Sadly, we live in an age where rational discussions on important policy issues are difficult. We determine who is saying something before we hear what is actually being said. Last week’s Congressional hearing featuring Robert Kennedy Jr. is perhaps the best example of this phenomenon.
Good public policies are not automatic and are never easy. Frankly, this is why Congresses across the country meet so often, each establishing a revision process to revise decisions made in the past few years. However, to fix the issue, you must be motivated to focus on the issues at hand. Instead, they attack the messenger. Ideally, approach the problem with the long-term intention of getting the solution right. Scientific progress is equally difficult, and certainly there is no direct line to progress. It’s not as if there are always bright lines to follow, but if done correctly, progress is possible and surprising. Before the Salk vaccine, more than 20,000 polio cases were seen in the US per year. Now nothing happens in the Western Hemisphere.
The period of symbiosis in our history was completely fabre. There are mistakes, the exaggeration is constant, and now there is something suspicious in the public realm. Good public policy should aim to thoroughly analyze prescriptions for what is wrong, what was right, and how to prepare better for the next outbreak. The history of medicine is rich in examples of progress made through analysis and testing.
My family was rocked and eventually broke when I was a child. This is because miraculous drugs were wrong for my younger brother, who mostly responded and died. I was thinking about my whole life. I was wondering why, how, and how it was horrible. One of the challenges in life is to weigh the balances we face, choose our routes, and revisit what we thought were facts.
There is now a lot of passion in the struggle between community health and well-being and family choices. I hope that the focus of the discussion is on quality science and proven results, taking into account true concerns about ongoing research on the appropriate age, components within the shot, combination of shots, and effectiveness of selected treatment options.
Politics seems to infect every aspect of our lives, and for this I am not sure there is a cure. As for me, I carry the deep truth that I can make mistakes and affect life. It should not be singular about profits, but the fuel for progress should always be to drive us forward. Take a deep breath and look at the 76 shots your 18-year-old gets. It aims to improve health outcomes, and again, not mixing bad politics with bad politics.

