Quote:
Originally Posted by wehateporn
Good find BittieBucks Eric, most likely to do with different ages of vaccination and different types of vaccines
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Could be, but the article mentions different reactions to different compounds from the *same* protein.
That could indeed be cause by differences in age but it also tells me it could be down to geographical location. For example, lookup the % of people who are lactose intolerant(different from an allergy). Make a map of people who are immune to HIV. You'll find it overlaps with the map of where the plague ravaged centuries ago(which ultimately is down to genetics)
Many times allergies are also linked to the level of consumption of a specific product.
Apparently, in Greece, peanut allergy is pretty much non existant.
In Israel the consumption of sesame is very high.
My point is..it could be that vaccines have an influence on allergies, but that doesn't mean that they don't have effect nor that they should be dismissed that easily.