February 19, 2004
Vaccination News
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Posted February 19, 2004:
►February 18, 2004 - Rise in autism due to change in diagnostic practice? - Pharmacotherapy via Medical News Today - "In the early 1990s, boys with diagnosed developmental disorders were infrequently diagnosed with autism. In the later 1990s, such boys more often were diagnosed with autism....CONCLUSION: A major cause of the recent large increase in the number of boys diagnosed with autism probably is due to changing diagnostic practices."
Comment: Without seeing the raw data, it is difficult to know what this study is demonstrating. But unless they can show that "developmental disorders" went down about the same amount as autism went up, this study does not prove that changing diagnostic practices are "a major cause" for the rise in diagnosed autism.
►February 18, 2004 -
Asia's toll from bird flu rises to 22 - AP via The Globe and Mail
►February 18, 2004 -
Thailand, Vietnam Report More Bird Flu Deaths - AFP/AP via Voice of America
►February 19, 2004 -
Babies at risk of pneumococcal - Herald Sun - "THOUSANDS
of Victorian babies have been left exposed to the deadly pneumococcal disease as
a global shortage of preventative jabs worsens...Vaccine-maker Wyeth said last
month that babies who had begun the three-shot immunisation course would be able
to finish the program...But worried parents have now been told supplies are no
longer available, and they will have to wait at least four months before their
children can resume the course...The delay will not negate the effect of the
shots already administered, but those children do not have complete protection
against the killer disease...Parents have been advised not to use an older
pneumococcal vaccine."
►February 18, 2004 -
Canadian discovery promises new MS treatments - Researchers hope enzyme will
serve as target for multiple sclerosis drugs - The Medical Posting
►February 18, 2004 -
FDA to review S.D. firm's lupus drug - The San-Diego Union Tribune via
SignsOnSanDiego.com
►February 18, 2004 -
Viragen Launches Multiferon Sales And Marketing Program In Mexico - press
release - Viragen, Inc. via PRNewswire-FirstCall via Yahoo!
►February 18, 2004 -
Dissemination of information on viral pneumonia accelerated nationwide -
Vietnam News Agency
►February 18, 2004 -
DynPort Vaccine Company Selects Finjan's Mirage Solution to Provide Precise
Control over FDA Regulated Processes and Documentation - Digital Rights
Management Tool to be Used for Conducting Research, Studies and Clinical Trials
- press release - Finjan Software via PRNewswire via Yahoo!
►February 18, 2004 -
New Partnership Introduces Pioneering Approach To Treatment Of Heart Disease And
Diabetes In the UK - press release - Haringey Teaching Primary Care Trust (TPCT)
and Pfizer Ltd via Business Wire
►February 18, 2004 -
Origen Therapeutics Receives SBIR Grant Aimed at Furthering Human Polyclonal
Antibody Development in Chickens - press release - Origen Therapeutics, Inc,
via Business Wire
►February 18, 2004 -
Australian HIV Vaccine Boosts Immune System - The Gay Financial Network
►February 18, 2004 -
Beaverton clinic urges parents to have their children revaccinated - The
Oregonian via www.oregonlive.com - "A
Beaverton clinic will begin mailing notices today to the parents of about 3,000
babies and toddlers who received a vaccine that might not be effective because
it was improperly stored."
►February 18, 2004 -
Hygiene
concern at GP's practice - An inquiry has been launched into how
unsterilised equipment was used for internal medical examinations on women. -
BBC - "Last year, the medical practice operated by Dr Tahira Idrees was
investigated over out-of-date vaccines."
►February 18, 2004 -
Japan declares
end to its first bird flu case - Reuters AlertNet
►February 18, 2004 -
Ancient approach targets hepatitis C symptoms - Santa Cruz Sentinel - "Firmage
and her classmates are in their third week of learning the ancient Eastern
approach to treating hepatitis C through acupuncture and herbs...While the
method dates back hundreds of years, teaching acupuncture specifically for
hepatitis C is new for Five Branches Institutes, the Santa Cruz college of
traditional Chinese medicine."
►February 18, 2004 -
SciClone Reports Data: 41% of Hepatitis C Non-Responder Patients Test HCV RNA
Negative after 24 Weeks of ZADAXIN Triple Therapy - press release - SciClone
Pharmaceuticals, Inc.via Business Wire
►February 18, 2004 -
Elan Corporation, plc: Elan Reports Fourth Quarter 2003 and Full-Year Financial
Results - press release - Elan Corporation via Business Wire
►February 18, 2004 -
International Egg and Poultry Review By the USDA's Agricultural Marketing
Service - This is a weekly report looking at international developments
concerning the poultry industry, this week following the latest news in the
Avian Influenza outbreak. World Reaction to Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza -
Poultry News via www.thepoultrysite.com
►February 18, 2004 -
Mercury from big fish could make you sick, doctor warns - Monterey Herald
►February 18, 2004 -
Single
chickenpox shot may not be enough - Chicago Sun-Times
►February 18, 2004 -
Study: Pox Vaccine Loses Punch - Less effective after 1st year - Scripps
Howard News Service via www.newsday.com
►February 18, 2004 -
Chickenpox Vaccine Effectiveness One Year Later -
JAMA via Ivanhoe
►February 18, 2004 -
Anthrax Scare Closes Brussels Train Station - It Was Sugar -
www.itv.com via
www.shortnews.com
►2004 -
Graves' Disease and Research - Multiple areas of study -
www.rarediseases.about.com
►February 18, 2004 -
Mercury level leads to alerts at 2 state lakes - The Arizona Republic
►February 18, 2004 -
Mercury emissions rules challenged - Environmental groups demand lower
levels (requires registration) - The Times-Picayune via
www.nola.com
►February 18, 2004 - Seek healthcare experts' advice on vaccine information - opinion - The Miami Herald - "I am further troubled that the author does not provide evidence or references to substantiate her claim about the alleged danger of vaccines while her message contributes to misinformation about vaccines. Readers should beware of journalists who play doctor and instead entrust the care of their children to qualified and trained healthcare professionals."
Comment: How often do MDs provide evidence or references to substantiate their claim when writing an opinion piece in a newspaper? Did this MD substantiate his claims using references in this letter? (No.)
►February 18, 2004 -
Health NW: Healthy travels - Blue Mountain Eagle
►February 18, 2004 -
Bird flu in Vietnam a threat to marine life: WWF - AFP via
www.channelnewsasia.com
►February 18, 2004 -
Professor Studies Asthma, Antioxidants - Cornell Daily Sun
►February 18, 2004 -
Bill makes meningitis information mandatory - Colorado State Collegian - "A
bill has been introduced to the Colorado General Assembly that would require all
Colorado institutions of higher education to provide information about
meningitis and the available vaccine to students living in campus
housing...Students living in the residence halls have a slightly increased risk
of contracting bacterial meningitis, an infection of fluid in the spinal cord
and brain, according to a study by the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention completed in 2000...Up to 125 cases of bacterial meningitis occur on
college campuses around the country, 10 to 15 of which have been deadly, said
Lisa Duggan, immunization specialist at the Hartshorn Health Service...'It's not
a huge number,' Duggan said. 'But it's tragic considering it is a preventable
disease.'"
►February 18, 2004 -
Theories on autism - Capital News 9 - "This is what seems to be baffling the
medical community. It is not clear if more children have autism, or doctors
simply have a clearer understanding of what autism is."
►February 18, 2004 -
Japan confirms new bird-flu outbreak - Spread: The Agriculture Ministry said
the virus had been found in dead chickens on the country's main island, while
Thai authorities cracked down on cock fighting - Reuters via Taipei Times
►February 18, 2004 -
Turkmenistan: National immunisation programme proceeding well - UN Office
for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs via
www.irinnews.org
►February 18, 2004 -
Group wants
medical cards for polio survivors -
www.online.ie - "support group for polio victims has called on
the Government to provide financial assistance to people who contracted the
disease in Ireland between the 1930s and 1960s."
►February 19, 2004 -
After Bird Flu, Dengue (requires registration) - editorial - The Jakarta
Post - "Doctors' confirmation on Tuesday of suspicions a new, previously unknown
sub-variant of the dengue virus is responsible for a virulent outbreak accross
the country adds to the graveness of a situation already rated "extraordinary"
by the government. This is all the more so because the Asian bird flu has yet to
be brought fully under control...What led the government -- in this case, the
Ministry of Health -- to issue the "extraordinary situation" rating was the
dengue death rate, which by mid-month reached more than 1 percent of the number
of patients treated. Dengue cases during the past few weeks were more than twice
the number recorded over the same period last year."
Comment: Are people
becoming less capable of fighting off these illnesses? If so, why is that?
►February 18, 2004 -
Bird flu: don't eat chicken if there's an outbreak - Utusan Malaysia Online
►February 18, 2004 -
Scientists confirm healthfulness of pasta as good carbohydrate - In Response
to Low-Carb Diet Fad, Leading Health and Food Authorities Update and Confirm
Health Benefits of Pasta Meals - press release - Oldways Preservation Trust via
PRNewswire via Yahoo!
►February 18, 2004 -
How Now, Mad Cow? - Common Dreams News Center - "Common Courage Press has
just released the first paperback version of our 1997 book Mad Cow USA, the book
that predicted the emergence of the deadly human and animal dementia disease in
the United States. When Mad Cow USA was first published in November 1997, it
bore the subtitle, 'Could the Nightmare Happen Here?' We used a question mark
because we thought mad cow disease was possible but still preventable in the
United States, if the meat industry and government regulators adopted adequate
safety measures...Our book received favorable reviews at the time from some
interesting publications such as the Journal of the American Medical
Association, New Scientist, and Chemical & Engineering News. Otherwise, it went
largely ignored and unheralded. It sold briskly but briefly during the infamous
Texas trial of Oprah Winfrey for the alleged crime of "food disparagement," and
then slid into obscurity until December 2003, when the 'nightmare' in our
subtitle arrived and U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Ann Veneman announced that
mad cow disease has been found in the United States."
►February 18, 2004 -
Seattle Genetics to Present at BIO CEO & Investor Conference - Seattle
Genetics, Inc. via Business Wire
►February 18, 2004 -
Meeting
Addresses Childhood Killer: Measles - American Red Cross - "Among the
attendees was Dr. Samuel Katz, inventor of the measles vaccine...Each year, a
disease barely remembered by most Americans kills nearly one million children, a
half million of those in Africa alone."
Comment: Measles
in developing nations is deadly. Historically, it has not been deadly in
developed ones. The fact that measles is deadly in developing nations is
not a reason to hype the deadliness of measles in developed nations. For more on
measles go to
What
Is Wrong With This Picture?; More
confusing disease stats;
Playing With Fire - It's Not EASY To
Fool Mother Nature; Don't
Worry, Be Happy; Measles
In The Vaccination Age: Is It Now Deadlier?; Why We Won't Take No* For An
Answer (*No relationship between MMR and autism); and
Shoot First, Don't Ask Questions
Later.
►February 18, 2004 -
Embrex Statement Regarding Avian Influenza - press release - Embrex via
PRNewswire-FirstCall via Yahoo!
►February 18, 2004 -
Chicken Pox Vaccine Study (includes video) -
www.woai.com
►February 18, 2004 -
Exclusion Day: No Shots, No School -
www.koin.com
►February 18, 2004 -
Appeal to end horse mutilations - Horse and Hound
►March 2004 -
Inactivated Influenza Virus Vaccines in Children - journal article (Clinical Infectious Diseases) - "In
conclusion, the data show that killed influenza vaccines
in children are safe, immunogenic, effective, and
potentially cost-saving."
Comment: Note that this is an
Aventis Pasteur
study.
Among their
many products are vaccines, including one for
influenza.
►March 2004 -
Nasopharyngeal Carriage of Streptococcus pneumoniae by Adults and Children in
Community and Family Settings - journal article (Clinical Infectious Diseases)
►February 2004 -
Obesity and asthma in children - journal article (Journal of Pediatrics) - "We currently
do not know whether there is or is not a real association between obesity and
asthma in children. Further studies in pediatric populations with better
measurements of obesity are highly desirable."
►February 2004 -
Is obesity associated with asthma in young children? - journal article (Journal of Pediatrics) - "Conclusion
This study suggests that there is no statistical association between obesity and
asthma among Canadian children age 4 to 11 years. "
►February 2004 -
Predicting the supply and implementation strategies needed to immunize children
and adolescents against influenza - journal article (Journal of Pediatrics) - "Between 5 and
10 million individuals aged 6 months to 17 years have conditions (predominantly
asthma) that indicate influenza vaccination."
Comment: This recommendation is particularly
interesting in light of recent findings that there is No
asthma exacerbation help from children's flu vaccination.
►February 2004 -
Prevalence and characteristics of children at increased risk for complications
from influenza, United States, 2000 - journal article (Journal of Pediatrics) - "Results
Approximately 5.2 to 10.0 million children aged 6 months through 17 years
(7.4%-14.2%) had high-risk conditions indicated for influenza vaccination.
Asthma accounted for the majority of conditions."
►February 2004 -
Safety, efficacy, and immunogenicity of a live, quadrivalent human-bovine
reassortant rotavirus vaccine in healthy infants - journal article (Journal of Pediatrics)
Comment: I wonder about the advisability of using
bovine derived vaccine.
►February 2004 -
Neurologic and cardiovascular effects of methylmercury - journal article (Journal of Pediatrics) - "In this issue
of The Journal, Grandjean et al and Murata et al report on the effects of
methylmercury exposure after 14 years of follow-up in a cohort of children from
the Faroe Islands. They report that intrauterine exposure to higher levels of
methylmercury may lead to irreversible neurotoxic effects as well as decreased
sympathetic and parasympathetic modulation of heart rate variability."
►February 2004 -
Evidence for reduction of antibiotic use across all outpatient care settings for
young children - journal article (Journal
of Pediatrics)
►February 17, 2004 -
Teen Video
Game Packages Don't Tell All - HealthDay via Yahoo!
►February 17, 2004 -
Ratings of teen-rated video games do not always fully describe content -
Study results prompt need for physicians and parents to take active role in
selecting games and discussing content with teens - Children's Hospital Boston
via www.eurekalert.org
►February 17, 2004 -
Gene
Therapy and Your Child - KidsHealth.org via Yahoo!
►February 17, 2004 -
Shaken
Baby/Shaken Impact Syndrome - KidsHealth.org via Yahoo! - "To diagnose SBS,
doctors look for hemorrhages in the retinas of the eyes (which are extremely
rare in any accidental injuries, such as falls), skull fractures, swelling of
the brain, subdural hematomas (blood collections pressing on the surface of the
brain), rib and long bone (bones in the arms and legs) fractures, and bruises
around the head, neck, or chest."
Comment: Recent research confirms that hemorrhages in the retinas and other widely accepted signs of shaking can result from other things. For more on this and other problems re: so-called Shaken Baby Syndrome, go to the Online SBS Conference at www.redflagsdaily.com. You can also and read Alan Clementson MD's (Professor Emeritus, Tulane University Medical School) excellent letter titled Was the Baby Shaken?, sent to and published in the Townsend Letter for Doctors and Patients.
►February 17, 2004 -
Big rise in multiple birth rate - The proportion of multiple births has
increased by 20% in the last decade, figures for England and Wales show. - BBC
►February 17, 2004 -
Asia's Bird Flu
Death Toll Rises to 21 - Asia's Death Toll From Bird Flu Rises to 21 People
After Boy in Thailand Dies - AP via ABC News
►February 2004 -
Hearing and vision screening program for school-aged children - journal
article (American Journal of Preventive
Medicine)
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")
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
Top Stories Archives - daily breaking and other important news stories
Daily News Archives - all the news posted on this website each day (from April 2001)
Hot Topics - selected stories, by category
Return to Vaccination News Home Page (for best results, right click to "open in new window")
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.