Cherie, I think I'm quite similar to you - there are some injections I'll let the baby have, and some I'll be refusing for the baby. I am more pro-vaccination than anti-vaccination, especially with the non-immunised immigrant carriers in the UK (nothing to do with cleanliness, just that people with natural immunities and from other countries can carry diseases no matter what - I just wish we had a decent immigration system, like Australia), and personally quite enjoyed vaccination times as it meant a day off school for some of the tropical ones. But I will be giving vaccinations later than usual and I am going to have to consider seperate injections - they give them mostly in one needle for five things here. HepB is also at 6 weeks in the UK, which I'm happier about (although would still put it off until 8w; there are cases of hepititis in the UK and wouldn't not do it).

I would never have the flu vaccination for me as flu doesn't usually kill you (well, men may claim it almost does when they have it LOL). Plus I've never seen anyone not feel bad for a week after that injection and it doesn't prevent the flu anyway! I wouldn't do chicken pox either (don't think I can in the UK), even though I have a couple of over-stretched chicken pox scars on my stomach now. But that's me - if it doesn't usually kill or severely disable then I'd rather not vaccinate.