Osteopathy, naturopathy and homeopathy are not taught in medical school and their practitioners don't earn MD. The term 'complementary medicine' is actually more accurate, as it denotes (correctly) that they can enhance conventional medicine but not replace it.
Your new viewing angle probably obscures the suppression of diseases that vaccines bring about, and the resurgence of the same when such programs are allowed to lapse.
Research involves, in its very early stages even, verifying the reliability of the available sources. None of your citations passed that stage. None of those authors is qualified to give more than an opinion, and even most of them are blatantly biased.
And when any of those people can actually prove their claims without fudging their sources, they will become the dominant view. It's not like it hasn't happened over and over and over, in medicine and elsewhere.
She also hitched herself to Andrew Wakefield's wagon (who, as a reminder, started the 'vaccines cause autism' malarkey in an effort to discredit the MMR and sell the measles vaccine he had developed to the NHS). A complete lack of medical ethics there, and the misinformation continued in her own book.
This post provides an analysis of the questionable tactics Dr Humphries uses to support her anti-vaccine claims.
medium.com
Don't be so certain. Medical research is not the same as historical research. Same way that a medical journalist can report on research, but not participate or evaluate it.
Severe side effects of vaccines, like anaphylactic shock, are extremely rare (around 2 cases per million), and even some of them can be avoided if the person has had proper healthcare beforehand and any allergies or other contraindications have been diagnosed; unfortunately, not all can be detected in advance. There have been no causal links established between vaccination and either death or learning difficulties. Most vaccines are not administered during pregnancy, and if you're talking about the COVID-19 ones in particular, there seems to be
some deliberate misinformation going on there as well. Injection site tumours happen to cats, not humans.
I'm not qualified, nor do I have access to the means to do actual research, as opposed to Google search, like you and I and everyone else has been doing here. That's why I rely on people who
have done their research: virologists, microbiologists, biochemists, epidemiologists, and experts on public health.