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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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
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►January 10, 2004 -
School vaccination system could use shot in the arm - Despite state law, districts struggle to
protect students - Lowell Sun Online - "In a perfect world, all students
would enter the classroom fully vaccinated. State law requires nothing
less...But in the real world of overburdened, underfunded schools, things aren't
so simple. The result: Many students enter the classroom without protection from
serious illnesses."
Comment: In a perfect world, the "experts" and
those who believe in them would not act as if they know what is best for
everyone. They would also not try and enforce their narrow, human,
imperfect view.
►January 8, 2004 - Judge clears anthrax
shots in the military
- The Daily News - "Geld said the matter has been under
review by the FDA for more than two decades...'These deliberations have been
going on for years,' Geld said. 'The timing is not related to the ruling. It
just so happened that it came out now.'"
►January 9, 2004 - UHC
out of flu vaccine - Students are still unable to receive influenza vaccines
from the University in the midst of a nationwide flu epidemic. -
www.redandblack.com
►January 8, 2004 - Late
safeguards against flu -
www.townonline.com - "If you want to
avoid the flu, vaccines are no longer available. Wash your hands
instead...That's the message of a flu advisory that the Massachusetts Department
of Public Health has sent to local health boards...Another vaccination option is
a nasal spray called FluMist, which can only be used by healthy people between 5
and 49 years old. According to the Department of Public Health, one dose costs
$46, but many insurance companies offer rebates...However,
FluMist is a weakened version of the flu, so those who take it should be
careful, Collins said. For example, if someone takes the vaccine and coughs or
sneezes within a couple hours, there is a chance he or she may be spreading the
flu."
►January 9, 2004 - UHS
launches campaign to combat spread of flu - The Michigan Daily - "'Our
demand for FluMist has been very high,' Krista Hopson, media coordinator for
UMHS...The University decided earlier not to offer FluMist to students because
of certain risks associated with it. Despite the shortage, their stance
has not changed...'We still don't have the confidence in FluMist to use it.
Unless you're at high risk you shouldn't,' said Winfied. Currently not
many students at the University are among those at high risk."
►January
9, 2004 - Pentagon Advisers
Review Troop Vaccine Safety - Global Security Newswire via
www.nti.org - "A U.S. Defense Department
advisory board is reviewing the militarys practice of giving soldiers multiple,
simultaneous vaccinations to protect them from certain biological agents and
natural diseases...Ellen Embrey, deputy assistant secretary of defense for force
health protection and readiness, last October requested the review by the Armed
Forces Epidemiological Board (AFEB), which is composed of top civilian experts
from around the country. The board is expected to present its findings at a
regular meeting next month...The request was made while a subcommittee of the
board and another panel were investigating a possible relationship between
military-administered vaccines and the illnesses or deaths of four personnel."
►January 9, 2004 -
BioPort wins $245 million contract to supply anthrax vaccine - AP via
www.mlive.com - "BioPort Corp. said Friday
that it has entered into a three-year, $245 million contract with the Pentagon
to provide anthrax vaccine following a government ruling that the vaccine is
safe...The Lansing, Mich.-based company has been the nation's sole supplier of
an anthrax vaccine for years but has struggled with safety and reliability
issues. BioPort President Bob Kramer said Friday the contract 'demonstrates the
Pentagon's faith in our company.'"
►January 7, 2004 - National
Autism Summit Charts a Path Through a Scientific, Clinical Wilderness
(requires subscription) - journal article (JAMA) - "Autism
advocates say that for decades, allof science has turned away from
the mysterious brain disorder,diagnosed now more than ever. Jon
Shestack, father of a sonwith autism and vice president of the
advocacy group Cure AutismNow, said he felt like 'someone snuck into
my home and stolemy one-and-a-half year old's mind, leaving his
bewildered bodybehind.' If 1 in 250 children were actually being
abducted ratherthan diagnosed with autism, "it would be a national
emergency,"he said...Budget figures bear out such criticism.
Comment: How nice
that the CDC is so concerned about external exposure. Would that they had
the same level of concern for internal exposure, particularly injection, of this
toxic substance.
►January 9, 2004 - Special
ed a major part of a schools work - Press of Atlantic City - "More than one
out of every four students in the Pinelands Regional School District requires
some form of special-education services, forcing the district to devote 40
percent of its instructional budget to the program...Beside the added cost per
student - it can cost twice as much to educate a special-education student - the
district employs about 100 special education personnel, about a quarter of its
entire staff."
Comment:
Here we go again. Minimizing the very real pain and suffering of those
most acutely affected by autism by associating autism with its most benign (and
sometimes even beneficial) form. For more on this, go to
Scandals:
Adding Insult to Injustice to Injury Redux.
►January
9, 2004 -
Guest opinion: Misleading statements could issue of mercury
- www.billingsgazette.com - "The
Dec. 20, 2003,
guest editorial by Verne Lehmberg and David Ponder chastising EPA for their
recent rules regarding mercury emissions from coal fired power plants was
misleading and a major distortion of facts...The authors of this article would
have us believe that fish in Montana's lakes and streams are unhealthy to eat
due to mercury contamination, with the strong implication that this mercury
contamination is caused by coal-fired power plants...Mercury is a naturally
occurring element that is widespread in the environment. It is released to the
environment by the natural processes of leaching of soil and rock by rainfall
and groundwater movement, and by volcanic activity."
►January 7, 2004 - New Picture of Rare Childhood
Disorder -
Brain scan of boy with hyperplexia provides new
insight - HealthDayNews via Dr. Koop - "The first use of
functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to study the brain of a boy with a
rare disorder called hyperlexia is described in a Georgetown University study in
the new issue of Neuron...The case study of a single child revealed the
neural mechanisms that underlie hyperlexia. The findings suggest hyperlexia is
the true opposite of the reading disability dyslexia."
►January
2004 -
Developmental Checkups - Theyre good, theyre cheap and
theyre almost never done. What is wrong with this picture? - EP Magazine
►January 2, 2004 -
Is flu stronger,
or are we weaker?
- (registration required) - BioMedNet - "'We
don't really know,' said Wendy Barclay at the University of Reading, 'but there
are two possibilities.' If Fujian flu is truly more virulent, it could be that
the virus has changed in some way. But many virologists don't believe Fujian flu
is unusually virulent. It is feasible that the patients' themselves are
different somehow, and are more susceptible to the effects of the infection."
►January
8, 2004 -
CDC:
Worst of Flu Season May Be Over - Thirty-eight states report
widespread activity, compared to 42 last week. So far it has killed 93 children.
- HealthDay Reporter
►January
9, 2004 - Whooping
Cough Increases - WYTV - "Whooping cough, or pertussis, is a serious illness
in young children who can develop complications and even die from
infection...The disease is increasing, almost triple the number of cases in the
past two decades, and that includes the valley...Local epidemiologists think
they know why."
►January 9, 2004 -
UN Says Polio is
Spreading to Countries Where It Had Been Eradicated -
United Nations (New York) via
www.allafrica.com - "The United Nations World Health Organization (WHO)
today confirmed two new cases of poliovirus in Benin and Cameroon - countries
where the disease had previously been eradicated...The spread of the virus
across borders shows how fragile progress in its eradication is, the agency
said, stressing the urgency of stopping transmission."
Other diseases/conditions (some already in the vaccine pipeline)
►January 11, 2004 - Lankan
doctor on the path to an AIDS cure -
www.thesundayleader.lk - "Here is someone who just might have the solution
that millions around the world have long been waiting for - a possible cure for
AIDS. Dr. Mass Usuf is an alternative medical practitioner who specialises in
acupuncture, homoeopathy, palm diagnosis and naturopathy and believes that
homeopathic treatment, combined with other alternative methods of cure can be
effectively used to fight this deadly disease."
►January 10, 2004 - Managing
MS - HealthDayNews via The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
►January 9, 2004 - State
cow farm ID bill attacked by ag groups - AP via GazetteXtra - "Agriculture
groups balked Thursday at a bill that would make livestock farmers pay $30 to
register their addresses in an electronic farm locater system designed to help
trace sick animals and control disease."
►January
9, 2004 -
Doctors told
about symptoms - USA Today - "No one is known to have
acquired the human form of mad cow disease in the USA, but the first case
detected in a cow in Washington has prompted federal health officials to alert
doctors to the symptoms."
►January 10, 2004 -
Jury Tacks on $8 Million in Cancer Death (requires registration or
subscription) - The New York Times - "or the first time in New York State, a
jury in Brooklyn yesterday said a tobacco company should pay punitive damages
for the lung cancer death of an individual smoker."
►January 8, 2004 - Pathogens
maketh man (requires registration) - BioMedNet - "The
infectious activity of pathogens over the centuries has left an indelible mark
on the human genome, report evolutionary biologists...Now, protection that
evolved against pathogens that blighted human populations hundreds of years ago
appears to have evolved into protection against more recent arrivals, such as
HIV."
Big
pharma, research conduct, conflict of interest, ethics, FDA, oversight, approval
process, warnings
►January 10, 2004 -
Three journals
raise doubts on validity of Canadian studies - journal article (BMJ)
- "Suspicions about the validity of research by Professor RanjitKumar Chandra, a prominent Canadian researcher, have been raisedby three journals, including the BMJ."
►January 10, 2004 -
Immunologist
accused of misconduct is allowed to relocate - journal article (BMJ)
- "The leading Sydney specialist in immunology, Bruce Hall, whowas
accused of scientific misconduct, will escape any punishmentafter a
controversial decision by his university to allow himto relocate his
laboratory and staff."
Mandatory
vaccines, parental/health rights, legal
Miscellaneous
►January 8, 2004 -
Analyze this (bioremediate
that)
- Contamination with nuclear materials of 1.7 trillion gallons of ground water,
and over 40 million m3 of soil, debris, and waste at 120 sites has been hailed
the US "cold war legacy." Could bioremediation help solve the problem? -
(registration required) - BioMedNet
►January
10, 2004 -
Clue to women at risk of miscarrying - The Australian - "Researchers
may have found a way of predicting which women are likely to suffer miscarriage,
offering hope for women who suffer recurrent miscarriages...An immune system
protein could be the key to successful pregnancies and could lead to routine
blood tests to identify women at risk of losing their babies."
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
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?"