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January 14, 2004
January 14, 2004*
Vaccination News
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
click here to
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top stories" in the subject line. For today's
top stories, click
here.
Vaccine-related
(including autism)
►January 15, 2004 -
Thailand may sue over HIV 'vaccines' - The Nation - "Thailand
is ready to fight in court for the right to be joint copyright owners of two
experimental HIV vaccines, Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra warned
yesterday...He was speaking after Japanese researchers patented research
conducted jointly with Thai counterparts."
►January 14, 2004 -
Dow Announces Deal to Develop Vaccines - AP via The Atlanta
Journal-Constitution - "Dow Chemical Co. announced a four-year, $5.7 million
research agreement with the National Institutes of Health to develop plant-based
vaccines that it says will be cheaper and easier to produce than existing
vaccines."
►January 14, 2004 -
Sh220m Vaccines to
Protect Livestock Countrywide - New Vision (Kampala) via
www.allafrica.com - "A minimum of 100,000
doses of vaccines valued at sh220m is to be used in vaccinating livestock in the
country this year...Dr. Kisamba Mugerwa, the minister for agriculture said the
vaccination strategy that mostly targeted foot and mouth disease, (FMD) in
cattle among other diseases last year, had been used to a very limited extent
due to untimely and inadequate release of funds."
►January 13, 2004 -
WHO
Renews Effort to Wipe Out Polio - New
Infections Emerge in Previously Polio-Free Countries - NPR - "The World
Health Organization hopes to eradicate polio worldwide by next year, using the
oral polio vaccine. But last year, health officials started to see a dangerous
trend: The disease spread from Nigeria to six other West African countries where
polio had been eradicated."
Comment: How is it
that the oral polio vaccine, which is live and can
cause polio,
is thought to be able to eradicate polio?
►January 13, 2004 - Demand
for flu vaccine rises as supplies dwindle - The Daily
Northwestern - "People looking for
flu protection for the remainder of the winter will have to go somewhere other
than Evanston's Department of Health and Human Services...The department, which
oversees Evanston's public influenza immunization program, exhausted its supply
of flu shots in mid-December because of a jump in requests following the deaths
of several children throughout the country, according to Jay Terry, department
director."
►January 13, 2004 - Train
Passengers Tricked into Paying for Fake SARS Vaccine -
Central News Agency via The Epoch Times - "A group
of people posing as 'train station medical staff' recently had train passengers
in the Guangzhou Train Station in China take 'SARS vaccination shots' that cost
150 yuan each [approximately 20 dollars]. The World Health Organization has not
yet been able to develop a vaccine to prevent Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome,
and no such vaccine is known to exist. The Guangzhou disease prevention unit
said that there will be severe repercussions for anyone who commits this type of
crime."
►January 13, 2004 - Interlink
Gives Shot in the Arm to Global Vaccines Initiative -
PRNewswire via Yahoo! Finance - "Interlink
Healthcare Communications has aligned with an organization designed to
streamline the process of getting life-saving vaccines to the world's poorest
children. Interlink has begun branding efforts for the Pneumococcal Accelerated
Development and Introduction Plan-PneumoADIP for short -- which is a $30 million
project sponsored by the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization (GAVI)."
►January 2004 -
Effectiveness of
Individually Tailored Calendars in Promoting Childhood Immunization in Urban
Public Health Centers - journal article
(American Journal of Public Health)
►January 14, 2004 - Chiron
to Boost Flu Vaccine Production 25 Percent - Los Angeles Times via
www.immunizationinfo.org
(abstract)
►January 13, 2004 - FluMist
Prices May Be Reduced - Washington Post via
www.immunizationinfo.org
(abstract)
►January 13, 2004 - Landrieu
Seeks to End Vaccine Shortages - Baton Rouge Advocate via
www.immunizationinfo.org
(abstract)
►January 13, 2004 - Mozambique:
Cholera Vaccination Period Extended - Africa News Service via
www.immunizationinfo.org
(abstract)
►January 14, 2004 - Health
Department Investigating Whooping Cough Cases - AP via
www.immunizationinfo.org
(abstract)
►January 14, 2004 - Polio
Spread From Nigeria, WHO Confirms - New York Times via
www.immunizationinfo.org
(abstract)
►January 12, 2004 - 10
Killed by Measles in Northern Philippines - Xinhua News Agency via
www.immunizationinfo.org
(abstract)
►January 12, 2004 - Burkina
Faso: Trial of Malaria Vaccine Makes Encouraging Start - Africa News Service
via www.immunizationinfo.org
(abstract)
►January 12, 2004 - Polio
Vaccine - United News of Bangladesh via
www.immunizationinfo.org
(abstract)
►January 14, 2004 - Polio
on rise as Nigerian clerics block vaccinations - The Globe and Mail - "The
World Health Organization has confirmed new outbreaks of polio in two African
countries that were polio-free -- just as the global effort to eradicate the
disease was believed to be on the brink of success...New cases have been
confirmed in Cameroon and Benin, and both were caused by a strain from Nigeria
that is spreading after Muslim leaders in the north of that country blocked
vaccination efforts, saying they were part of a U.S. plot to make Muslim women
infertile.
►January 14, 2004 - Veterans
to lobby Govt on vaccine illness link - The Canberra Times, Australia - "Now
out of the army, Mr Romer said he and others suffered from debilitating
intestinal and skin conditions they believed were caused by the medication...'It
scares the hell out of me,' he said...'I'm not there to sue them, I'm not that
sort of a bloke. I just want something to be done over all this. Surely to God
they can do something to help us.'"
►January 13, 2004 - New
York: Merck's Top AIDS Researcher Joins Nonprofit Vaccine Effort - Wall
Street Journal via www.aegis.org
►The
Dangers of Smallpox Vaccination -
www.naturodoc.com - "The
public is now getting lots of medical propaganda about the eradication of
smallpox through vaccination. But in fact, the consensus among leading medical
historians that have studied the question have maintained that the eradication
of the zymotic, or "filth" diseases, like cholera, dysentery, typhus, plague, in
the past that are popularly attributed to mass vaccination campaigns, had
actually been due to improvements in diet, hygiene, sanitary measures,
non-medical public health laws, and to a host of new non-medical technologies,
like refrigeration, faster transportation, removing horse manure from cities,
and the like (McKinlay, 1977; McKeown, 1979; Moberg & Cohen, 1991;
Oppenheimer, 1992; Dubos, 1959)."
►Anthrax
Vaccine is Dangerous - The following warning on the pending anthrax vaccine
also recalls the hazards of aspartame, the artificial sweetener. Not
coincidentally, the current U.S. Secretary Of Defense, Donald Rumsfeld, was the
influential head of GD Searle, the pharmaceutical company that won FDA approval
for aspartame after the FDA advisory committee had recommended AGAINST approval
of aspartame - also known as Nutrasweet. -
www.naturodoc.com
Comment: It is
not clear that it is "not coincidentally". That is sheer speculation, in
my opinion.
►January 2004 - PCV7
vaccination reducing racial disparities - (registration required) - A new
study found that disease burden has begun to equalize among black and white
children. - Infectious Diseases in Children
►January 14, 2004 -
Flu nasal spray
vaccine to be available soon - - "The Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) has 250,000 doses of a nasal spray vaccine, some of which will
be given to state health departments free."
Comment: Of
course, nothing is "free". This vaccine will be paid for by the taxpayers.
►January 14, 2004 -
Landrieu, Bayh announce plan to prevent future flu vaccine shortages -
Leesville Leader -
"As this flu season progressed
into a deadly epidemic, Louisianians waited in long lines to receive vaccines in
short supply...To prevent such future supply and demand problems, Sens. Mary
Landrieu (D-La.) and Evan Bayh (D-Ind.) announced their proposed Flu Protection
Act, which would prevent future shortages by providing a system for recommending
the number of shots needed each year and for removing economic disincentives now
facing vaccine manufacturers."
Comment: Those lucky dogs (the vaccine
manufacturers). They are apparently making plenty on vaccines (see
Healthy
Defence). Unlike most markets, which are limited
to those that need the drug, vaccines are targeted at entire populations, need
them or not. So just think, the entire world universally getting an
endless number of vaccines! They have their liability covered. They
get to do the research that supports the use of their products and creates
demand, and no one blinks an eye (or at least almost no one). The
government and media collude in pushing their products. And now the
government will guarantee sales. It's the dream business plan to end all
dream business plans.
►January 14, 2004 -
WHO plans 'rapid-response campaign' to contain spread of polio in Africa -
AP via Canadian Press
Autism-related, developmental/behavioral issues
►November 2003 -
Intestinal Lymphocyte Populations in Children with Regressive Autism: Evidence
for Extensive Mucosal Immunopathology - by (among others) the now surprising
adversaries, Simon H. Murch and Andrew J. Wakefield - journal article (Journal
of Clinical Immunology)
Comment: For some of what has been written on the
recent controversy between the two previously aligned doctors, click
here.
►January 14, 2004 - Students
tested for mercury on Sunday - The Record-Courier - "Investigators
from the Center for Disease Control and Nevada Department of Health offered
urine analyses over the weekend for students involved in the mercury
contamination at Pau-Wa-Lu Middle School...'We'll keep cleaning until we reach
300 parts per trillion -- which is about the amount given off from dental
fillings,' said Douglas County School District Superintendent John Soderman on
Sunday...'The danger is being overplayed, most definitely,' said his half sister
Carmen Daniels, who is visiting from Pine Grove, Calif...Ricky's father, Richard
Padovani, disagreed...'You can't over react
with something like this. Mercury is pretty dangerous.'"
Comment: Note
that this is external exposure. Not ingested. Not injected.
►January 13, 2004 - Kids
left hanging as program to treat autism shuts down - Operator blames switch
of funding to counties - Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
►January 14, 2004 - Can
popping fish-oil pills stop this tantrum? - Since a compelling experiment
was shown on the BBC's Child of Our Time last week, sales of Omega-3 supplements
have rocketed. But, asks Ian Sample, are behavioural problems so easily solved?
- The Guardian, UK
►January 13, 2004 - Parents
complain of inadequate answers after mercury contamination
- Reno Gazette-Journal
►January 13, 2004 - Heart
Study Prompts Call for Change (requires registration or subscription) - The
New York Times - "A therapy that increases patients' survival rate to 4.7
percent from 1.5 percent may not sound like a breakthrough, but that is how an
editorial in a medical journal last week described a new treatment to revive
people whose hearts had suddenly stopped."
►January 14, 2004 - Mercury
'hot spot' contested - Bad data flawed report, environmental firm says - The
Journal Gazette
"Vaccine-preventable" disease-related
►January 12, 2004 -
WHO Says
No Evidence of Bird Flu Jumping to Humans - Reuters via Yahoo! - "The World
Health Organization (news
-
web sites) (WHO) is waiting for tests on an outbreak of bird flu in Vietnam
but said on Tuesday there was no evidence it was behind the deaths of 12 people
who fell ill with influenza...'We're investigating any possible link. We have no
evidence of the link at the moment,' Peter Cordingley, a spokesman for the WHO's
Western Pacific headquarters in Manila, told Reuters."
►January 14, 2004 - Bird
Flu Kills People in Vietnam - Atlanta Journal-Constitution via
www.immunizationinfo.org
(abstract)
►January 14, 2004 - Bioterrorism
procedures invoked when chickenpox case first appears as possible smallpox -
The Casper Star-Tribune
►January 13, 2004 - Health
bosses criticised over Hepatitis B - Health officials in Bristol have been
criticised for their handling of an outbreak of Hepatitis B. - BBC - "The Health
Protection Agency urged the city's primary care trusts to deal with an increase
in cases of the liver disease in 2002...But it has been claimed that health
managers in the city did not come up with the cash to tackle the outbreak for
almost a year."
►January 2004 - Influenza
continues steady march across U.S. - (registration required) - Influenza
activity is highest in the western United States, and the CDC is expecting even
more cases as the season progresses. - Infectious Diseases in Children
►January 2004 -
Influenza 2004 - (registration required) - Early outbreaks, deaths in
children, not enough vaccine this is shaping up to be an interesting flu
season. - Infectious Diseases in Children
►January 13, 2004 - Smallpox Scare at Pioneer
Valley Hospital - KSL News - "A simple
case of Chicken Pox brought out the health department and caused quite a stir at
West Valley's Pioneer Valley Hospital...It's not everyday a common childhood
disease attracts so much attention. But that's all changed in our post September
11th world with worries over terrorists, getting their hands on chemical and
biological agents."
►January 12, 2004 - Bird
flu spreading in Asia -
www.promedmail.org - "The World Health Organization says an outbreak of bird
flu among chickens in Vietnam may be linked to the deaths of 10 people. The bird
flu has also sickened and killed thousands of chickens in South Korea and
Japan."
Comment: Is the media not getting its facts
straight, or is it WHO? (See
WHO Says
No Evidence of Bird Flu Jumping to Humans)
Other diseases/conditions (some already in the vaccine pipeline)
►January 14, 2004 -
SARS may not be alone
- Antibodies to a SARS-like virus hint at repeated
infections. - Nature - "A virus similar to that responsible for severe
acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) infected people in Hong Kong 18 months before
SARS reared its head, a recent study says. But some experts say the result is
tentative and needs to be confirmed by larger studies...The result suggests that
the leap from animals to humans was not a one-off event, infectious-disease
experts say...In most cases, these coronaviruses probably infect human cells
only weakly, perhaps triggering a passing sniffle. Zheng believes that the SARS
virus mutated in animals or humans so it can readily jump between people,
generating the potentially fatal infection."
►January 14, 2004 -
Conmen Cash in On
HIV/Aids Scourge - The Herald (Harare) via
www.allafrica.com - "'Diagnosed with
Aids? Look no further, we have holy water and herbs that cure the virus
and boost the immune system!...The increase in the number of people succumbing
to the deadly HIV/Aids has resulted in an upsurge of 'miracle cures'."
Comment: Given that
there have never been long-term studies comparing those with either HIV or AIDS
to those given or not given the toxic AIDS drugs, what makes the "approved"
drugs any different? And at least holy water isn't in itself harmful,
unlike the AIDS drugs, which are known to be toxic (but allegedly worth the
risk).
►January 14, 2004 -
Bird flu could be worse than SARS
- Aljazeera.net - "The bird flu spreading through Southeast Asia could turn out
to be far more devastating than SARS if it links up with human influenza, an
expert said on Wednesday...'The
pandemics that occured in the previous century, the 20th century, were really
devastating, especially the Spanish flu. We had that in 1918 and 40 million died
of that. We should worry. It kills. It kills.'"
Comment: Here we go.
And spreading fear about a pandemic sells. It sells (flu vaccine).
►January 2004 -
The
Metabolic Syndrome in Overweight Hispanic Youth and the Role of Insulin
Sensitivity - journal article (Journal of
Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism)
►January 2004 -
Human Papillomavirus Prevalence and Types in Newborns and Parents:
Concordance and Modes of Transmission - journal article
(Sexually Transmitted Diseases)
►January 2004 -
Susceptibilities to
Different Antibiotics of Helicobacter pylori Strains Isolated from Patients at
the Pediatric Medical Center of Tehran, Iran - journal article
(Journal of Clinical Microbiology)
►January 2004 -
Maintenance of Serum
Immunoglobulin G Antibodies to Epstein-Barr Virus (EBV) Nuclear Antigen 2 in
Healthy Individuals from Different Age Groups in a Japanese Population with a
High Childhood Incidence of Asymptomatic Primary EBV Infection - journal article
(Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology)
►January 12, 2004 -
China
Rules Out SARS Suspect in Shenzhen - Reuters via Yahoo!
►January 12, 2004 -
Ethnicity
May Be Risk Factor for Asthmatic Kids Allergies - HealthDay via Yahoo!
►January 12, 2004 -
Ethnicity may affect allergies in children with asthma - Puerto Rican and
African-American children with asthma at risk for multiple allergies - American
College of Chest Physicians via
www.eurekalert.org
►January 12, 2004 -
Aid Group
Urges More Focus on Child Health - Reuters via Yahoo!
►January 19, 2004 -
A to Z Guide: The year 2003 brought new insights into Alzheimer's, advances
in diabetes and some deadly new diseases - Time Magazine
►January 13, 2004 -
Cow and A: What's the Chance of Finding a Mad Cow Burger on Your Plate? -
Washington Post
►January 14, 2004 - Mad
cow's untold story - Studies quietly raise questions about threat to humans
- Rocky Mountain News - "from government and the cattle
industry that mad cow disease poses no threat to public health, a small universe
of scientists working on a family of related illnesses are finding disturbing
evidence to the contrary...Several little-publicized studies, as well as ongoing
research at a government laboratory in Montana, continue to spark questions
about human susceptibility not only to mad cow, but to sister diseases such as
chronic wasting disease that mainly affects deer and elk, and to scrapie, which
infects sheep."
Comment: For more on the mad cow story, go to the
Online Mad Cow Conference at
www.redflagsdaily.com
►January 14, 2004 - New
threats to health predicted - The Guardian, UK - "'We should not be
surprised if the microbial world responds if it wishes to survive,' Prof
McMichael said after addressing a Royal Society conference in London. 'In the
1970s, eminent people were saying it was the end of the infectious disease era.
We now find after the experience of the 1980s and 1990s we are sadder and
wiser.'... He said that injudicious use of antibiotics had created opportunities
for microbes to develop resistance, while 'hyper-hygienic' living in developed
countries might explain the rise of asthma and other auto-immune diseases."
►January 13, 2004 - Researchers
develop model to help control West Nile outbreak -
www.eurekalert.org
►January 2004 - Incoming
AAP President Johnston outlines goals for the coming year - (registration
required) - In a special Q&A, Infectious Diseases in Children spoke with Carden
Johnston, MD, about the coming year and challenges facing pediatricians. -
Infectious Diseases in Children
►January 2004 - MRSA
shown to have inducible resistance to clindamycin - (registration required)
- Researchers find that inducible clindamycin resistance is common in MRSA
isolates; resistance also found in MSSA isolates. - Infectious Diseases in
Children
►January 2004 - Africas
orphan crisis getting worse from HIV/AIDS - (registration required) - UNICEF
report calls for immediate help for families supporting a growing orphan
population. - Infectious Diseases in Children
►January 2004 - Scientists
have 14 challenges to conquer - (registration required) - The science
community has 14 medical challenges to focus on as part of the Grand Challenges
in Global Health initiative. - Infectious Diseases in Children
►January 2004 - What's
Your Diagnosis? - (registration required) - A monthly case study, with
treatment information and discussion to follow. - Infectious Diseases in
Children
►January 2004 - Use
of cough and cold products - (registration required) - This months column
will review the use of these products in children and the published evidence of
their efficacy. - Infectious Diseases in Children
►January 14, 2004 - Disgust
is good for you, shows study - New Scientist - "The purpose of disgust has
been quantitatively demonstrated for the first time - it is an evolved response
that protects people from disease or harm."
Big
pharma, research conduct, conflict of interest, ethics, FDA, oversight, approval
process, warnings
►January 13, 2004 - The
Medical Industry's Practice of Giving Gifts to Doctors
- How Should the Law and Professional Regulations Address it? - FindLaw's Writ -
"As part of their multi-billion dollar marketing
efforts, many companies in the medical industry give gifts to doctors. They do
so in order to gain a competitive edge: For the companies, doctors' choices are
key. Nearly two-thirds of all patient visits in the United States end with the
doctor writing a prescription. And for the medical industry, doctors'
prescriptions control sales...Gifts to doctors may have negative effects."
Comment: My guess, my
opinion, is that that is a huge understatement.
►January 14, 2004 - Foregone
conclusions - The public is being regularly deceived by the drug trials
funded by pharmaceutical companies, loaded to generate the results they need -
The Guardian, UK - "How then do companies usually manage to fund research that
is favourable to them? An answer is supplied in a recent issue of the BMJ by
Dave Sackett and Andy Oxman, two tireless campaigners for the better use of
scientific evidence in medicine...The trick is in the question asked and the
design of the trial."
Comment: And if you think none of this has anything to do with the
validity of vaccine safety and effectiveness research.....
Mandatory
vaccines, parental/health rights, legal
►January 12, 2004 - Supreme
Court upholds secret detentions - MSNBC - "(The court)
Rejected an appeal from St. Louis University in a case involving a polio
vaccine. The university was ordered in 1991 to pay $16 million to the family of
a baby who contracted polio and was paralyzed after receiving vaccine. The
university tried to recover the money from the government and American Cynamid
Co., the vaccine maker. The university claimed the vaccine Orimune, which was
given to Danny Callahan, violated government regulations. The case is St. Louis
University v. American Cynamid Co., 03-557."
►January 13, 2004 -
Pa.
courts asked to collect malpractice suit data - AP via Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette - "The state Supreme Court's chief justice wants local court
officials across the state to report the number of medical-malpractice claims
filed in the past four years and monitor new cases as they come in...Doctors'
groups have complained that skyrocketing insurance rates are forcing them to
leave the state and have lobbied aggressively for reforms that would lessen
their insurance burden."
Miscellaneous
►January 13, 2004 - 46
jobs are cut at Wellness Center - Fond Du Lac Reporter
►January 13, 2004 - Neonatal
Unit at King/Drew May Be Downgraded - The Los Angeles
Times - "Los Angeles County health officials are
planning to downgrade the status of the neonatal intensive-care unit at Martin
Luther King Jr./Drew Medical Center, restricting its ability to care for the
sickest newborns and chipping away at one of the hospital's most cherished
services."
►January 12, 2004 - Young
Doctors Working Too Many Hours (requires registration
or subscription) - The New York Times
►January 14, 2004 -
County
taps tobacco funds - Loan will keep Public Health branches open - Record
Searchlight via www.redding.com - "Shasta
County supervisors agreed Tuesday to dip into funds from a 1998 tobacco
settlement to help the Department of Public Health maintain offices in Anderson,
Shasta Lake and Burney...Supervisors snatched $1 million from a $6
million pot of tobacco settlement receipts set aside to begin repaying bonds
issued for the county's new administration complex in downtown Redding."
►January 13, 2004 -
UMDNJ
to put focus on compassion - Medical school gets $3.2M grant to train more
'humanistic' MDs - The Star-Ledger
►January 13, 2004 - House
of horrors - Sperm counts are falling and cancer levels are rising.
Something is very wrong somewhere, but what? The answer, says Hilary Freeman,
may be uncomfortably close to home ... - The Guardian, UK - "Buying organic and
filtering your water may make you feel more secure, but it does little to
protect you or your family from environmental toxins. Forget traffic pollution:
the average Briton's home is almost certainly swimming in a cocktail of
chemicals, many of which have been linked to allergies, cancers and
infertility."
►January 2004 -
Risk and Protective
Factors for Adult and Child Hunger Among Low-Income Housed and Homeless
Female-Headed Families - journal article
(American Journal of Public Health)
►January 13, 2004 -
Stages: Many Miss
Out on 'Good Death' - (requires registration or subscription) The New York
Times - "About a fifth of those interviewed said the patients had not always
been treated with respect. Compared with a private home, this was two and half
times as likely to occur in a nursing home and three times as likely to occur in
a hospital. Survivors often said that they, too, did not receive enough
emotional support."
►January 12, 2004 -
The un-cola - The Globe and Mail - "Soft-drink purveyors say they will
remove colas and other carbonated drinks from vending machines in Canadian
elementary and middle schools by the start of the next school year. While
insisting that all its products are suitable for kids -- a dubious claim at best
-- the industry acknowledges that it is responding to increasing health
concerns...It is obvious, though, that this voluntary action is designed to
forestall the sweeping bans being imposed or considered by an increasing number
of governments alarmed by soaring rates of childhood obesity."
Comment: Click
here
to learn about A Miracle in Wisconsin.
►January 13, 2004 - Napolitano:
More money for education -- without a tax hike - Capitol Media Services via
Arizona Daily Sun
►January 14, 2004 - How
Using This Drug (cannabis) Effects The Brain - Evening Standard, London (UK)
via www.mhnet.org
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.
BioMedSearch.com
"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
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Patented personal and medical ID bracelets. Great for kids & travel, runners & cyclists, seniors, and medical alert.