When I switched my kids to a more natural immunity-building approach three years ago, I thought it was just me being paranoid. But seeing this new poll makes me wonder how many other parents feel the same way.

The latest poll shows almost half of voters want the CDC's childhood vaccine schedule reevaluated — that's not some fringe group anymore but a significant portion of America questioning what they've been told about kids' shots.

When I dug into it, I was shocked to learn how little we actually know about long-term effects. And now this poll tells me many people are starting to ask the same questions as me: Is it really safe? Are all these vaccines necessary?

The thing that gets me is how vaccine manufacturers get a free pass from lawsuits for injuries. How can they say their products are perfectly fine without being accountable if something goes wrong?

I know my kids better than anyone, and the natural approach — breastfeeding when possible, real food with tons of immune-boosting nutrients, even some careful use of natural remedies like elderberry syrup or echinacea for colds — feels so much safer.

And you see it everywhere now: parents sharing stories about their kids after vaccines. It's making people think twice. I know every parent wants what's best for their child, and sometimes that means questioning the status quo.

It wasn't just me being a paranoid auntie anymore. Turns out millions of others are looking closer too at this vaccine schedule stuff. We're not buying it like we used to.

When I stopped giving my kids all those processed foods filled with sugar and preservatives, their health improved dramatically overnight. Could vaccines be the same? Maybe our bodies just know better when it comes to what's really good for us.

I'm going to pass this along because if you're like me wondering about these shots your kid is getting, then you might want to look into it more too. There are a lot of things we don't talk about openly in our society anymore but I think now is the time to start asking some hard questions.