When the current measles outbreak began, WorldNetDaily didn’t have much to say; it copy-and-pasted articles stolen from elsewhere about one apology for an outbreak and calls to reduce exemptions from vaccinations. But WND is a longtime anti-vaxxer, and those tendencies have been rekindling in recent months, so it couldn’t stop conspiracy-mongering for long.
First up was dubious doc Jane Orient, who writes in a Feb. 28 WND column:
Every time there is a measles outbreak somewhere there is an outcry to restrict vaccine exemptions, to protect the public – and, just coincidentally, vaccine manufacturers.
Measles is extremely contagious, and with today’s air travel, a patient incubating measles but not yet sick can arrive any time and cough virus particles all over Disneyland. Most patients recover fully, with robust lifelong immunity. But some get serious complications or die. Measles is two to four times worse than in pre-vaccination days because it affects more adults and infants. Mothers with only waning vaccine-induced immunity cannot give their babies the antibodies that once protected infants of naturally immunized mothers during their most vulnerable period.
That link goes to an abstract of an article in a medical journal that doesn’t quite say what she thinks it says. The full article states that the fact that diseases are more severe in the unvaccinated “might be a potent tool to motivate hesitant parents to vaccinate their children,” but that clinicians “do not engage parents in extensive discussions about many clinical services, including vaccination.”
Instead, Orient complained that outbreaks cause people to dismiss anti-vaxxers like her:
Worries are attributed to “antivax quacks,” and the omniscient Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook is reportedly going to protect the public by suppressing information he judges to be “not credible.” Public health people prevented the screening of the 2016 movie “Vaxxed: from Coverup to Catastrophe” in Phoenix. The film shows children with devastating neurologic damage and parents telling how their once-normal child changed dramatically just after getting a vaccine. But these are mere anecdotes; there is “overwhelming evidence” of safety, the experts assure us.
“Vaxxed” is the film made by Andrew Wakefield, a now-defrocked doctor who wrote an infamous study claming a link between vaccines and autism that has since been discredited.
Orient then dismisses the threat, assuring us that “measles probably can’t be eradicated” and that “the last measles death in the U.S. occured in 2015.”
That was followed by a March 6 article touting how the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons — the fringe-right organization that Orient heads — fearmongering about the alleged “government-imposed risks” from mandating that children be vaccinated.
We’re guessing that WND is not going to report to its readers that an unvaccinated boy almost died of tetanus and racked up an $800,000 hospital bill trying to stay alive.