By Sarah Ferris
Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) is moving into damage control mode after his controversial comments on the measles vaccine put the 2016 contender at odds with the vast majority of his party.
After 24 hours of intense media coverage for his vaccination comments, Paul received a Hepatitis A booster from the Capitol physician’s office — and invited a New York Times reporter along to watch.
“It just annoys me that I’m being characterized as someone who’s against vaccines,” Paul, a medical doctor, told the Times as he received the shot, which was a follow-up from vaccines he'd received before traveling to Guatemala last year.
Paul attempted to clarify his remarks after facing blowback for a CNBC interview where he said he knew of “many tragic cases of walking, talking, normal children, who wound up with profound mental disorders after vaccines,” though he also said that vaccines were “a good thing.”
The senator said he “did not allege causation” and said his words have been taken out of context.
Paul told the Times that the "the science is clear that if you compare the risks of taking a vaccine to the ill effects of taking a vaccine, it’s overwhelming.”
[Great to see that congress has such good tax payer paid for health care and that they can go to a doctor at their work place and get free medical treatments....]
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