Experts
clash over danger of vaccine - Cape Times via
www.iol.co.za - "Confused?
If not, you probably haven't been paying attention to the debate on the safety
of the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine...But then came the most dramatic
development. There was now proof of the danger from the MMR, said Wakefield -
and it had not been made public."
Colorado's
immunization woes - Health officials launch effort to get shots to more
children - Rocky Mountain News
CDC:
Critical Decisions Count - new website - Medical citations and articles
on immunizations for concerned parents to discuss with their pediatricians and
doctors.
Flu
jabs for rare illnesses - Taipei Times - "The
Center for Disease Control (CDC) is offering people with rare disorders free flu
vaccines this winter for the first time, according to the Taiwan Foundation for
Rare Disorders."
Get
that flu shot, and you may save yourself a heart attack - Houston Chronicle - "Influenza
is thought to trigger heart attacks and strokes by destabilizing fatty deposits
clinging to artery walls. Inflammation caused by the flu can help blood clots
form around the fatty deposits, or the infection can cause one of the deposits
to break apart, ultimately blocking a blood vessel and setting off a stroke or
heart attack...A growing body of research has shown that flu shots reduce heart
attack risk by 50 percent to 67 percent. Other studies show influenza
vaccination may cut stroke risk in half. In comparison, statin drugs, which
lower blood cholesterol, reduce cardiovascular disease deaths by 30 percent on
average."
Concerns
over flu vaxxine charges - Limerick Post -
"The
Consumers Association has expressed concern over the affordability of the flu
vaxxine among vulnerable income groups."
HIV
vaccine trial ends in failure - A major trial
into a possible vaccine for HIV has ended in disappointment for researchers. -
BBC - "Those given the vaccine were no less likely to contract HIV, and
the jab did not slow the progress of the disease."
Family
Gets State Radio Tracker for Son, 6
- Reuters
via Yahoo! - "A Norwegian family may use a
state radio surveillance device to help track down their six-year-old son if he
runs away, an Oslo appeals court ruled...The court ruling, obtained by Reuters
on Monday, agreed with the family that the boy needed extra care because he
suffered from autism and was prone to running off."
The
child within autism - The cause remains unknown, but with more cases
diagnosed, parents can only cope - The Star-Telegram -
"St. Patrick's Cathedral was particularly quite and solemn just after the
consecration at a recent Sunday morning Mass when Scott Gammage became aware
that his 11-year-old son, Nicolas, was growing restless...'I decided it was time
to go, and we were slipping out the back when Nicolas suddenly turned around,
waved real big and shouted, very clearly, "Bye, God! See you tomorrow!"'"
Family's justified
faith in a son flowers in support for others - AP via Star-Tribune - "Annette
Levine's question was one that no parent wants to ask: "What's wrong with our
baby?"...Now the Levines have become big boosters of Fraser, the Twin Cities
nonprofit organization that operates a school, intensive social services and
housing for more than 2,200 children and adults with autism-related and other
developmental disabilities."
A
Chance at Independence -
D.C.'s Developmentally Disabled Could Be Eligible for More Services - The
Washington Post - "Eight-year-old Deion Hawkins can fasten a button, but
he needs help with a zipper. He is proficient with the computer, but he cannot
ride a bicycle. He knows how to warm food in the microwave, but not how to tie
his shoes. He can vacuum the floor, but he can't bathe himself...Michelle A.
Hawkins worries what will happen when her son, found to have autism at age 3,
grows up and leaves the District's public school system, where he receives
one-on-one classroom instruction. 'I intend for my son to be independent and as
close to normal as possible,' she said. 'I believe he can achieve that, but he
must have support.'"
A
conflict of interest? - An audit suggests that a flaw in state law keeps
the state from efficiently funding services for those with developmental
disabilities. - The Wichita Eagle via
www.kansas.com - "Taking care of disabled youngsters and adults at
home -- or as close to home as possible -- was the point of a 1995 state law
that led to closing state hospitals in favor of community-based care...A recent
audit, however, raises questions about whether the money is being spent
effectively."
Comment:
And what, pray tell, of other drug side effects? For instance, what of
drugs (i.e., vaccines) which are pushed on healthy children by the government
and medical profession prior to proper study (i.e., long-term studies using
never-vaccinated children as controls)? What's the chance they are even
particularly followed up on, given that there are 35,688 VAERS reports
for which it is apparently "Unknown" whether or not the person RECOVERED.
(Note estimates of
under-reporting that may or may not be applicable to VAERS.)
Can't
stop coughing? Whooping cough hits adults, too
- www.post-gazette.com
- "A child visits a pediatrician, who fails to diagnose that the young
patient has pertussis, also known as whooping cough. The child infects the
doctor, who then passes the respiratory tract infection on to others...That's
what happened in September in the Allentown-Lehigh area of the state. As a
result, 20 cases of pertussis were confirmed and the Pennsylvania Department of
Health issued an advisory to doctors, alerting them to be on the lookout for the
disease."
Influenza
in children
- journal article (CMAJ) - "Prevention:
The key to controlling influenza infection is prevention.The
importance of hand-washing cannot be overemphasized. Vaccination
works to prevent cases;9 one of the biggest
factors influencingwhether a child is vaccinated is whether the
family physicianrecommends it..."
Bone
disorder in Sars survivors
- www.health24.co.za - "Hong Kong
hospital officials said Sunday that 49 Sars survivors are suffering from a
degenerative bone disorder, possibly a side-effect of the steroids used to treat
them...Many Hong Kong Sars patients who contracted the potentially fatal
respiratory illness were treated with an antiviral drug and high dosages of
steroids, and some experts had warned that the regimen may be harmful, the
Associated Press reports."
Comment: Recognizing what
appeared to many to be an emergency in this case, still, how often are the
treatments devised to deal with illness the cause of long-term consequences
attributed to the disease? (See also
Doctors Probe Whether Medication Hurt Hepatitis Victim)
Virus
hits home - The
Advertiser, Australia - "Adelaide is in the
grip of a gastroenteritis epidemic that is straining hospital resources...The
Women's and Children's Hospital emergency department has seen more than 100
cases since Saturday and Flinders Medical Centre also reports its paediatric
wards are full of sufferers...The highly contagious illness, which is
predominantly being caused by rotavirus, has forced hospital staff to create a
makeshift isolation bay for each child admitted."
FDA
shift could transform market for statins
- The Wall Street Journal (requires subscription) via
www.healthleaders.com - "The
FDA will soon have to decide if statins, the best-selling drugs widely used to
lower cholesterol and reduce the risk of heart attacks, are safe enough to be
sold over-the-counter."
Drugmakers'
paths of influence need to be less hidden -
The Wall Street Journal (requires subscription) via
www.healthleaders.com - "Wall
Street Journal columnist Alan Murray says that although drugmakers should be
allowed to lobby for influence with the federal government, their tactics should
be public knowledge."
Comment:
Hmmm, does this mean the FDA is
dropping any pretense that its job is to protect the consumer?
Federal
government fails to warn public about Hepatitis C - AP via
www.semissourian.com -
"Despite repeated promises, the federal government
has failed to warn Americans about the potential dangers of hepatitis C, a virus
that infects millions and kills thousands every year...The Kansas City Star
reported Sunday that nearly every public education campaign about the virus has
sputtered, with the government often citing a lack of money as the reason...The
government also did not follow through on a plan to notify tens of thousands of
patients that they might have been infected by hepatitis C from blood
transfusions before 1992."
Global rise in fake
drugs - The worldwide use of fake drugs has
increased because they are so easy to make and sell cheaply, says the World
Health Organization - BBC
Needle
Found in New Shoe at Wal-Mart - AP via
Newsday - "The
mother of a 5-year-old boy who says he was pricked by a hypodermic needle left
inside a shoe at Wal-Mart wants the world's largest discount retailer to pay for
his HIV and hepatitis tests."
Clinical Trial Patients Don't Care About Study Sponsors Or Physician Conflicts
Of Interest - Johns
Hopkins Medical Institutions via Life Science News - "Many
patients will volunteer for a clinical trial if asked, even if the physician who
inquires is a stockholder in the sponsoring company or has other potential
conflicts of interest, a Johns Hopkins study demonstrates...'Many people don't
trust pharmaceutical companies because they feel they are being overcharged for
medications,' Braunstein adds. 'But given a chance to get involved in the
testing of a new drug that may provide them some health benefit, they want to do
this.'"
Comment: This is just plain hard to believe.
And, if true, equally hard to interpret.
Emerging
field of epigenetics hints at new culprits in disease
- Dallas Morning News via www.sunherald.com
- "After scientists decoded the human
genetic blueprint, the mysteries of disease were supposed to be simpler to
solve...But researchers are starting to warn that the genetic blueprint has
extra text that's only beginning to emerge. Solving some disease
mysteries, they say, won't happen until this extra information is fully
understood."
What
Is the Next Plague?
- The New York Times - "No one knows when or where the next plague will
occur, or whether it will be from a natural or bioterrorist attack...But it is
coming."
What
Did We Learn From AIDS?
- The New York Times - "AIDS exploded a scientific complacency that seems
inconceivably naïve today. Few experts were ruminating about new plagues in the
1970's because it was widely assumed that vaccination, sanitation and
antibiotics were making infections obsolete. The retroviruses, the family of
viruses that includes the AIDS virus, H.I.V., were felt to be of academic
interest only."
Do
We Still Hurt Newborn Babies?- A Prospective Study of
Procedural Pain and Analgesia in Neonates - journal article - "Conclusions
Clinicians estimated that most neonatal intensivecare unit
procedures are painful, but only a third of the neonatesreceived
appropriate analgesic therapy. Despite the accumulatingevidence that
neonatal procedural pain is harmful, analgesictreatment for painful
procedures is limited. Systematic approachesare required to reduce
the occurrence of pain and to improvethe analgesic treatment of
repetitive pain in neonates."
Antibacterial
eases phobia - TB
drug plus virtual reality relieves fear of heights. - Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting, New
Orleans, November 2003 via Nature
Fusion
of old and new - The Star Online - "Dr
Nor Shahidah said that before integrated medicine is endorsed, there should be
adequate scientific evidence on the potential clinical benefits, safety and
risks of TCM; this is still lacking in this country, she said."
Comment: What about doing more to encourage
breastfeeding?
Immune
protein clue to cot death
- High levels of an immune system protein may increase the risk of cot death,
say researchers. - BBC - "They believe high levels of the chemical
may make the nervous system less responsive to danger signs...However, critics
of the research, published in Neurology, say it failed to compare children of
the same age."
Comment: Do vaccines
ever raise the level of cytokines in the brain?
SIDS
Linked to Protein Build-up
- Ivanhoe - "Researchers from Belgium have
linked Sudden Infant Death Syndrome to abnormal amounts of a key protein in the
brain...These proteins normally assist in fighting infections, but if levels are
too high, they could throw brain functions, such as breathing, off track."
Comment: Do vaccines
ever raise the level of cytokines in the brain?
People
to Watch: John Bonfiglio -
www.signonsandiego.com - "As the new chief
executive of Immune Response Corp., John Bonfiglio is leading an effort to
revive the biotechnology company's troubled finances and restore confidence in
its science...The company was co-founded by the late Dr. Jonas Salk with the
purpose of using his experience and success with the polio vaccine to develop an
immune-based therapeutic vaccine to treat HIV and AIDS."
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?"