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NJ Vaccine Science

A site dedicated to making the case for vaccine exemptions using CDC statements, vaccine inserts, and peer reviewed science.

  • Vaccine Safety
    • Adverse Events After Vaccination – How Often They Occur
    • Adverse Effects of Vaccines Evidence and Causality – 2012 IOM Report
    • Immunity for Vaccine Manufactures & HHS Failure to Submit Safety Reports
    • Plotkin Deposition
    • WHO Global Vaccine Safety Summit
    • ACIP Meeting for Hepislav-B
    • DTP: The Story of an Unsafe Vaccine
  • Cost-Benefit Analysis
    • Hep B
    • Pertussis
    • Influenza
    • NJ Assembly Woman Vandervalk – Protecting an at-risk population
  • Herd Immunity
    • Problems with Herd Immunity: District 11 Stories
      • The Medically Complicated: Keanu
      • Vaccine Injury: Gio
      • The Medically Complicated: Michael
    • Measles & Herd Immunity
  • COVID
    • The Overwhelming Evidence for Keeping Schools Open
    • How to tell the magnitude of NJ’s second wave?
    • FLU SHOT MANDATE: WILL IT HELP DURING COVID-19?
    • Alan Dershowitz and Paul Offit Advocate for Vaccine Choice
    • CDC, Oxford, Stanford Agree, COVID-19 IFR is under 0.3%

The Overwhelming Evidence for Keeping Schools Open

1. UNICEF released a report on November 20, 2020 making the case very clearly by stating that “there is strong evidence that, with basic safety measures in place, the net benefits of keeping schools open outweigh the costs of closing them.” They also clarified that “schools are not a main driver of community transmission, and children are more likely to get the virus outside of school settings.”

2. Brown’s School of Public Health makes The Case for Open Schools in a Pandemic by concluding “it is clear from the data and experiences of individual school districts that opening schools in a pandemic with infection control measures in place does not lead to increased transmission of the virus. In many ways, schools can be the safest place to be for children during a pandemic.”

3. According to NJ Coronavirus Dashboard Monmouth County has 2 outbreaks in all its schools linked to a total of 4 cases.

4. The mainstream media is finally catching up with the data from around the world:
Are we seriously taking about closing schools again? – Carroll, NYT
Schoolchildren Seem Unlikely to Fuel Coronavirus Surges, Scientist Say – NYT
When Trump was right and many democrats wrong – Kristof – NYT
We’ve figured out it’s safe to have schools open. Keep them that way.

5. If you still think children and schools are a risk, Emily Oyster attempts to explain how the risks from schools have been misrepresented in School Rankings: Framing (Slightly) Differently .

6. Peer reviewed evidence continues to mount in favor of school openings. I will reference a few studies below but there are many more. Luckily this organization tracks all the COVID-19 Pediatric Literature .

A. Estimation of US Children’s Educational Attainment and Years of Life Lost Associated With Primary School Closures During the Coronavirus Disease 2019 Pandemic

“This decision analytical model found that missed instruction during 2020 could be associated with an estimated 5.53 million years of life lost. This loss in life expectancy was likely to be greater than would have been observed if leaving primary schools open had led to an expansion of the first wave of the pandemic.

These findings suggest that the decision to close US public primary schools in the early months of 2020 may be associated with a decrease in life expectancy for US children.”

B. Effect of school closures on mortality from coronavirus disease 2019: old and new predictions

“The model used for Report 9 was independently validated and verified, and predicts that, in the absence of an effective vaccine for covid-19, school closures would result in more overall deaths than no school closure

Mitigating a covid-19 epidemic requires a different strategy from an influenza epidemic, with more focus on shielding elderly and vulnerable people.”

C. Impact of school closures for COVID-19 on the US health-care workforce and net mortality: a modeling study

“Minimizing the impact of COVID-19 and saving lives requires weighing the trade-offs. In some scenarios, closing schools is likely to be sensible. However, policy makers and advisers need to understand that closing schools might have serious unintended downstream effects on the health-care system, and substantial uncertainty exists about the effectiveness of school closures for preventing infection beyond schoolchildren.

The effect of reducing the health-care workforce on patient survival is an important unknown. Our estimates suggest that in the USA, the health-care system appears disproportionately exposed to labour shortages induced by school closures, and the segment of that system that provides infection control in nursing homes even more so.

Such potential shortages in the health-care workforce should be a first-order consideration when assessing the potential benefits and costs of school closures.”

D. Association between living with children and outcomes from COVID-19: an OpenSAFELY cohort study of 12 million adults in England

“For adults living with children there is no evidence of an increased risk of severe COVID-19 outcomes. These findings have implications for determining the benefit-harm balance of children attending school in the COVID-19 pandemic.”

Take Action:

1. Sign up for NJ Vaccine Science action alerts via email.

2. Stay Informed – check our our Blog and Advocacy Home page for action items, follow us on Twitter, and like us on Facebook.

3. Call and Email your Senator and Assemblymembers – ask them to oppose bill S902/A969. Use this link to find your representatives’ phone number and send them a message.

4. Call and Email the Bill Sponsors: Senate President Sweeney: [email protected] / 856-251-9801; Assemblyman Conway  [email protected] / (856) 461-3997

If you live in Legislative District 11 sign our D11 Petition to protect NJ’s RE. 

Contact NJ Vaccine Science at:

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Other Useful Websites:

Hope from Holly

Vaccine Papers

National Vaccine Information Center

Informed Consent Action Network

Vaccine Injury and Compensation Program

DISCLAIMER:

All information, data and material contained, presented, or provided here is for general information purposes only and is not to be construed as reflecting the knowledge or opinions of the publisher, and is not to be construed or intended as providing medical or legal advise. The decision to vaccinate and how you implement that decision is yours and yours alone. You are encouraged to consult with your medical professional and legal adviser.

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