Her conclusion: 'You just have to follow your own heart' when it comes to medical decision-making.
— Emily MatcharI attained a triumph so complete that it is now rare to meet an American with marks of small pox on his face... Benefits are valuable according to their duration and extent... But the benign remedy Vaccination saves millions of lives every century, like the [gift] of the sun, universal and everla.
— Benjamin WaterhouseNothing but the natural ignorance of the public, countenanced by the inoculated erroneousness of the ordinary general medical practitioners, makes such a barbarism as vaccination possible.......Recent developments have shown that an inoculation made in the usual general practitioner's light-hearted way, without previous highly skilled examination of the state of the patient's blood, is just as likely to be a simple manslaughter as a cure or preventive. But vaccination is nothing short of attempted murder. A skilled bacteriologist would just as soon think of cutting his child's arm and rubbing the contents of the dustpan into the wound, as vaccinating it in the same.
— George Bernard ShawHere in Bosnia I had already seen several cases of rheumatic fever and a case we thought was miliary tuberculosis, diseases now rare in America. It was sobering to think that the mundane process of vaccinating these children might ultimately save more lives than any UN-brokered peace treaty.
— Pamela GrimThe more it (vaccination) is supported by public authorities, the more will its dangers and disadvantages be concealed or denied.
— M. Beddow Bayly-Speaking about Vaccinations - 'If you accept the truth after the fact, the pain will last a life time.
— Richard DiazIn 1736 I lost one of my sons, a fine boy of four years old, by the small-pox, taken in the common way. I long regretted bitterly, and still regret that I had not given it to him by inoculation. This I mention for the sake of parents who omit that operation, on the supposition that they should never forgive themselves if a child died under it; my example showing that the regret may be the same either way, and that, therefore, the safer should be chosen.
— Benjamin FranklinThe Great Vaccination — the vaccination against the stupidity of the intelligentsia.
— Álvaro de CamposVaccination was, and is, thoroughly infused with our politics, our social values, and our cultural norms. By acknowledging and understanding the divergent reasons why we've vaccinated in the past, however, we just may ensure the continued success of vaccination in the future.
— Elena ConisI know you're on my side,' an immunologist once remarked to me as we discussed the politics of vaccination. I did not agree with him, but only because I was uncomfortable with both sides, as I had seen them delineated. The debate over vaccination tends to be described with what the philosopher of science Donna Haraway would call 'troubling dualisms.' These dualisms pit science against nature, public against private, truth against imagination, self against other, thought against emotion, and man against woman.
— Eula Biss