anyone have a child with any of these infections so we can expose them to it, along the line of the old style measles parties.

I appreciate this is an emotive subject. Vaccination is not compulsory and every parent makes their own choice. I respect the choices all parents have made but do not wish to debate on those choices.

Many thanks in advance.

OP posts:
CatherinaJTV · 21/06/2011 22:26

no (since they both had 2x MMR)

I wish your children all the best, may they escape infection until they are old enough to make sensible decisions for themselves (not wanting to debate, just expressing my good wishes for your little ones).

illuminasam · 22/06/2011 09:29

No, but I'd be interested in perhaps joining a network and finding out more about it/speaking to people who've done it.

Larian · 22/06/2011 11:34

I hope you enjoy raising deaf children if you are intentionally exposing them to measles: www.youtube.com/v/O8NJLaAenOE

Why not just get a vaccine that is proven to be much less dangerous? Or are you buying into the lies that are told by anti-vax nutters that are stiing public health back by 70 years? factsnotfantasy.com/vaccines.php

electra · 22/06/2011 11:39

Marie, sorry about the unbalanced and patronising replies you've received. There are many sensible people on MN who don't go along with the government propaganda about mass vaccination programmes and would prefer to think for themselves - but obviously some people feel the need to justify their own choices by calling us 'nutters' which probably says more about them. Obviously it's not a clear cut issue at all though.

bubbleymummy · 22/06/2011 11:53

Just watched that video. Dies anyone want to explain why she had to be vaccinated anyway after having measles? It doesn't make sense to me.

illuminasam · 22/06/2011 12:36

In that video, the mother chose not to vaccinate her child but it's also clear that she assumed her child would not contract measles as it's so rare. She presumably had little information about what to do if her child did contract the disease. She does not seem to have made the choice to not vaccinate with her eyes open.

And bubbley - I'd also be interested to know why her and the whole family had to be vaccinated. Comes over as a bit sinister!

CatherinaJTV · 22/06/2011 12:42

illuminasam

How would not vaccinating with eyes open have changed anything for the mother and child in that video? Measles did to her what measles do to a certain proportion of kids. Knowledge doesn't change that.

CatherinaJTV · 22/06/2011 12:45

bubbley - doesn't make sense to me either. We may be getting an abridged version of what happened w/re to vaccination recommendations?

MissTinaTeaspoon · 22/06/2011 12:52

So you want to deliberately expose your children to a disease (I'm referring specifically to measles here) that could lead to serious illness for them? Measles can lead to brain damage, encephalitis and deafness. If your child passed rubella onto a pregnant lady she could miscarry. If they pass mumps onto a teenage boy he could end up infertile.

Whether or not you vaccinate your children is your lookout but why would you deliberately expose them to illness?

illuminasam · 22/06/2011 12:57

Catherina - It might do. She seemed surprised her child caught it. Perhaps she hadn't researched ways of lessening complications. Did she give her child extra vitamin A for example? Did she know to? How about keeping her in a darkened room? Unfortunately we don't know the answers to these questions from the video.

Not getting into providing studies that show Vitamin A is implicated in lessening the complications from measles.

CatherinaJTV · 22/06/2011 13:17

illuminasam

seems Marie is not getting her non debate ;) I have read many an outbreak analysis of very conscious vaccine refusers (mostly of the Steiner kind), who supposedly did everything "right" (according to their paradigm) and yet, their kids show the same rate of complications, including encephalitis and deaths as their involuntary peers (i.e. kids that got measles without parental intent). I genuinely wonder (beyond the patronising snark, which, admittedly, I do have problems keeping in check) where non-vaccinating parents get the confidence from that they will do everything "right" and their child will not suffer. And I honestly have a problem with the implicit notion that if a child suffered from measles, the parents must have done something "wrong". Measles, for all I know, are inherently neurotropic (like mumps and canine distemper and all the family), and, it being a viral disease with no known virustatic acting on it, there is no treatment for virally induced encephalitis. And, since wild measles (unlike their vaccine cousin) suppress the immune system for weeks, opportunistic infections are also hard to keep away (although admittedly relatively "easily" treated with antibiotics in the 10% or so of kids who get otitis and/or pneumonia). Could you explain? Thank you.

Owlingate · 22/06/2011 13:22

I think it is chicken pox parties you were thinking of, people don't even do those any more because it can be serious to some children.

A relative of mine was severely disabled following measles and no one in my family remembers any point where measles was comparable with say chicken pox or hand foot and mouth. Measles was treated with the same seriousness as scarlet fever.

mummytime · 22/06/2011 13:28

I nearly died as a children from Rubella, and caught Scarlet fever straight afterwards. A friends son nearly died from Chicken Pox. DH's mother died from Chicken Pox. We were all vaccinated against measles (but a cousin nearly died as he was too young to be vaccinated, he was on life support for 2 weeks).

So my kids are vaccinated (and I came very close to getting them done for Chicken pox whilst on a US holiday).

Pagwatch · 22/06/2011 13:37

When I was little measles was considered a mild disease. I had a story book where the lead child gets illl and when it is diagnosed as measles everyone is "oh phew, it's only measles"
I had it as did all my family (8 of us) and cousins (30 plus) with no complications.

I suspect that my experience is as irrelevant as all those who know someone who did have a bad reaction - not very.

Dd has not had the vaccine but I would not wilfully expose her to the virus.

But this will get lairy and people will be fucking rude for no good reason other than that they like to. So I shall bugger off.

CatherinaJTV · 22/06/2011 14:01

Mummytime - can't you go private in the UK for the varicella? We did for a dTaP/IPV booster when the school offered the dT/IPV at us, because I really wanted the pertussis protection. DD had varicella vax in Germany before it was generally introduced (and it held beautifully while her little brother got chicken pox twice, sigh).

mummytime · 22/06/2011 14:05

Probably, but it can be very cheap in the US. All three caught it naturally and were fine, so its irrelevant now.
But we are the kind of family who catch things.

illuminasam · 22/06/2011 14:09

Catherina - I'm not sure that non-vaccinating parents do all have the confidence that they will do the right thing. I think it's a choice they make and hopefully they try to be as informed as possible about the implications of that choice. The same goes for those that choose to vaccinate.

I don't think I implied that the parents had done something wrong - I said that the video didn't provide all the information about the situation.

I don't know why your studies show the same rates of complications and death and I'm not going to rise to asking you for your sources. I have work to do for one thing. I have confidence in alternative/complementary preventative and palliative treatments for illness purely because I have used them for a number of reasons and they have worked. Unfortunately I have been a victim of conventional medical approaches to my detriment more than once.

I'm sure you are highly knowledgeable about the virus and it's actions and the allopathic treatments available and that is the route you have chosen. I'm not trying to change your mind.

When I had measles as a child, I was prescribed antibiotics by the doctor. I was rushed to hospital for an allergic reaction to penicillin, not due to the measles itself.

That's the end of the discussion for me too.

Marie100 · 22/06/2011 14:13

Hello illuminasam,
Since posting this request I have come across the following resource www.arnica.org.uk/ I have not yet looked into it but with hope it will be useful.

Many thanks

OP posts:
twoandahalfmenner · 22/06/2011 14:22

Marie - that's brilliant, thank you very much.

Tabitha8 · 22/06/2011 14:36

Arnica also have a Yahoo group that's worth looking into and there are local Arnica groups dotted around the UK.

CatherinaJTV · 22/06/2011 14:39

Thanks illuminasam for your perspective. Not trying to change your mind either, just interested.

GrimmaTheNome · 22/06/2011 14:41

Being old enough to remember the pre-vaccination erea - AFAIK they didn't used to have 'measles parties'. It was German measles parties - because the illness is slight but the teratagenic potential is so horrific.

MissTinaTeaspoon · 22/06/2011 15:29

Without starting a great debate, can you clear this up for me? Why do you want your children to be immune to measles? I know that if you are going to get rubella and mumps the consequences for an older child or adult are worse, but why measles? Why put your children through the misery of the disease, discounting the risks, when a vaccine exists? I dont know the figures but surely the risks of the vaccine are less than the risks associated with the actual disease?

illuminasam · 22/06/2011 15:57

Speaking personally, I think measles would be horrible to get as an adult and likely to be much worse so I'd prefer my child to get immunity as a child. I haven't yet made the decision whether to vaccinate against it or not (although I am leaning towards not).

While I'm sure the disease is miserable, it's my opinion that a child would then be immune for life and their immune system would be in good stead to respond to other infections having previously responded to natural measles. It's my opinion that the long term effect would be to strengthen the immune response for life. I'm not convinced that vaccinations provide that, unless one keeps injecting, which means one is reliant on conventional medicine and I don't have 100% confidence in that approach so would not like to be reliant on it.

It's taking responsibility for it rather than handing that over to doctors and scientists if that makes sense.

If my DS was a DD, it would be definitely not as I would like her to have a natural immunity that she can pass on to her babies. As my DS is a DS I am somewhat walking the corridor of uncertainty at the moment.

imadgeine · 24/06/2011 08:40

That definitely rings a bell with me too Grimma. German measles parties.
I can understand why people get into an anti-vacc belief system. Nobody likes taking their babies to be vaccinated (except in 3rd world maybe...). There are people out there throwing doubt and scorn on the most significant contribution that medial science has come up with raising further doubts. It is in some ways easier not to do it, than to feel that by ones deliberate actions one might have done some harm.
Decision having been made with heart then the head looks for justifications and support. In the face of a lot of evidence that they have made a bad choice. They will look for information that will make them feel they have made good choice.

People do this re all kinds of beliefs. I once met a lovely american man (really cool - he taught his son to sign when he was a baby) whose sister had been shot by her ex and left dead in the house with 3 kids. However he was still convinced that the US gun law was absolutely wonderful and had all kinds of arguments to justify his belief system...
Can't for the life of me understand why anyone would want to expose unvaccinated kids to measles though. This is taking anti-vacc thinking to extremes. Is it really true that it is worse for adults? I thought it was the other way round.

Swipe left for the next trending thread