Vaccination

Vaccine (456)

Synopsis: 5. medicine & health: Medical procedure: Vaccination:


BBC 00943.txt

I've been vaccinated against killers from polio to tuberculosis to measles; I've had an inside toilet and bathroom with hot and cold running water;


BBC 01104.txt

For example, malariacontrol. net simulates the spread of the disease on computer oe helping governments decide how to invest most effectively on, for instance, bednets versus vaccines.


impactlab_2010 00679.txt

Such a balance could help explain why vaccines seem to protect some people better than others


impactlab_2011 02739.txt

#At the same time, the need for vaccination and losses from whole flocks being infected should be reduced. While large poultry producers could benefit from this early type of transgenic bird,


impactlab_2013 00124.txt

And as of now, there s no vaccine in the US just yet. Of course, this doesn t mean that bacon will be disappearing entirely any time soon,


impactlab_2013 00922.txt

Of course I also mentioned vaccines and other lifesaving scientific advances. Melinda talked about the benefits of contraception and agriculture.

They include everything from making vaccines that don t have to be refrigerated to preventing mosquitos from transmitting malaria.


Livescience_2013 03309.txt

Both the H7n9 virus and the H7h7 virus belong to the H7 family of viruses. 6 Flu Vaccine Myths There are probably other viruses like H7n7 that are circulating in the poultry populations in China said study


Livescience_2013 03940.txt

the fact that any potential vaccine tests in animals (not humans) may be up to six weeks out;

and it takes awhile for a suitable vaccine to be developed then international public health officials are going to start sweating.

In the case of a pandemic a vaccine would need to be developed and distributed quickly.

 A California company (Inovio) is in the early stage of developing a potential vaccine with plans to get access to the virus in a highly protected lab environment for its initial tests.

In a worst-case scenario a vaccine could skip animal tests and be administered to humans.


Livescience_2013 06913.txt

and self-interest nor is scientific research free from cultural influence (consider halal vaccines for example). Some people have very good reasons to be suspicious of scientists and science.


Livescience_2014 02464.txt

It still affects more than 500000 people around the world yearly though livestock vaccination and dairy pasteurization have hampered its spread.


Livescience_2014 03194.txt

The good news though is that the two viruses that cause these cancers are largely preventable by vaccine-Hepatitis b

and being vaccinated for the most common cancer-causing infections. These are largely the focuses of public health policies for cancer for


Livescience_2014 04502.txt

Other work revealed that probiotics may enhance the effects of the vaccine against rotavirus vaccine the most common cause of severely dehydrating diarrhea in infants and children according to a 2008 study in the journal Vaccine.


Nature 00235.txt

THE WHO defends itself against allegations it overhyped the dangers of H1n1 under pressure from vaccine manufacturers at a hearing of the Council of europe's health committee.

After around 65 million people have been vaccinated, THE WHO says H1n1 vaccines appear to have an excellent safety profile.

None of the deaths investigated in those vaccinated have found a direct link to vaccination.

2 november 2009: Ministry of Health of Ukraine 1103/en/index. html>reports it has recorded over 250,000 cases of influenza-like illness, with 70 deaths.

Strategic Advisory Group of Experts (SAGE) on Immunization issues vaccination advice to THE WHO, including use of a single dose of vaccine in adults and adolescents and use of any licensed vaccine for pregnant women.

vaccinations get underway in many European countries. 18 october 2009: 1023/en/index. html>This week, Mongolia, Rwanda,

Australia begins mass swine flu vaccinations. 25 september 2009: European Medicines Agency recommends approval of two H1n1 vaccines, from Novartis and Glaxosmithkline.

15 september 2009: FDA approves four H1n1 vaccines, from CSL Limited, Medimmune LLC, Novartis, and Sanofi Pasteur.

10 september 2009: Two papers published in the New england Journal of Medicine show two new vaccines against H1n1 are likely to be effective after just one dose (paper 1,

paper 2). The obvious advantage of a one-dose schedule is that, in the current time of vaccine scarcity,

it doubles the number of people who may be vaccinated with a fixed amount of vaccine, writes Kathleen Neuzil, of PATH, in an accompanying editorial.

On the basis of these data, it would be appropriate to begin vaccination with the use of one dose of the usual antigen content.

3 september 2009: Novartis says a trial on 100 subjects shows its H1n1 vaccine is potentially protective for 80%of subjects after one dose and over 90%after two doses. 21 august 2009:

Healthy victims of swine flu should not routinely be given antiviral drugs, the World health organization useantivirals 20090820/en/index. html>warns.

Two Australian companies say they have started human trials of their swine flu vaccines. 16 july 2009: WHO changes reporting requirements for H1n1

Chinese state news source Xinhua reports tests have begun on the first H1n1 vaccine developed in the country.

Medimmune, a biotechnology firm in Gaithersburg, Maryland, wins a $90 million contract from the federal government to begin developing a live attenuated vaccine for H1n1.


Nature 00242.txt

for example we invest heavily in public-private partnerships for developing new drugs, new diagnostic techniques, new vaccines.


Nature 00252.txt

In the past, work on cattle led to the development of the smallpox vaccine and in vitro fertilization techniques.


Nature 00445.txt

Capua showed that serum samples from people vaccinated against seasonal flu strains showed little or no cross reactivity against H1,


Nature 00540.txt

which is critical for vaccine production, as is the current practice. Nevertheless, reliance upon patchy data from historical flu viruses has its limitations.


Nature 00650.txt

Research HIV vaccine: An experimental HIV vaccine has shown moderate success at preventing infection by the virus. A US$119-million study involving more than 16,000 HIV-negative men

and women from Thailand found that a combination of two older drugs, which had failed to work individually, together reduced the risk of contracting HIV by nearly a third.

It's the largest step forward that's ever occurred in the HIV-vaccine field, says Dan Barouch of the Beth Israel Deaconess Medical center in Boston, Massachusetts.

which includes Solvay's vaccines business, based in Belgium. The acquisition will also see Abbott increase its annual US$2. 7-billion pharmaceutical research and development investment by $500 million.


Nature 00734.txt

Vaccine report: More children than ever are being immunized, but 24 million infants in the world's poorest nations still do not receive routine immunization, according to a report by the World health organization, UNICEF and the World bank.

The 21 october State of the World's Vaccines and Immunization report says that although four in five children now have access to lifesaving vaccines,

at least another US$1 billion is needed annually to help raise immunization rates above 90%.%This would cover the rising costs of immunization

HIV vaccine doubt: Results of the largest-ever HIV-vaccine trial looked less impressive when full details were published formally last week (S. Rerks-Ngarm et al.

N. Engl. J. Med. doi: 10.1056/nejmoa0908492; 2009) than when they were outlined in a press release a month earlier.

In September, the trial was said to show that a vaccine combination reduced the risk of HIV infection by nearly one-third.


Nature 00954.txt

a vaccine containing the attenuated virus that was heat-stable and could be stored and transported over long distances.

regional efforts and focused on widespread vaccination programmes and on long-term monitoring of cattle and wildlife.

Although the rinderpest vaccine can provide lifelong protection, it also poses a challenge. Because it contains the live virus

diagnostic tests can't differentiate between infected and vaccinated animals, as both will test positive for antibodies against the virus. Cows also pass on antibodies to their offspring through their milk.

vaccinations must stop for a period of two years and calves younger than two years old then need to be tested.


Nature 00972.txt

The programme's success depended on widespread vaccination programmes and long-term monitoring of cattle and wildlife.

when a heat-stable vaccine was developed that contained the attenuated virus, allowing the vaccine to be stored

and transported over long distances. Oura says that the biggest scientific challenges in eradicating the virus is the large-scale monitoring

Although the vaccine can provide lifelong protection, it has caused also some problems. Because it contains the live virus

diagnostic tests can't differentiate between infected and vaccinated animals, as both will test positive for antibodies against the virus. Cows also pass on antibodies to their offspring through their milk.

vaccinations must stop for a period of two years and calves less than two years old tested.


Nature 01110.txt

1998) that began the scare over a purported link between autism and the measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccine.


Nature 01211.txt

and less extreme measures such as vaccinating the animals may have been enough. I've never encountered anything like that before,

Vaccination of dairy goats is now mandatory everywhere in the country. After the first round of vaccinations in the southern Netherlands in 2008, initial findings showed that the vaccine,

produced by animal drug company CEVA of Libourne, France, cut down on the amount of bacteria in the goats'milk and afterbirth during lambing season the following year1.

But the first infected goats to be vaccinated were slaughtered in 2009. That put a crimp in possible findings from this year's lambing season

already under way, as to how much vaccination could help already infected farms, says Hendrik-Jan Roest, project leader on Q fever in goats for the Central Veterinary Institute (CVI) in Wageningen, The netherlands.

but in the end, documenting the impact of the vaccinations may have to wait at least another year. Researchers are also racing to work out


Nature 01919.txt

which specializes in vaccines and antibody therapies. Crucell's board of directors unanimously supports the deal, and shareholders will vote on the matter on 8 february.


Nature 02005.txt

Nature Newspolicy Research People Business Trend watch Coming up Number crunch Policy Haiti's cholera fight Health officials have outlined plans for a proposed cholera vaccination


Nature 02020.txt

Instead, developing countries try to control H5n1 by vaccinating birds. This doesn't prevent them from silently acquiring mild forms of the disease and

and are famous for evading vaccines. If made commercially available, the GM birds wouldn't have these issues.


Nature 02082.txt

Vaccine initiative Kenya became the fifth country to roll out a new pneumococcal vaccine this week,

under a plan to help developing countries adopt new vaccines as speedily as the developed world.

and produce affordable vaccines for poor nations. But the initiative led by the GAVI Alliance, breaks this impasse by guaranteeing firms a market for their products,

and cuts vaccine prices further using public subsidies. If more money can be raised, more than 40 developing countries are expected to roll out the vaccine by 2015.

See go. nature. com/hmkyod for more. Grants glitch Computer glitches forced Australia's National Health and Medical Research Council to shut down its online system for accepting funding applications last week.


Nature 02094.txt

In these cases, vaccines should be developed, Mcdermott says. Agricultural research has focused traditionally on increasing production,


Nature 02251.txt

in return for greater access to any vaccines created. The deal announced by THE WHO on 17 april,

or vaccines 墉 as Indonesia did in 2007. Events Cleanup visions for Fukushima As workers continue to douse stricken reactors at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant with water,

People Research fraud Prosecutors in the United states are seeking to extradite a Danish scientist researching the relationship between autism and vaccines, who,


Nature 02557.txt

Research targeting mosquito control is compared grossly underfunded with that on malaria drugs and vaccines she adds,


Nature 02660.txt

There is no vaccination to protect against Hendra virus or Nipah virus, the two established species of henipavirus.


Nature 02984.txt

Scientists contacted By nature say that basic research on such mutated strains may eventually yield insight relevant to developing pandemic countermeasures such as drugs and vaccines.

Other scientists add that it should force governments to rethink existing vaccine technologies, which are only capable of supplying vaccine six months after a pandemic starts,

and of producing enough vaccine for a small fraction of the world population. But the notion that the research offers a guide to dangerous variants that could be stamped out before they spread is unrealistic

say Osterholm and other researchers.""In order to even consider the possibility of reducing the animal reservoir of an emerging pandemic virus,


Nature 03029.txt

) Wakefield's work posited a now-discredited link between autism and the combined measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccine;


Nature 03070.txt

Bossart, a microbiologist at Boston University in Massachusetts, works on treatments and vaccines for the Nipah and Hendra viruses,

then we have to test vaccines in them, says Bossart. The US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has broken ground for a facility that would have allowed researchers such as Bossart to work closer to home.


Nature 03175.txt

and keeping animal vaccines and diagnostics up to date. To assess trends in global genetic surveillance, Nature analysed the records of nonidentical sequences from all subtypes of avian

and selects human strains to be included in vaccines for seasonal flu. Monitoring animals falls to the FAO,


Nature 03494.txt

and the kinds of mitigation strategies like vaccines that are said available Mark Thurmond, a committee member and veterinarian at the University of California at Davis. Deciding the ultimate fate of the NBAF falls to policy-makers,


Nature 03639.txt

With no vaccine or cure for the disease, mass culls and vigilant hygiene offer the main defence.

scientists believe that it should be possible to develop a vaccine to eradicate the disease.

researchers could engineer these genes into the genome of a harmless virus to create a vaccine.

Alternatively, identifying and switching off the disease-causing genes in the virus could lead to an attenuated vaccine.

I had a vaccine


Nature 03664.txt

Companies set to fight food-label plansource: California Secretary of Statethose in favour of labelling argue that the public has the right to know what is in their food,


Nature 03701.txt

Cancer vaccine The biotech firm behind the first approved cancer vaccine will slash 41%of its workforce, after tepid sales of its Provenge (sipuleucel-T) therapy for some prostate cancers.

) Dendreon hopes to market the vaccine in Europe by 2013. Alzheimer s setback Research has been halted on a keenly watched experimental drug aimed at treating Alzheimer s disease after it failed two late-stage clinical trials.


Nature 03721.txt

but it lives on in scores of labs. Twelve months after the world celebrated the success of a years-long vaccination campaign that made rinderpest only the second disease after smallpox to be eradicated,

Rinderpest vaccine strains, which are stocked in many countries and consist of live attenuated virus, are also a concern.

vaccine strains will need probably to be maintained in high-security labs in several regions so that they can be shipped swiftly to any outbreak,

whether vaccines can be developed against another related virus, the sheep and goat disease called peste des petits ruminants,


Nature 03862.txt

but rarely funds proposals to produce drugs or vaccines in the milk of transgenic livestock.


Nature 04078.txt

HSCICMMR vaccination The immunization of children in England against measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) by 24 Â months of age has reached now more than 90,

Vaccinations dipped to as low as 79%after authors led by Andrew Wakefield published a now-retracted paper in The Lancet suggesting a link between the MMR vaccine and autism.

whereas industry funding has grown (mostly owing to investments in trials for dengue vaccines). 7 december Climate negotiators end a fortnight of debate at the United nations Framework Convention on Climate Change in Doha. go. nature. com/wnhovv12 December British scientists start 100


Nature 04494.txt

and rumours about vaccines as they occur in real time. The system, described in a 13  May paper (H.  J.  Larson et  al.

if trust in vaccines falls. 18-21 may The American Society for Microbiology holds its annual general meeting in Denver, Colorado,


Nature 04599.txt

That includes cattle movement controls, increasing biosecurity, development of vaccines and control of the wildlife reservoir.

I would also point to vaccines as well. Vaccines, at the end of the day, are going to be what allows us to actually eradicate TB.

Clearly reducing wildlife populations and killing cattle is not going to actually produce the elimination that we re really striving for.

We re already moving as rapidly as we can towards getting a vaccine for cattle.

so we might have pilot vaccination trials. However, the BCG vaccine bacillus Calmette-Guã rin, the common vaccine for TB is probably only going to be about 60%effective,

so it s not going to be the silver bullet. We probably have to also move to vaccination of badgers.

There s an injectable vaccine available at the moment, but it s far too expensive to roll out on any wide-scale basis

. So we need to get an oral vaccine for badgers, and we re still some way from doing that.

I think social science has a major role to play in this. This isn t just about badgers and cattle.


Nature 04643.txt

and vaccines to prevent the virus from spreading. The National Pork Board has approved $800, 000 to fund research and education.

but only after years of working with the virus. In the United states, the same import restrictions that were set up to help to prevent PEDV from entering the country have made it difficult to import the necessary lab materials for working with the virus, such as vaccines, infected cells


Nature 04671.txt

whether vaccines developed against a closely related virus peste des petits ruminants (PPR), which causes disease in sheep

if successful, would eliminate the need to retain stocks of live-attenuated rinderpest vaccine. That would contribute to the goal of reducing the number of labs worldwide holding rinderpest material,

Stocks of live-attenuated vaccine, currently held in at least 53 labs in 34 countries, are deemed less problematic,

Conversely, the agencies plan to centralize stocks of vaccines in a few high-containment repositories in regions at highest risk of disease,

"Many countries are reluctant to give up their vaccine stocks. The process of destroying virus or shipping it to centres with high biosafety levels must be done in a way that does not risk its release,

Many countries are reluctant to give up their vaccine stocks in case the disease should reappear and threaten their food supply.

They worry about becoming dependent on the willingness of the international community to swiftly provide them with needed vaccines."

and that they would have guaranteed access to vaccine from FAO-OIE repositories. Vallat notes that

if Baron proves that PPR vaccines can protect cattle against rinderpest, it would provide an elegant way around such political issues:

there would no longer be need any to hold onto rinderpest vaccines. Baron says that he hopes to start the vaccine-challenge trials next spring

and complete them by the end of 2014. Additional potentially promising research areas include other improved vaccines,

diagnostics and perhaps disease pathology, says Lubroth. He stresses, however, that the advisory committee will not be prescriptive


Nature 04715.txt

Flu vaccine backfires in pigspreventing seasonal sniffles may be complicated more than researchers suspected. A vaccine that protects piglets from one common influenza virus also makes them more vulnerable to a rarer flu strain,

researchers report today in Science Translational Medicine1. The team gave piglets a vaccine against H1n2 influenza.

The animals responded by making antibodies that blocked that virus but aided infection with the swine flu H1n1,

and caused more severe pneumonia in vaccinated piglets than unvaccinated ones. The root of the different immune responses lies with the mushroom-shaped haemagglutinin protein found on the outside of influenza-virus particles

In the study, a vaccine for H1n2 spurred pigs to produce antibodies that bound the cap and the stem of that virus s haemagglutinin.

The finding may give some vaccine developers pause. Much of the work to develop a universal flu vaccine has targeted the stems of haemagglutinin proteins

because they are relatively consistent across many types of influenza viruses. The new study suggests that such vaccines could also produce antibodies that enhance the ability of some viruses to infect new hosts,

says James Crowe, an immunologist at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee. But that does not mean that researchers should stop developing novel flu vaccines,

including those that target haemagglutinin stems, he adds.""We should be very careful. Gary Nabel, a flu-vaccine researcher and chief scientific officer at the biotechnology firm Sanofi in Cambridge, Massachusetts, agrees."

"It raises a warning flag, but at the same time it provides a tool to manage that risk,

Still, researchers have not yet tested whether human influenza vaccines can produce the same effect. And differences between pigs and humans make it difficult to interpret how relevant the findings are to the development of human vaccines,

says Sarah Gilbert, a vaccine researcher at the University of Oxford, UK. Lead author Hana Golding, a microbiologist at the US Food and Drug Administration in Bethesda, Maryland, agrees

and stresses that seasonal vaccines are still safe and effective.""This has no relevance to the regular vaccinations,

she says.""We think that people should definitely take them


Nature 04716.txt

Overpumping threatens to deplete US high plains groundwateran article by Scientific American. Midwestern Farmers have relied on the High Plains Aquifer System

since they first discovered the solution to their drought woes nearly six decades ago. The massive underground water source has turned a vast dry swath of the Great plains from North dakota to Texas into arable farmland.


Nature 04765.txt

The rice could be used to complement vaccinations to protect children when they are at their most vulnerable to rotavirus,

since 2009 that rotavirus vaccines be included in national immunisation programmes. But studies have shown since that these vaccines are less effective in developing countries than in industrialised countries,

protecting only 50-60 per cent of people immunised in developing countries, compared with 85-98 per cent in industrialised countries.

Mucorice-ARP1 could complement existing vaccine schedules. It would not be a substitute for a vaccine,

she says, but it's something that in certain situations could be very helpful. For example, the rice could be given to children under two years old

including rotavirus vaccines, oral rehydration solution and zinc supplementation, Santosham says. We must ensure that all the currently available tools are made available to every child in the world


Nature 05001.txt

Malaria strategy Researchers should aim to develop malaria vaccines by 2030 that can reduce the disease by 75,

%the World health organization said on 14 Â November in its updated Malaria Vaccine Technology Roadmap. The original 2006 roadmap had called for a malaria vaccine with an efficacy of 50%against severe disease

and death a target that seems unlikely to be met (see Nature 502, 271-272; 2013).

the revised plan recommends rapid assessment of new candidate vaccines using controlled studies in humans.


Nature 05220.txt

when researching a vaccine against human immunodeficiency virus  1 (HIV-1) by spiking rabbit blood samples with antibodies.


Nature 05259.txt

a crowd-funded initiative to develop an HIV vaccine that has sparked debate among scientists. See go. nature. com/hwcnwu for more.


popsci_2013 00669.txt

#The latest outbreak of measles in the U s a preventable disease that the Western hemisphere eradicated decades ago thanks to vaccines has been traced to a megachurch in Texas. The church's senior pastor Terri Pearsons had criticized previously vaccines USA Today reports.

One ill child is 4 months old too young to have received the measles vaccine. On average among 1000 kids who contract measles one gets a serious brain infection called encephalitis and one or two kids die.

and urged the congregation to get vaccinated which sounds great. But a statement from church leaders issued last week still includes some troubling unscientific claims.

I believe it is wrong to be against vaccinations and the disease is only shut down

The statement suggests there's some link between vaccines and autism when there is none. It also suggests following the recommended vaccine schedule is somehow dangerous.

The recommended schedule has never been linked to getting diseases later in life nor is there any evidence that getting vaccines at a young age is harmful to babies.

In addition to urging them to get vaccinated Pearsons told her congregation to take excessive amounts of Vitamin d.

I also strongly recommend taking Vitamin d at 1000 units a day for young children and 2000 units a day for older children and adults ongoing.

the church leaders were initially against vaccinations for dubious reasons then they changed their minds

and went to the trouble of offering free vaccinations to correct their error and then suggested taking 1000 mg to 2000 mg of Vitamin d to boost the immune system in addition to vaccinations.

A lot of current research indicates that Vitamin d improves immune response and nothing shows that 2000 mg is anywhere close to a toxic or unhealthy amount.

As is so often if not always the case with articles condemning suspicion of vaccines this engages in misrepresentation and misinterpretation.

because they don't receive vaccines for measles at such an early age. But that would mean that before the vaccination was available measles would have to have been something regularly if not universally contracted in infancy.

And there are no records of that ever being the case. Indeed infants may be protected naturally from the disease.

The article claims that there is no link between vaccines and autism when in reality there is no published link!

what the New world Order demands unsurprisingly many will not push on material that proves vaccines are dangerous.

Vaccines are your friends that's how we*eradicated*polio and smallpox. Fool. Self correcting problem anyway.

and of course that church didn't actually help in getting vaccines. Thanks for letting me know about the new world order I would have guessed never such a thing existed

âÂ#â âÂctually about 15 years ago there was a specific type of vaccine that

although it was never directly proven hospitals stopped giving the vaccine due to a large coincidence of kids getting autism from it.

I happen to know a person that got autism from said vaccine at the age of 8!

They were completely normal prior the vaccination. That's pretty freaking scary. Now no one uses that vaccine anymore

and the only trail you need to follow is what types of vaccines are used now

and why the old ones were replaced. You can't hide that data. Truth is we weren't very good at making safe vaccines back in the day.

However the incidence of children getting autism from that vaccine was still very small compared to the number of children who were vaccinated.

People who deny that the evolution of bacteria pathogens and microbes will surpass our own immune response are mistaken sadly.

If you don't vaccinate then you put yourself at risk. A better argument is that

Thus this is a modern enlightened liberal congregation of feel-good back-to-the-Earthmother vegan hippies who are not vaccinating their children with the wicked chemicals of the modern world.

and vaccines are good and proven science (we are rather glad not to have to deal with smallpox anymore).

http://www. thehealthyhomeeconomist. com/two-autistic-children-awarded-millions-by-vaccine-court/http://www. collective-evolution. com/2013/05/08/italian-court-rules

-mmr-vaccine-caused-autism-us-media-blacks-out-story/@Drchuck1 time for some more Geratol.

Vaccines are not always safe: The Vaccine Injury Compensation Program has paid out over $2 billion in compensation to families who have been damaged by vaccines.

This article does little to help the situation as this liberal media bullshit site simply spews

Only try and realize the truth-there is no spoon. troll@D49 could you provide a URL to a medical journal or something that talks about the potential dangers of vaccines?

I don't think that vaccines can cause autism or similar things based on what I've read

The other strengthening factor here is that the Vaccine Injury Compensation Program has paid out over $2 billion in compensation to families who have been damaged by vaccines.

young Emily Moller from Houston won compensation following vaccine-related brain injury that once again involved MMR and resulted in autism.

or the court ruled that vaccines had caused brain injury. In turn this injury led to an ASD diagnosis. MMR vaccine was the common denominator in these cases.

âÂ#Â#The report echoes the exact same sentiment that our reader conveyed âÂ#ÂDR.

-We agree that your child got autism after the vaccinations but we won't go on record as saying that.

Also here is another vaccine cover up link magically missing: http://www. whydontyoutrythis. com/2013/07/cdc-admits-98-million-americans-received-polio-vaccine-in-an-8-year-span

-when-it-was contaminated-with-cancer-virus. htmlknowing now what we know about vaccines and medicine you think our previous attempts at vaccines are full proof?

You don't think that the government and big pharma cover up evidence of those early mistakes?

To all who think that you have been given a straight answer to these issues you are being fooled.

We all know that we didn't know enough back then to have foreseen these issues with vaccines.

For those of you who received Polop Vaccines...ouch. The CDC is not some trustworthy source of information either.

http://www. ncbi. nlm. nih. gov/pubmed/11897278http://www. nvic. org/NVIC-Vaccine-News/April-2010/Vaccine-Contamination-Pig-Virus

However this is real evidence of the effects of vaccines. Don't believe that something is safe just

or paid for by the same company that makes the vaccines. You may have an underlying condition that

when combined with a vaccine will make you sick. You may possible develop nervous system disorders

if they take the vaccines. That doesn't mean that you won't gauge the risk

A LOT OF PEOPLE HAVE BEEN HURT BY VACCINES. THAT IS A FACT. ARGUE ALL DAY IT DOESN'T CHANGE THE NUMBERS.

Enjoy your vaccines!:Do not try and bend the spoon. That is impossible. Only try and realize the truth-there is no spoon.

but it is another example of vaccine failure in any case. The germ theory needs to be rethought.

'It also explains why vaccinated people still get the exact diseases they were vaccinated for. It's about the immune system.

and gets vaccinated is it the innate system providing protection or the vaccine (vaccine supporters assume the vaccine)?

And how would one ever know? Well supposed adequate antibody titer levels are the measure

but these have failed repeatedly to correlate with protection (meaning blood work on the few occasions it is checked will reveal antibodies from the vaccine present

In vaccinated people that still get sick that would imply an immune issue that failed to ward off a pathogen early

and thus major symptoms came forth even with vaccine antibodies present. And this happens every time an'outbreak'occurs somewhere (just like the above example.

Flu pertussis measles you name it many of the infected (if not most) are fully or partially vaccinated people.

What else would explain why vaccinations fail? If they worked they would work. If you dig through old writings from the last couple centuries many physicians found evidence supporting the idea of immune issues involved with smallpox.

The smallpox vaccine had discovered critics who from their field work that the vaccine didn't work

But these physicians were ignored as most of their peers were inculcated already totally in the belief in vaccines.

There is still not a single control study to settle the issue (control studies for vaccines are compared not against a saline placebo but against an already'established as safe'vaccine...

The claim of breach of ethics for withholding vaccines is not a valid argument as drug companies have no problem testing every other drug on participants

It's hypocritical for the vaccine pushers to claim vaccines as hard science when that science has never actually been done

If you look through the graphs on the dissolvingillusions website you will see that mortality from many diseases had dropped considerably well before vaccines came to market.

That alone should give pause to vaccine supporters (yet it never seems to oddly enough and instead draws attacks claiming fake data

How do vaccine supporters explain the death decreases before vaccines and the clear downward trend every disease was displaying (Scarlet fever is interesting as it followed a similar progression down

but there never was a vaccine)? Improved medical care? Perhaps but IV's were not widely in use until the 1950's


< Back - Next >


Overtext Web Module V3.0 Alpha
Copyright Semantic-Knowledge, 1994-2011