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"Recent Breaking News" and "Breaking News Archives"
Autism
in a Needle - In These Times (how to purchase)
- November 24, 2003 issue -
may be available at Barnes and Noble
Studies
describe heart disease following smallpox vaccination - American Heart
Association via www.eurekalert.org - "Heart-related
complications can occur after the smallpox vaccine, but symptoms are usually
mild, according to three studies presented at the American Heart Association's
Scientific Sessions 2003...Public health officials expected some adverse
reactions associated with the smallpox program, but didn't anticipate heart
complications, he said...'The smallpox vaccine appears to be associated with
myocarditis and pericarditis, but so far disease has been mild in civilians who
received the vaccine,' Schieber said."
Comment: Has the disease
really been mild, or have possible serious cases merely been summarily dismissed
as being related to the vaccine? And should it have been a surprise? (For
more on this, go to:
Scandals:Whose job is it, anyway?)
Vaccine
Safety: New Study Adds to Growing Evidence Supporting Vaccine
Safety - Four Recent Studies Show No Link Between Vaccines Preservative and
Autism - www.healthnewsdigest.com
To read Safe Minds' responses to some of
the studies and issues raised, click
here.
Few
in Bay Area try nasal flu vaccine - The
Oakland Tribune - "Despite a $25 million television and print
ad campaign touting the benefits of the nasal mist, local customers so far are
turning their noses up at FluMist...The main drawbacks are the higher cost and
restrictions on who can get the vaccine."
Vaccine
side effects hit children - China Daily - "The health
bureau of the city of Fushun, in Northeast China's Liaoning Province, has issued
orders stopping the using of a flu vaccine that may cause infants to suffer
fever and even twitching after vaccination...The vaccines were part of a supply
of more than 1,000 vials of domestically made flu vaccine that the bureau
purchased through legal channels, said Zhou, who refused to reveal the name of
the producer."
"Good Doctor" Frist
Doesn't Care About Women's Health - N.O.W. - "Case
in point: While the homeland-security bill was being drawn up at the end of the
session in 2002, someone in the Senate inserted a two-paragraph provision that
would shield pharmaceutical giant Eli Lilly from lawsuits brought by parents
convinced that a preservative used in the company's vaccines caused autism in
their children. Frist never owned up to adding the provision, but it was nearly
identical to one he had authored earlier in the session." (Spring
2003)
New
Possible Link to SIDS Found - HealthDay via
Yahoo! - "High levels of a particular
cytokine in the brains of infants may be linked to Sudden Infant Death Syndrome
(SIDS)"
Comment: Do vaccines ever raise
the level of cytokines in the brain?
United
States: Blood Banks Pass Up Test that Might Have Prevented Thousands of
Infections- AP via www.aegis.com
- "US blood banks in the early 1980s failed to use a screening test for
hepatitis C
that could have prevented thousands of infections, the Kansas City Star
reported. The Star used data from studies at the time and estimated that if
screening that detected an enzyme indicating liver damage had been implemented,
more than 300,000 HCV infections might have been prevented."
HIV
fear for women in smear tests - The Scotsman
- "Letters are to be sent out this week
to about 100 women who are at risk of contracting HIV after they were given
cervical smear tests with "dirty" equipment at a West Lothian surgery."
Putting
a Chill on Important Pills:
Antibiotics Can't
Cure Colds And Flus - And Overuse Puts All of US at Risk - New York Times
Syndicate via MedlinePlus/NIH
A
common cause - Common autoimmune diseases have
a common basis - The Scientist
S.1015 - A bill to authorize grants through the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention for mosquito control programs to prevent mosquito-borne
diseases, and for other purposes.
H.R.1298 - A bill to provide assistance to foreign countries to combat
HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria, and for other purposes.
Vaccinations,
drugs, toxins, parasites and infections have also been implicated, but none seem
to apply in her case."
Mousepox
Research Poses Controversy
- The Badger Herald Online - "A
St. Louis University professor has sparked controversy and ethical debate
concerning public access to potentially lethal agents by creating a deadly
version of the mousepox virus...Maki said that if published, the recipe for the
creation of the virus will be available to all, and this is not very
responsible. Others do not think the publication of the research poses a serious
threat, and would not like scientific information suppressed."
Drugs
of 4 Patients Subbed Without OK
- The Boston
Globe (requires subscription) - "The Disabled Persons Protection
Commission uncovered numerous ethical violations at the Solomon Carter Fuller
Mental Health Center by Boston Medical Center physicians..."
Is
Obesity A Disease? Insurance, Drug Access May Hinge
on Answer - The Washington Post - "The
rising number of Americans who are seriously overweight has triggered intense
debate among scientists, advocacy groups, federal agencies, insurance companies
and drug makers about whether obesity should be declared a "disease," a move
that could open up insurance coverage to millions who need treatment for weight
problems and could speed the approval of new diet drugs."
Strawberries
may boost astronaut performance -
Frozen fruit protects rats' brains from harmful rays.
- Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, New
Orleans, November 2003 via Nature
Scientists
find brain areas activated in true versus false memories
- Make advances
in understanding why false memories are formed -
www.eurekalert.org - "The
significance of this study and others using visual stimuli, according to
Beversdorf and his group, is that it shows that false memories can develop
during nonverbal tasks. Such findings may have implications for those with
autism. High functioning autistic individuals can actually perform better than
others on verbal false memory tasks. However, because atypical language
processing is a defining feature of autism, it remains to be seen whether this
unusually good performance for false memories can extend to nonverbal tasks."
Exercise
may speed spinal cord repair -
Running boosts nerve talk in injured rats. -
Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, New
Orleans, November 2003 via Nature
Pilot
study may give quadriplegics computer control
- Human trial scheduled for brain sensors that turn
thought into action. - Society for
Neuroscience Annual Meeting, New Orleans, November 2003 via Nature
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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?"