Lollipop Parties to Infect Kids with Chickenpox

Discussion in 'Conversations Between White Women and Black Men' started by swirlman07, Nov 13, 2011.

  1. swirlman07

    swirlman07 Well-Known Member

    So, why would a parent purchase a lollipop that was licked by a child with Chicken Pox, for infecting her child with Chicken Pox? Not to mention the disgust factor, or the assumption that you child will contract chicken pox, apparently some parents think that it's a matter of convenience to intentionally expose their children to an infectious disease.

    By the way, it's not a foregone conclusion that a child will ever contract Chicken pox. I've never had Chicken Pox, Mumps, measles or any of those childhood diseases.


    http://newyork.ibtimes.com/articles...enpox-lollipops-federal-crime-carry-risks.htm
     
    Last edited: Nov 13, 2011
  2. Ches

    Ches Well-Known Member

    Parents want their kids exposed as a child because complications due to chickenpox are less likely and less severe than if they contract it as an adult. Complications in an adult can be pretty serious. My son contracted chickenpox without us having to resort to chickenpox parties or other unorthodox methods, thankfully.
     
  3. nurse1980

    nurse1980 New Member

    uuugh! I typed up a big long response to this, and i timed out :-( Anyways, the point of my reply was....Why not just get the vaccine? Why risk exposure for your child? The article makes a valid point: How will you feel if your child is one of the few that develops serious complications from the Varicella virus? IMO- Id rather deal with a bit of pain, swelling, redness from the injection site.
     
  4. Sin Mari

    Sin Mari New Member

    I'd rather use the vaccine too, but I see why people do expose their children to it. They just think they're doing the right thing.
     
  5. nocturnalmission

    nocturnalmission New Member

    I would not intentionally expose my child or any other child to Chicken Pox or any other childhood virus just to get it out of the way because I think the risks out-weigh the benefits if the illness spins out of control.

    If I understand the evolution of viruses and the experts studying them, there are now several strains of Chicken Pox out there. One strain that may have been native to an area or region and other mutated strains "imported" from other areas. Although a child may have enough antibodies to "fight" a native strain through the various ways such antibodies are developed (breast feeding, etc), there may be no protection against the mutated/foreign strain.
     
  6. wtarshi

    wtarshi Well-Known Member

    both mine have had the vaccine, far easier and safer. too many pregnant woman walking around here to risk infection
     
  7. Sin Mari

    Sin Mari New Member

    True, true.
     

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