TE44 Wrote: ------------------------------------------------------- > That must have been very difficult hellosailor, I > hope your daughter recovered without any lasting > effects. As you said we can only choose what we > believe to be best, When my daughter was little > and had whooping cough, i found the doctor very > unhelpful, he seemed more interested in blaming me > than caring for her. I have also found this with > some parents, especially when kids were at school. > I think it is a difficult decision, but one that > should b down to us. You didn't immunise your children against whooping cough? That means, I suppose, that you left them unimmunised against polio, diphtheria and tetanus as well. I honestly think you must be mad. I also think that you might have come to a very different decision if you hadn't known that most parents do immunise their children and so your children would benefit from herd immunity without any risk that they might be amongst the unfortunate few who do have a reaction to an immunisation. Best of both worlds for you, thanks to the rest of us. Going back to measles, it's not a trivial disease. Any child who gets measles is going to be miserably ill in bed for over a week with a high temperature. Who'd want that if it could be avoided, and that's even without the worry of complications? And what about the risk to the unborn child if an unimmunised child has rubella and infects the mother?