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@ Naomi Not sure quite why you assume that MMR has been raised to be directed at you, but why not ask Jno if that was the case, since they raised it?
And whilst you might argue that your own reservations about MMR are perfectly rational, perfectly sound, not at all dictated by faith or otherwise, I am not sure that your specific thought processes surrounding the issue of MMR prove my hypothesis wrong - namely, that many of those refusing the MMR vaccine have an absolute faith with a capital F in Wakefield,have an absolute faith in the idea that it is some component of the vaccine - thimerosal, or stem cells, or something - that cause autism, flying square in the face of the mountains of evidence that show otherwise. They continue to portray Wakefield as a brave plucky maverick researcher, stomped upon, conspired against and villified by "big pharma" and the medical establishment. This, despite facts and evidence showing the conflicts of interest that he clearly had.
And I know that there have been studies demonstrating a link between a fundamentalist religious worldview and an anti-vaccination stance. I will have to dig out the papers sometime.
Nor do I think the issue of MMR, raised by Jno, derails the original subject.Presumably the parents in the link provided in the OP thought that faith and healing through faith was the best thing for their children, much the same way that parents refusing the MMR vaccination for their children thought they were doing the best for theirs - and to my mind from a similar mindset; rejecting the evidence and expert advice in favour of a faith-based worldview.