Breaking News Archives
- each day's breaking news from December 1, 2003
(check here for breaking news you might have missed and breaking news that
didn't ever hit the "front page")
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Vaccine-related
November 2003 -
Risk factors of multiple sclerosis: a case-control study. - journal article
(Neurological Sciences) - "In multiple logistic regression analysis, we
found independent risk factors of MS to be: familiarity for MS (OR=12.1; 95% CI,
1.3-110.7), autoimmune diseases (OR=3.8; 95% CI, 2.0-7.1) and migraine (OR=8.7;
95% CI, 1.0-75.4); comorbidity with autoimmune disease (OR=6.8; 95% CI,
1.4-32.0) and migraine (OR=13.5; 95% CI, 1.5-116.6); and vaccination against
measles (OR=92.2; 95%, 12.1-700.2). Familial susceptibility to MS, autoimmune
diseases and migraine, and vaccination to measles are associated with an
increased risk of MS."
Comment: Seems kind of important, this
result. Wonder why nothing much, if anything, has been reported about this
highly significant correlation between measles vaccine and multiple sclerosis.
December 14, 2003 -
MMR RIP?
(requires subscription) - The Sunday Times, UK - "A
conspiracy of silence or paranoid scaremongering? Is the MMR vaccine a cause of
autism or is it a vital health programme undermined by this medical maverick?"
December 14, 2003 -
Doctors fury at MMR
drama errors - The Sunday Herald, UK - "A spokesman
for the Royal Society said last night that members were alarmed at the blurring
of the distinction between fact and fiction, especially the failure to include
any reference to scientific doubts over Wakefields theories or that opinion is
split and the majority of scientists believe there is no evidence to suggest an
MMR-autism link."
Comment:
Sometimes what is one person's "fact" is another person's "fiction".
richard m
lindley, SpR paediatric surgery - "As doctors, we have a duty of care to
protect the health of children in the community. If parents watching this
programme will be less likely to have their children immunised, and therefore
run the risk of their children suffering serious and/or lethal complications of
measles, then we should make every effort to protest against it." - Competing interests: None declared
Raymond W.
Gallup - "It says quite a bit that Andrew Wakefield was sacked at the Royal
Free Hospital in London, England and that Arthur Krigsman was prevented from
doing his pathology work at hospitals in New York. It says that the people that
are against the science that Dr. Wakefield and Dr. Krigsman are producing, do
not want the truth to come out." -
Competing interests: I have an adult with autism that tested for elevated
measles antibody titers and colitis. Also, I'm Founder of The Autism
Autoimmunity Project that funded Dr. Andrew Wakefield's independent research.
M
C Feliciello - "Would
you consider the censorship of the film "Hear the Silence" from national
screening an effective means to restore herd parental trust in public health
policy?" -
Competing interests: Parent of an Autistic Child.
L S Lewis,
General Practitioner - "'As a doctor' I feel no doubt about my legal
duty to seek VALID CONSENT, VOLUNTARILY GIVEN, AND FULLY-INFORMED. How does
censorship of legal material in a free society achieve that?" - Competing interests: Fully-informed consent VS. maximum vaccinations
December 14, 2003 -
A
travesty of truth - This week's 'drama' about MMR and autism does nothing
but reinforce already held prejudices - The Guardian/Observer
June 2003 -
Rotavirus vaccines on the horizon offer some hope (requires registration) -
Future vaccines may include bovine and attenuated human rotavirus strains. -
journal article (Infectious Diseases in Children) - "Future rotavirus
vaccines may include both bovine and attenuated human rotavirus strains. They
are believed to be unlikely to induce intussusception, and should still be
effective, according to Paul Offit, MD, who spoke here at the Pediatric Academic
Societies meeting...Dr. Offit is a coholder of the patent on bovine-human
reassortant rotavirus vaccine currently being developed by Merck."
December 14, 2003 -
The Big Bad Flu, or Just the Usual?
(requires registration or subscription) - The New York Times - "For all the
public concern over the rapid spread of the new Fujian strain of influenza,
health officials and doctors say there is still no way to know whether this
year's flu season is particularly severe or just off to an early start. And for
all the clamor for dwindling supplies of vaccine, no one knows how effective the
current vaccine will be against the Fujian strain...But the flu season has
already thrown some realities about the public health system into sharp relief,
these experts say. It suggests that the country needs to be far better prepared
to deal with influenza either the conventional strains that cause serious
illness each year, or a horrendous strain like the one that caused the 1918-19
pandemic, which killed at least 30 million people worldwide."
December 13, 2003 -
Panel reluctantly backed flu vaccine to FDA
- Members of an advisory panel that backed this year's flu vaccine expressed
doubts about its potential effectiveness before recommending it for the Food and
Drug Administration's approval. - CNN
December 13, 2003 -
Stronger vaccine was nixed - March
decision by FDA is examined in light of deadly flu season - The Denver Post -
"Federal regulators could have approved a flu vaccine that protected the public
against the deadly strain sweeping through Colorado and across the country, but
would have had to use a controversial and risky method to do it."
December 12, 2003 -
Smallpox Vaccine Victims Can Seek Payment - AP via Yahoo! - "More than
38,000 medical care workers, police, firefighters and other emergency responders
have been vaccinated against smallpox under an emergency response plan that went
into effect last January. Officials estimate that about 2 percent of those
vaccinated experienced some sort of medical injury as a result...Under rules
announced Friday, those injured by the smallpox vaccine will be able to seek
compensation from a $42 million program that provides both financial and medical
benefits."
December 12, 2003 -
Getting
heated over mercury - Regulation
rollback is boon for utilities, bad for kids - by Molly Ivins -
www.workingforchange.com - "I
can't tell whether this administration is flaunting its cynicism, its contempt
for science or its conviction that when in power you help your contributors and
fry your enemies. Although how millions of small children and unborn fetuses
came to be enemies of Bush & Co. is beyond my political or theological
understanding."
December 7, 2003 -
Does Kindergarten Need Cops? - The youngest schoolkids
are acting out in really outrageous ways. Why? -
www.time.com - "
'I'm clearly seeing
an increasing number of kindergartners and first-graders coming to our attention
for aggressive behavior,' says Michael Parker, program director of psychological
services at the Fort Worth Independent School District, which serves 80,000
students. The incidents have occurred not only in low-income urban schools but
in middle-class areas as well. Says Parker: 'We're talking about serious talking
back to teachers, profanity, even biting, kicking and hitting adults, and we're
seeing it in 5-year-olds.' And these are not the kids who have been formally
labeled emotionally disturbed, says Nekedria Clark, who works in Parker's
department. 'We have our E.D. kids, and then we have our b-a-d kids.'"
December 14, 2003 -
Withdrawn Drug May Close Window of Hope for Kids
(requires registration) - The Los Angeles Times - "But
for the last 18 months or so, he's been moonlighting on the biggest case he'll
ever have proper treatment for his son, Garrett, who began displaying
autistic-like characteristics when he was 1 1/2. However, Gurwitz and his wife,
Renee, also a deputy district attorney, refuse to describe their son as
autistic...Therein lies the backdrop for an emerging medical story that, so far,
has left the Gurwitzes and other parents in varying states of frustration, anger
and dare they suggest it? cautious optimism."
"Vaccine-preventable" disease-related
December 13, 2003 -
Why flu kills healthy kids a medical mystery
- The Denver Post
- "The exact cause of death of 14-month-old
Jeremy Beaumont and of Joseph Williams, the 8- year-old from Wellington, and of
the other Colorado flu victims hasn't been determined. Most of those who died in
Colorado were sick before the flu struck, with compromised immune systems, or,
in at least one case, heart problems. But some were healthy - normal, exuberant
children whose deaths no doubt send shivers down the spine of every parent in
the state."
December 12, 2003 -
No end in sight - The News-Record - "The influenza A virus continues to take
its toll on Campbell County and health officials aren't expecting it to get much
better...Pediatrician Linda Ammari will see 45 kids today related to viral
illnesses, which she says hasn't slowed in the last two weeks."
December 13, 2003 -
Scientist warn of flu pandemic - As bad
as this year's flu season is, it hasn't brought the worldwide outbreak known as
a pandemic. But experts warn that a pandemic is coming, it's just a question of
when. - AP via CNN
Other diseases/conditions (some already in the vaccine pipeline)
December 14, 2003 -
Biotech threat scenarios get scary - Toledo Blade - "A newly declassified
Central Intelligence Agency report warns that rogue scientists could highjack
biotechnology and create super-microbes far worse than the virus staring in "24
Hours," Fox televisions popular drama...The CIA portrays them as viruses and
bacteria from hell."
December 13, 2003 -
Spread of Crohn's related to use of refrigeration, researcher
says - The Toronto Globe and Mail via The Seattle PI -
"The researchers believe that exposure to common food-borne bacteria such
yersinia and listeria overstimulates the immune system and triggers Crohn's in
people who are genetically susceptible. These bacteria are found in a wide
variety of foods that are refrigerated, including pork, chicken, sausage,
hamburger, cheese and lettuce; they can survive at temperatures near the
freezing point."
Comment:
Perhaps, but why are they susceptible? And since refrigerators have been
around for quite awhile, given that Crohn's is on the rise, what has changed to
make more and more people apparently susceptible than they used to be?
December 13, 2003 -
Drug firms fund disease awareness -
www.smh.com.au - via
Spin of the Day @ PR
Watch.org - "Pharmaceutical companies are pouring millions of dollars into
patient advocacy groups and medical organisations to help expand markets for
their products...They are also using sponsorships and educational grants to fund
disease-awareness campaigns that urge people to see their doctors."
December
8, 2003 - Butler verdict
perplexes - Scientists' reactions vary, but
most want more information following partial guilty finding - The Scientist
Breaking News Archives
- from December 1, 2003
(check here for breaking news you might have missed and breaking news that
didn't ever hit the "front page")
More News -
all the news most recently
posted on this website
All the News - a running tab of
everything posted on this website since October 29, 2003
DISCLAIMER: All
information, data, and material contained, presented, or provided here is for
general information purposes only and is not to be construed as reflecting the
knowledge or opinions of the publisher, and is not to be construed or intended
as providing medical or legal advice. The decision whether or not to vaccinate
is an important and complex issue and should be made by you, and you alone, in
consultation with your health care provider.
"A foolish faith in authority is the worst enemy of truth."
-- Albert Einstein, letter to a friend, 1901
"I know of no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society but the people themselves, and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from them, but to inform their discretion by education."
-- Thomas Jefferson, letter to William C. Jarvis, September 28, 1820
"What's the point of vaccination if it doesn't protect you from the unvaccinated?"
-- Sandy Gottstein
"Who gets to decide what the greater good is and how many will be sacrificed to it?"