Posted
February 22, 2004:
►February 22, 2004 -
Statement from Dr.
Andrew Wakefield - "Health Secretary John Reid has called for a public
enquiry. I welcome this since I have already called for a public enquiry that
addresses the whole issue in relation vaccines and autism."
►February 21, 2004 - Inquiry
demanded over vaccine scandal -
http://icwales.icnetwork.co.uk - "Its editor Richard Horton told BBC News:
'If we knew then what we know now, we certainly would not have published the
part of the paper that related to MMR, although I do believe there was, and
remains, validity to the connection between bowel disease and autism, which does
need further investigation, but I believe the MMR element of that is invalid.'"
Comment: It is
quite a stretch to go from the possibility that there might have been conflict
of interest to believing that a connection between MMR and autism is invalid,
particularly given that it is being confirmed by other investigators. And
if the journal editor believes such a conflict is reason to believe the results
of a study are invalid, why do they trust even one study which has been paid for
or otherwise influenced by vaccine manufacturers? Yet, despite the fact
that virtually all research into the safety of vaccines is so conflicted, there
is not one meaningful iota of concern being expressed re: the validity of those
studies. Quite the contrary - when the issue of such conflicts is raised,
they are either dismissed as irrelevant or ignored outright.
►February 22, 2004 -
Maverick view that sparked panic over the triple vaccine - Despite fellow
doctors' doubts, Andrew Wakefield's claims won uncritical media coverage. Jane
Fineman asks how - The Observer via The Guardian, UK
►February 22, 2004 -
We do enjoy a good health scare - opinion -
www.telegraph.co.uk - "The reason that
there will be rejoicing at the egg on The Lancet's face is that the tone of its
editorial commentary is so unrelentingly sanctimonious that it makes the late
Ayatollah Khomeini seem positively broadminded. Its piety is, however, without
the excuse of religious belief. Relentlessly castigating the pharmaceutical
companies for their venality, lecturing the medical profession upon its duty to
the Third World, and adopting as its own every tenet of political correctness
while brooking no debate, it has been well and truly caught with its trousers
down. The research about MMR and autism that it now wishes it had never
published started a health scare that might have done real damage to the public
health about which it has been hectoring us poor doctors for years."
►February 22, 2004 -
Families defend anti-MMR doctor against 'witch-hunt' - Claims that expert
'cherry picked' cases to support a link between the vaccine and autism have been
rejected by parents and colleagues, reports Michael Day -
www.telegraph.co.uk
Comment: What does it mean to cherry-pick in this context? If there are
children with gut issues and autism who had recently received the MMR vaccine,
examining those children is not cherry-picking, it is examining those children
and attempting to understand what is going on. The fact that there may be
children who do not have autism and/or gut issues and/or recently received the
MMR vaccine does not detract from the fact that there may be children who do.
►February 23, 2004 -
Journal
repents over vaccine-autism link - Reuters, Washington Post via
www.smh.com.au
►February 22, 2004 - 'GMC to
investigate MMR doctor' - The doctor at the centre of the furore over
"flawed" research linking MMR to autism in children will be investigated by the
General Medical Council. - "It has been proposed that my role in this matter
should be investigated by the GMC. I not only welcome this, I insist on it" - Dr
Andrew Wakefield - www.itv.com
►February 23, 2004 -
Lead researcher defends MMR study - The doctor at the centre of research
linking autism with the MMR jab has rejected claims the work was "flawed". - BBC
►February 22, 2004 - MMR storm:
Wakefield welcomes probe - Health Secretary demands inquiry after doctor who
linked triple jab with autism accused of conflict of interest - The Sunday
Herald, UK - "Last night, opposition politicians and autism campaigners joined
the call for a public inquiry into the safety of the MMR vaccine. In a
statement, the Autism Research Campaign for Health, a group of parents pressing
for more research, said: 'It is vital that there is a public inquiry into the
safety of MMR, and that it examines the growing number of studies showing the
presence of measles RNA in the blood, gut and spinal fluid of autistic
children.'...It added: 'The government insists MMR is safe. But they will only
publish epidemiological research and ignore clinical findings. A public inquiry
would address all sides of the debate.'"
►February 22, 2004 -
Defiant Doctor Demands Probe into MMR Claims - PA News via The Scotsman
►February 22, 2004 -
Focus:
MMR: The truth behind the crisis (requires subscription) - The Times, UK
►February 21, 2004 -
Anthrax vaccine
serious side-effects kept from soldiers who were vaccinated - Medical News
Today
►February 22, 2004 -
Bird
flu in China comes under gradual control: official - Xinhuanet via China
View
►February 22, 2004 -
Asia
urged to step up bird flu fight - One News via
www.nzoom.com
►February 22, 2004 -
Chinese bird flu
town comes out of isolation - Reuters AlertNet
►February 22, 2004 -
Bird flu found in
Gonzales County - Seguin Gazette-Enterprise
►February 21, 2004 -
Eastern US Poultry Industry Worries About Avian Influenza Outbreak - Voice
of America
►February 22, 2004 -
Chronic wasting disease is 'the big question' - The Oregonian via
www.oregonlive.com
►February 21, 2004 -
Wildlife center
operators protest DNR order to kill, test rehabilitated deer - Milwaukee
Journal Sentinel via www.jsonline.com
►February 22, 2004 -
Killer flu: Could the world cope? - It is only a matter of time before a
major outbreak of potentially deadly flu, according to scientists. Could the
world cope? - BBC
►February 22, 2004 -
B.C. bird flu outbreak a practice run: experts - CTV News
►February 21, 2004 -
Avian Flu Fears Move Closer to VA - AP via
www.whsv.com
►February 22, 2004 -
Row
over anthrax vaccine side effects - Gulf Daily News
►February 22, 2004 -
Australian troops slipped dangerous vaccinations - New Zealand National
Business Review - "According to
The Australian, so many Afghanistan-bound personnel suffered temporary
reactions to the vaccine that the anthrax vaccination program was suspended for
two months in November 2001."
►February 22, 2004 -
Aus
troops in dark about anthrax - NZoom - New Zealand
►February 22, 2004 -
Many factors in that deadly itch - As a country develops, so does the
incidence of allergies grow. A conference opening today will examine this
problem. - New Straits Times
►February 22, 2004 -
In Brief - Aids 'plot' fear over polio jab - The Observer via The Guardian,
UK
►February 22, 2004 -
Bird flu in cats poses no risk for humans: WHO - Daily Times
►February 22, 2004 -
Bird
flu in cats 'won't increase risk to humans' - AP, AFP via The Straits Times
►February 22, 2004 -
Public
health campaigns 'are a waste of money' - The Independent, UK - "The
Department of Health is spending millions of pounds on public health campaigns
without any evidence they actually work, an official report will conclude this
week."
►February 22, 2004 -
The next big
threat: killer influenza - The Times of India
►February 20, 2004 - New
Lung Cancer Treatment Shows Promise - Injection Kills Disease In Some
Patients - SeattleInsider via www.kirotv.com
►February 20, 2004 - Vaccine
ban linked to polio revival - AP via St. Petersburg Times - "The World
Health Organization will launch a huge immunization campaign Monday targeting
63-million children in 10 African countries as a polio outbreak spreads from
Muslim northern Nigeria...Islamic leaders in the region at the heart of the
Nigerian outbreak say they will uphold their ban on the polio vaccine, calling
it part of a U.S. plot to spread infertility or AIDS among Muslims."
►February 20, 2004 - Fatal
Case Of Unsuspected Pertussis Diagnosed From A Blood Culture - Consumer
Product Safety Commission via
www.intelihealth.com - "A recent case of pertussis (whooping cough) in an
elderly Minnesota woman who later died and identification of 3 additional cases
in other adults in the community underline the importance of clinicians being
aware that adults can get the highly contagious cough illness and they should
request laboratory testing to confirm a diagnosis of pertussis."
►February 20, 2004 - Bird
flu still a big problem, says Thailand - Reuters via
www.iol.co.za
►February 20, 2004 - State
requirements add to WHA school nurse's workload - The Pilot-Independent via
www.walkermn.com
►February 20, 2004 - Nurses
rang, knocked, needled for shots - Schools remind
parents about needed vaccines - Corpus Christi Caller-Times
►February 19, 2004 - Schools
enforce vaccination deadline - The Bulletin
►February 21, 2004 - In
the shadow of white death - Pollution and global warming are devastating the
world's coral reefs, reports Tim Radford. -
www.theage.com.au
►February 20, 2004 - Cold
virus hits peak season - San Jose Mercury News via
www.kentucky.com
►February 17, 2004 - Health
Highlights: - Here are some of the latest health and medical news
developments, compiled by editors of HealthDay via
www.medicinenet.com
►February 20, 2004 - Bowles
touts environmental record in WNC stop - AP via The Herald Tribune
►February 21, 2004 - Smoking
ban gets boost - The Standard, China
►February 20, 2004 - International
Conference on Women and Infectious Diseases Feb. 27-28 - CDC via U.S.
Newswire - conference alert
►February 20, 2004 - Competitive
Technologies Signs Two Revenue Agreements - PRNewswire-FirstCall via
http://interestalert.com
►February 21, 2004 - Five
people near B.C. farm have flu symptoms -
www.ctv.ca via www1.sympatico.ca
►February 21, 2004 - Dengue
hits 19 provinces in Indonesia - Xinhuanet via China View
►February 21, 2004 - Interferon
can represses SARS in apes - The Japan Times
►February 20, 2004 - Predators
And Human Health: Exploring The Role Of Predators In Keeping Pathogens At Bay
- Ecological Society Of
America via www.sciencedaily.com
►February 21, 2004 - Miyagi
Pref to close facilities for mentally disabled - Japan Today
►February 23, 2004 - Autism;
New research suggests link between vaccine ingredients and autism, ADHD -
Health & Medicine Week via www.newsrx.com
and www.newsrx.net via
www.mhnet.org - "According to new research
from Northeastern University pharmacy professor Richard Deth and colleagues from
the University of Nebraska, Tufts, and Johns Hopkins University, there is an
apparent link between exposure to certain neurodevelopmental toxins and an
increased possibility of developing neurological disorders including autism and
attention deficiti hyperactivity disorder...The research - the first to offer an
explanation for possible causes of two increasingly common childhood
neurological disorders - will be published the April 2004 issue of the journal
Molecular Psychiatry."
►February 12, 2004 - All
aboard the nanotube (requires registration or subscription) - BioMedNet
►February 2004 - Does
the huamn mnid raed wrods as a wlohe? (requires registration or
subscription) - A recent email message about a purported experiment run at
Cambridge University provides a useful illustration of some fundamental
mechanisms involved in reading. The message demonstrates that a text composed of
words whose inner letters have been re-arranged can be raed wtih qutie anazimg
esae! Although some of the readability of this email message is probably due to
top-down factors made possible by the fact that almost 50% of the words are not
mixed up, we suggest that a significant part of this 'jumbled word effect' is
due to the special way in which the human brain encodes the positions of letters
in printed words. Recent research using the masked-priming technique has helped
to elucidate the mechanisms involved in letter-position coding. Masked primes
are briefly presented, pattern-masked letter strings, whose effects on target
processing are thought to reflect fast, automatic processing. We will briefly
describe two phenomena, relative-position priming and transposition priming,
that have been observed with this paradigm and that are particularly relevant
for understanding letter-position coding. - Trends in Cognitive Sciences via
BioMedNet
►February 11, 2004 - Give
up smoking? Fat chance (requires registration or subscription) -
BioMedNet
►February 10, 2004 - Cheers,
to good health (requires registration or subscription) - BioMedNet
►February 10, 2004 - Delivering
on immunosuppression (requires registration or subscription) - BioMedNet
►February 9, 2004 - Glowing
bugs detect tumors (requires registration or subscription) -
BioMedNet
►February 6, 2004 - Scientists
take toys to work (requires registration or subscription) - BioMedNet
►February 6, 2004 - Unfolding
targets for dengue fever (requires registration or subscription) -
BioMedNet
►February 11, 2004 - Feedback:
Sing a song o' science (requires registration or subscription) -
BioMedNet
►February 9, 2004 - Feedback:
COSMIC assault on cancer (requires registration or subscription) - Wellcome
Trust Sanger Institute via BioMedNet
►February 11, 2004 - Streptococcus
pyogenes induces systemic vascular leakage that can be inhibited by an integrin
antagonist (requires registration or subscription) - (Commentary) -
BioMedNet Magazine
►February 6, 2004 - A
different kind of messenger: small RNAs as address labels that target a
silencing complex to the right place. (requires registration or
subscription) - (Commentary) - BioMedNet Magazine
►February 5, 2004 - The
enormous effectivity of dendritic cells in lymph nodes (requires
registration or subscription) - (Commentary) - BioMedNet Magazine
►February 5, 2004 - Epigenetic
silencing: neither the chicken nor the egg came first (requires registration
or subscription) - (Commentary) - BioMedNet Magazine
►February 4, 2004 - Just
folding back: convergence of the molecular fusion mechanism of class I and class
II viral fusion proteins (requires registration or subscription) -
(Commentary) - BioMedNet Magazine
►February 19, 2004 - Cloned
mules show their age (requires registration or subscription) -
BioMedNet
►February 18, 2004 - Improve
or impair: a bedtime story (requires registration or subscription) -
BioMedNet
►February 17, 2004 - Don't
count your bird chromosomes before they're... (requires registration
or subscription) - BioMedNet
►February 16, 2004 - New
BSE strain, and more to come? (requires registration or subscription)
- BioMedNet
►February 16, 2004 - Picking
at the bones of osteoclastogenesis (requires registration or
subscription) - BioMedNet
►February 13, 2004 - Cut
and paste in 3D (requires registration or subscription) -
BioMedNet
►February 18, 2004 - Feedback:
Picking at the bones of osteoclastogenesis (requires registration or
subscription) - BioMedNet
►February 18, 2004 - Feedback:
Glowing bugs detect tumors (requires registration or subscription) -
BioMedNet
►February 13, 2004 - Feedback:
Pointing the finger at female philanderers (requires registration or
subscription) - BioMedNet
December 2003 - Victorian
spectacle: Julia Pastrana, the bearded and hairy female (requires
registration or subscription) - Julia Pastrana toured Europe in the late 1850s
advertising herself as the 'Bearded and hairy Lady' or 'Nonedescript'. She
suffered from a rare inherited disorder, not understood until the late 20th
century, which manifested itself in facial distortion and considerable facial
hair in the male pattern. Doctors, as well as sensation seekers, were very keen
to examine her. Her story is unusual, not least because she was mummified after
death by her husbandmanager and continued to tour as a mounted exhibit for a
number of decades. Indirectly, she participated in the evolutionary debate in
Britain. In 1857, when she arrived in Britain from America, she was popularly
known as the baboon-woman. When Darwin's Origin of Species was published, and
evolutionary controversy about ape-ancestry was hot in the air, she was more
often likened to the gorilla or orang-utan as a possible specimen of a missing
link. - Endeavor via BioMedNet Magazine
►February 13, 2004 - A
map of the TNF-alpha/NF-kappaB regulatory network (requires registration or
subscription) - (Commentary) - BioMedNet Magazine
►February 12, 2004 - Lymphocyte
transformation assay and cytokine detection in harbor porpoise (Phocoena
phocoena) promotes future investigation of the cellular immune response at a
cellular and molecular level. (requires registration or subscription)
- (Commentary) - BioMedNet Magazine
►February 20, 2004 - Acambis
to Delay Vaccine Release - Financial Times via
www.immunizationinfo.org
(abstract)
►February 20, 2004 - Big
Polio Immunization Campaign - New York Times via
www.immunizationinfo.org
(abstract)
►February 20, 2004 - Lung
Cancer Vaccine Shows Some Promise - Boston Globe via
www.immunizationinfo.org
(abstract)
►February 20, 2004 - Next
Year's Flu Vaccine to Include Fujian Strain - Washington Post via
www.immunizationinfo.org
(abstract)
►February 20, 2004 - Working
Up a Strategy to Vaccinate the World - Washington Post via
www.immunizationinfo.org
(abstract)
►February 19, 2004 - British
Team Develops 'Black Death' Vaccine - Times, UK via
www.immunizationinfo.org
(abstract)
►February 19, 2004 - Inactive
Flu Vaccine May Be Safe for Kids - UPI via
www.immunizationinfo.org
(abstract)
►February 19, 2004 - Outbreak
of Hepatitis A Seen in Homeless, Inmate Dwellings - Boston Globe via
www.immunizationinfo.org
(abstract)
►February 19, 2004 - SLU
Is Running First Clinical Test of Bioengineered TB Vaccine - St. Louis
Post-Dispatch via
www.immunizationinfo.org (abstract)
►February 19, 2004 - Two
More Die of Bird Flu, Bringing Asian Toll to 22 - Boston Globe via
www.immunizationinfo.org
(abstract)
►February 17, 2004 - Hong
Kong Civil Servants to Get Flu Vaccine - Xinhua News Agency via
www.immunizationinfo.org
(abstract)
►February 18,
2004 -
Western BSL-3 labs face fight - Facilities would be located at US weapons
research facilities in New Mexico and California - The Scientist
►February 18,
2004 -
Avian influenza A(H5N1) - update 26 - WHO
►February 18,
2004 -
Recent outbreaks of cholera in Africa - WHO
►February 19,
2004 -
Sleeping sickness spreading in Angola, MSF says - Reuters AlertNet
►February 19,
2004 -
Polio Immunization Drive Set for Africa - WHO to Launch Major Immunization
Campaign As Africa Polio Outbreak Spreads - AP via ABC News
►February 19,
2004 -
Avian influenza A(H5N1) - update 27 - WHO
►February 18,
2004 -
Fort Detrick scientist isolated after exposure to Ebola virus - Incident
occurred Feb. 11 while woman was conducting a study to test potential treatments
- AP via www.baltimoresun.com
►February 19,
2004 -
Flu Vaccine Change Set for Next Year - AP via The Herald-Sun
►February 19,
2004 -
Artificial Blood Tested Without Consent - AP via The Herald-Sun - "Paramedics
are testing an experimental blood substitute on severely injured patients
without their consent in an unusual study under way or proposed at 20 hospitals
around the country...The study was launched last month in Denver and follows
similar research that was halted in 1998, when more than 20 patients died after
getting a different experimental blood substitute...Supporters say the current
product, PolyHeme, made by Northfield Laboratories of Evanston, Ill., is safer
and could save many of the nearly 100,000 people who die of bleeding injuries
each year nationwide."
►February 19,
2004 -
Researchers: New Vaccine Can Stop Lung Cancer (requires registration) -
Washington Post
►February 19,
2004 -
Panel Weighs Toxic Research on Humans - AP via The Miami Herald - "Exposing
human volunteers to toxic pesticides and pollutants for scientific purposes is
justified only under strict conditions and with careful review, a National
Academy of Sciences panel said Thursday...The Environmental Protection Agency
should establish a special review board to evaluate any studies that involve
intentionally giving people toxic chemicals, the committee said."
►February 20,
2004 -
FluMist failure makes MedImmune rethink the vaccine business - Maryland
Gazette - "The research chief of MedImmune told a House committee
last week that the company may get out of the flu vaccine-production business,
following disappointing sales of its nasal-spray vaccine this flu season...The
Gaithersburg company, one of only three in the nation that manufacture flu
vaccines, plans to destroy nearly 4 million of its 5 million doses of FluMist,
said James Young, president of research and development for MedImmune. Young
said it took the company 30 years and $1 billion in research and development to
produce the spray...'It's hard to justify staying in the business, if we are
hemorrhaging left to right,' Young said...He noted that the company even tried
giving away up to 1 million doses to local jurisdictions, but there were no
takers."
Comment: I wonder
if they did pre-development market research to see if there was demand for a
product like this?
►February 19,
2004 -
NIH Conflict of Interest Panel to Meet in Early March - National Institutes
of Health
►February 20,
2004 -
Norway in major research study - Norwegian and American researchers have
received a 13 million dollar grant from the US National Institutes of Health to
study psychiatric disorders of children. Most of the funding will be used in
Norway, where there is a unique, existing, body of information examining
families starting from pregnancy, newspaper VG reports. - Aftenposten
Graphing
IDEA Autism - The Graphing IDEA is a web based graphing tool, which allows
easy access to U.S. autism disability data. The source of the data is from the
US Department of Special Education. The data is collected annually as part of
the Individual with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA). Each state collects it's
own data and submits the state data to the US Department of Special Education.
The US Department of Special Education uses the data to prepare reports for the
US Congress. -
www.fightingautism.org
►February 19,
2004 -
Science Panel OKs Pesticide Tests on Humans (requires registration) - Los
Angeles Times - "A National Academy of Sciences panel said
today that human test subjects could be intentionally dosed with pesticides and
other toxic substances as long as the companies or government agencies
conducting the tests meet high ethical and scientific standards...The Bush
administration sought the advice from the esteemed group of scientists after it
sparked a controversy by reversing a Clinton-era moratorium on the use of human
subjects in tests that are used by Environmental Protection Agency officials as
they decide safe exposure levels for pesticides."
►February 20,
2004 -
Childhood Vaccine Controversy -
www.ksbh.com - "There is
growing controversy over the safety of childhood vaccines...Some say there is a
link between a substance in the vaccines and the mental disorder known as
autism...NBC Action News reporter Kevin Petrehn took a closer look at the facts
surrounding the vaccine controversy."
►February 19,
2004 -
Letter to Agriculture Secretary Ann Veneman concerning false or misleading
government reassurances on mad cow disease (HRG Publication #1690) - Public
Citizens Health Research Group
►February 12,
2004 -
Medicare for lobbyists - editorial - Palm Beach Post - "Rep.
Billy Tauzin delivered a $540 billion prescription-drug benefit for Medicare.
Now, the Louisiana Republican is leaving Congress for a $2 million-a-year job in
the drug industry. When it comes to exposing your principles, Rep. Tauzin makes
Janet Jackson look coy."
►February 18,
2004 -
Wrong diagnoses are killing patients - New Scientist - "Many
patients in intensive care units are being wrongly diagnosed, according to a
study in a UK hospital. Some are dying because doctors fail to spot major
conditions such as heart attacks, cancer and pulmonary embolism. The reason,
experts say, is not incompetence but that so few post-mortems are now performed
that doctors cannot learn from their mistakes."
►February 4, 2004
-
Amendment to immigration Bill 'could bar people with autism from entering
Ireland' -
Autism Cymru via www.awares.org
►February 18,
2004 -
Autism claims attention at schools - Educators respond to increased cases
among students - Atlanta Journal-Constitution - "Gwinnett
County Public Schools has seen an unexplained explosion in the number of
students like Danny, now an eighth-grader at Shiloh Middle School in
Snellville...In the early 1990s, fewer than 50 students with autism were
enrolled in county schools. This year, 689 are receiving services here a more
than tenfold increase in 10 years. Teachers are serving 150 more students with
autism than they did last year, which makes these students one of the
fastest-growing segments of the district's booming special education
population."
►February 19,
2004 -
Congressmen Question Industry Role in EPA Mercury Rule-Making -
www.bushgreenwatch.org
- "In a letter sent last week to EPA Administrator Michael Leavitt, Reps. Henry
Waxman (D-CA) and Tom Allen (D-ME) called for an explanation of reports that
portions of the EPA's proposal to regulate mercury generated by electric power
plants were copied verbatim from industry lobbying materials.[1]"
►February 18,
2004 -
Vaccination order criticized - The Baltimore Sun via Fort Worth/Dallas
Star-Telegram - "The U.S. Army has sent at least four
soldiers to Iraq who refused to be vaccinated against anthrax, despite the
Pentagon's long-held insistence that the vaccine is mandatory for all service
members assigned to areas of combat or probable terrorism...The deployments by
base commanders in Indiana, Kentucky, New York and Wisconsin has led Pentagon
critics to question the seriousness of the anthrax threat and the fairness of
penalties meted out earlier for scores of service members nationwide who refused
the vaccine."
►February 2004 -
US Code-Vaccine Laws, Injury Codes, Case Info - Health Hippo
►February 16,
2004 -
U.S. Nears Clash With Governors on Medicaid Cost (requires registration or
subscription) - The New York Times
►February 15,
2004 -
UH to study oceans effects on health - The university is one of four sites
chosen for the national program - Honolulu Star-Bulletin
►February 11,
2004 -
Induction of lupus autoantibodies by adjuvants - BioMedNet - "The
ability to induce lupus autoantibodies is shared by several hydrocarbons and is
not unique to pristane. It correlates with stimulation of the production of
IL-12 and other cytokines, suggesting a relationship with a hydrocarbon's
adjuvanticity. The potential to induce autoimmunity may complicate the use of
oil adjuvants in human and veterinary vaccines."
Comment: Lupus
has been reported as a vaccine-associated reaction at least
137 times
to
VAERS and has been reported in the medical
literature as well. (The list of articles in the literature includes only
systemic lupus erythematosus,
i.e., SLE)
►February 14,
2004 -
Schizophrenia link to lead petrol - US scientists say they have found a link
between exposure to lead in the womb and schizophrenia in adulthood. - BBC
July, 2002 -
West Nile Virus positives and MTBE analysis of NYSDEC Wildlife Pathology Unit's
West Nile Virus database 1999. (New York State Department of
Conservation)(Statistical Data Included) - Townsend Letter for Doctors and
Patients via www.findarticles.com
►February 12,
2004 -
Wyeth Reaffirms Distribution Plan for Prevnar(R) to Optimize Product
Availability for Children - PR Newswire-First Call via Yahoo! Finance
►March
2003 -
Mercury-What is its role in Autism and
Alzheimer's Disease? -
video presentation by Boyd Haley, Ph.D. 1 hour 27 seconds - www.nomercury.org
►February 21, 2004 -
'Lancet' backs away from MMR controversy - The Independent, UK
►February 21, 2004 -
Ministry to
come clean on hepatitis - The Asahi Shimbun
►February 20, 2004 -
Low
Pathogenic Avian Influenza in British Columbia - The Canadian Food
Inspection Agency via Canada NewsWire
►February 20, 2004 -
Vaccine Shows Promise In Fighting Cancer -An experimental vaccine shows
promise in fighting a deadly cancer. -
www.kirotv.com
►February 20, 2004 -
Thailand:
Bird flu has spread to new species - AP via The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
►February 21, 2004 -
Mexico bans Canadian poultry imports due to bird flu - Xinhuanet via China
View
Your
Daily Digital Doctor - Technology Review Magazine via
www.wsbtv.com
►February 20, 2004 -
Adjuvant Autologous Renal Tumour Cell Vaccine Reduces Risk of Progression after
Radical Nephrectomy in Patients with Renal-Cell Carcinoma -
Lancet via Doctor's Guide
►February 21, 2004 -
Reid Calls for Inquiry
into MMR Claims - PA News via The Scotsman
►February 22, 2004 -
Journal admits vaccine report error - AFP via
www.abc.net.au
►February 21, 2004 -
Controversy
swirls around British MMR vaccine study - Reuters AlertNet
►February 21, 2004 -
MMR jab: Your
views - The journal that sparked the row about the safety of the MMR vaccine
has said, with hindsight, that it should not have published the research. - BBC
►February 21, 2004 -
New twist in MMR row -
www.iccoventry.co.uk
►February 21, 2004 -
Research that
led to MMR autism link, inquiry called for in UK - Medical News Today
►February 21, 2004 -
Inquiry demanded over vaccine scandal - Associated News Media via
www.femail.co.uk
►February 20, 2004 -
Anthrax Shots Made Australian Troops Sick - Report - Reuters
►February 21, 2004 -
Anthrax Shots Made Australian Troops Sick - Reuters
►February 21, 2004 -
Thailand mops up four new bird flu outbreaks, cat infections downplayed -
AFP via www.channelnewsasia.com
►February 19, 2004 -
Biological warfare: An interview with a Mayo Clinic specialist - Mayo Clinic
►February 21, 2004 -
Hepatitis link to pigs may hit transplant hopes - The Guardian, UK
►February 20, 2004 -
Hidalgo County to Offer Hepatitis A Shots -
www.krgv.net
►February 21, 2004 -
Australian troops not told of anthrax vaccine concerns - AP via USA Today
►February 21, 2004 -
Australian troops fall ill following anthrax vaccinations - AP via
www.newsobserver.com
►February 21, 2004 -
Vaccine effects 'kept secret' - AAP via The Australian
►February 22, 2004 -
ADF denies keeping anthrax vaccine effects secret -
www.abc.net.au
►February 21, 2004 -
Mild Avian Flu Strain on Texas Chicken Farm Believed Not Harmful to Humans -
The Washington Times via www.miami.com
►February 21, 2004 -
Maryland Orders Poultry Farms to Test Chickens for Avian Flu before Processing
- The Baltimore Sun via www.miami.com
►February 21, 2004 -
Lawmakers push for tougher regulations on mercury - Green Bay Press-Gazette
via Post-Crescent via www.wisinfo.com
►February 21, 2004 -
Mercury debate energized in Illinois town - Gannett News Service via Green
Bay Press-Gazette
►February 21, 2004 -
Childhood meningitis vaccine in short supply - Toledo Blade
►February 21, 2004 -
Quarantined sites of bird flu being assessed - Xinhuanet via China View
►February 21, 2004 -
Thailand mops up 4
new bird flu outbreaks - AFP via www.inq7.net
►February 21, 2004 -
Avian flu outbreak 'no threat to public' - Vancouver Sun via
www.canada.com
►February 21, 2004 -
Persistent efforts urged to fight bird flu - Xinhuanet via China View
►February 21, 2004 -
Nigerian State Shuns Polio Vaccine as Virus Spreads - Reuters
►February 21, 2004 -
Two
drugs for autism - Ivanhoe via News 8 Austin
►February 21, 2004 -
Marshall program helps autistic children attend college - AP via The
Charleston Gazette via www.wvgazette.com
►February 20, 2004 -
Student with Bacterial Meningitis -
www.wreg.com
►February 21, 2004 -
Network fast-tracks research - London Free Press via
www.canoe.ca
►February 22, 2004 -
Researchers
develop vaccine for animals with hay fever - Japan Today
►February 21, 2004 -
Ten African nations vow to eradicate polio - AFP via The Globe and Mail
►February 21, 2004 -
Nepal polio campaign - www.news24.com
►February 21, 2004 -
Polio
Re-Emerging in Karnataka -Star of Mysore
►February 20, 2004 -
Belgium to recognise autism as a separate handicap - Le Soir via
www.awares.org
►February 20, 2004 - Phase II of
polio camp tomorrow -
www.newstodaynet.com
►February 19, 2004 -
Environmental Groups Decry Pesticide Report - Reuters via Yahoo!
►February 19, 2004 -
One
in five asthmatics are highly sensitive to aspirin - One in five asthmatics
are highly sensitive to aspirin - Systematic review of prevalence of aspirin
induced asthma and its implications for clinical practice -
BMJ via
www.eurekalert.org
►February 19, 2004 -
Gene
Therapy Shows Promise for Cystic Fibrosis - Reuters via Yahoo!
►February 19, 2004 -
USDA War
on Weight Summons Beefy Fast-Food Giants - Reuters via Yahoo!
►February 19, 2004 -
Blood Test
Can Prevent Unneeded Antibiotic Use - HealthDay via Yahoo!
►February 19, 2004 -
Biochemical clues to long lifespan revealed - Findings extend longevity
research from yeast and worms to mammals - Children's Hospital Boston via
www.eurekalert.org
►February 2004 -
Differences in antibiotic prescribing patterns for children younger than five
years in the three major outpatient settings - journal article
(Journal of Pediatrics)
►February 21, 2004 -
FAO/WHO
meeting warns of contamination of powdered infant formula - journal article
(BMJ)
►February 15, 2004 -
Practice Guidelines - AAP Releases Policy Statement on the Prevention of RSV
Infections - journal article (American
Family Physician)
►February 2004 -
One breath at a time: Living with cystic fibrosis - journal article
(Journal of Pediatric Nursing)
Volume
4, 2003 -
Music Therapy: Loud Noise or Soothing Notes? (pdf) - journal article
(International Pediatrics)
Issue
1, 2004 -
Congenital syphilis: unique clinical presentation in three preterm newborns
- journal article (Journal of Perinatal
Medicine)
►February 21, 2004 -
Govt misled troops
about anthrax vaccinations: Opposition -
www.abc.net.au - "Senator Evans says
dozens of troops were sent home for refusing the anthrax vaccinations and while
most agreed to the injections, many did so reluctantly...'Clearly the attitude
of some of the troops may have been different if they had known about the severe
adverse reactions by earlier troops to the inoculations,' Senator Evans said."
►February 21, 2004 -
Australian government
keeps mum about side effects of anthrax vaccine - AP via
www.whnt19.com
- "The Australian government is admitting it kept silent about possible side
effects of the anthrax vaccine."
►February 21, 2004 -
Calls for Inquiry on
'Flawed' MMR Research - PA News via The Scotsman - "Health
Secretary John Reid today called on the General Medical Council to investigate
claims that controversial research linking the MMR vaccine to autism in children
was 'flawed'...Dr Reid urged the GMC to mount an inquiry 'as a matter of
urgency' after the medical journal, The Lancet, admitted that the report should
never have been published...However the Liberal Democrats said that an
investigation by the GMC was 'insufficient' and called for a full independent
inquiry."
►February 22, 2004 -
MMR doctor: I stand by my research on autism link
- The Telegraph, UK - "The British
doctor who claimed to have identified a link between the MMR vaccine and autism
last night angrily rejected claims that the research was 'flawed' as parents of
children involved in the original study accused his critics of a
'witch-hunt.'...Dr Wakefield spoke out after allegations yesterday that his 1998
study of 12 children was flawed because he had also been working on a separate
project to seek evidence to support a legal action by parents claiming that the
MMR jab had harmed their children. He said: 'That was a completely separate
study. We took children according to clinical need. There was no selective
recruitment.'"
►February 21, 2004 -
Lancet was wrong to publish MMR paper, says editor - The Telegraph, UK - "A
leading medical journal admitted yesterday that it was wrong to publish the
paper that started
the MMR vaccine scare six years ago...The editor of the Lancet said the
British researchers who linked the triple jab to autism and bowel disease in a
group of 12 children had 'a fatal conflict of interest'. But Dr Andrew
Wakefield, lead author of the study at the Royal Free Hospital, London,
repudiated the journal's statement."
Comment: You know that there is
something fishy going on when there has been no similar righteous indignation
about all the studies allegedly refuting Wakefield's claims that were funded at
least partly by the vaccine manufacturers.
►February 20, 2004 -
Journal regrets publishing MMR study - Reuters - "The
journal said Wakefield had not told editors he was carrying out a study for the
Legal Aid Board on behalf of parents who believed the vaccine had harmed their
children...'In my view, if we had known the conflict of interest Dr. Wakefield
had in this work, I think that would have strongly affected the peer reviewers
about the credibility of this work, and in my judgement it would have been
rejected,' Horton told BBC News on Friday...Wakefield told the BBC on Friday he
stood behind his findings. 'They have now been confirmed independently by
reputable physicians and pathologists,' he said."
►February 20, 2004 -
MMR Vaccine: Five Years
of Claims and Counterclaims - PA News via The Scotsman
►February 21, 2004 -
Canadians ill after bird flu alert - Herald Sun - "FIVE
people on a farm in British Columbia on Canada's west coast, where bird flu was
discovered this week, had fallen ill with flu-like symptoms, government
officials said today...But they stressed the public should not worry because the
strain of avian influenza - confirmed to be a low pathogenic H7 strain - was
mostly harmless to humans, unlike the H5 strain that has killed 22 people and
forced the slaughter of millions of chickens in Asia...'These are five
individuals who had intensive exposure to sick chickens. This is not a virus
with a propensity to spread from human to human,' said David Patrick, of the
British Columbia Centre for Disease Control."
►February 21, 2004 -
Valley Fever vaccine may be reality - Porterville Recorder
►February 20, 2004 -
State requirements add to WHA school nurse's workload - The
Pilot-Independent via www.walkermn.com
►February 18, 2004 -
School day 'shot' for 221 Bend-La Pine students - State-set 'exclusion day'
hits those lacking immunization records -
www.bend.com
►February 20, 2004 -
H7 avian influenza outbreak found on B.C. farm; not same type ravaging Asia
- Canadian Press via National Post via
www.canada.com
►February 20, 2004 -
Pilgrim's Pride Statement Regarding Case of Avian Influenza in Texas - press
release - Pilgrim's Pride Corporation via PRNewswire-FirstCall via Yahoo!
►February 21, 2004 -
Passengers to be screened at BIA for Avian Influenza - Daily News, Sri Lanka
►February 20, 2004 -
Delaware imposes fines for failure to comply with bird flu control measures
- Agriculture Online News
►February 20, 2004 -
Autism Focus of New
Study - University of Alabama at Birmingham via Newswise
►March 2004 -
Characterization of novel structural features in the lipopolysaccharide of
nondisease associated nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae - journal article
(European Journal of Biochemistry)
►February 20, 2004 -
Avian Influenza A Virus Subtype H7N7 Transmission High Among Those Handling
Infected Poultry - Lancet via
Doctor's Guide
►February 20, 2004 -
Egg shipments resume from farm with avian influenza virus - State officials
on Friday lifted a days-old ban on egg shipments from a Pennsylvania farm
despite confirmation of an active strain of avian influenza in the flock. - AP
via Nepa News via www.zwire.com
►February 20, 2004 -
ANC student recovers from meningitis - A 10th-grade male student at the
Academy of the New Church High School in Bryn Athyn Feb. 11 was diagnosed with
meningococcal infection, a sometimes-contagious bacterial infection of the
bloodstream that can be fatal. - Montgomery Newspapers via
www.zwire.com
►February 20, 2004 -
Tests Show No
Chronic Wasting Disease In Pa. Deer, Elk - AP via
www.thewgalchannel.com