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
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►January
16, 2004 -
Life-saving baby jabs running low - The Herald Sun - "THOUSANDS
of newborn Australian children will miss out on shots against the deadly
pneumococcal disease as a global vaccine shortage takes effect...Australian
supplies of the Prevenar vaccine will not be fully restored until at least
April, according to manufacturer Wyeth...The drug company has been forced to
halt production of Prevenar at its US plant amid an upgrade to meet increased
international demand."
►January
16, 2004 -
Gov't
ordered to pay hepatitis B sufferers 16.5 mil. yen
-
Mainichi Daily News, Japan - "Three
people who launched a damages suit against the government after becoming
infected with hepatitis B following group immunizations were Thursday awarded
16.5 million yen in compensation...In a Sapporo High Court decision that altered
an earlier district court ruling, the court accepted the causal relationship
between the immunization of the victims and their contraction of the virus."
►January
16, 2004 - Concerns over
shortage of meningitis vaccine -
www.abc.net.au - "The vaccine has recently attracted attention because it is
not universally funded like the meningococcal vaccine, when both infections can
be equally dangerous."
►January
15, 2004 -
Shortage of a vaccine used for acute infections pushes B.C. to ration - CP
via www.canada.com - "A severe Canadian
shortage of a vaccine used to prevent acute infections has forced British
Columbia into strict rationing...Pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine is used to
prevent everything from blood infections and pneumonia to meningitis. 'The
vaccine is in limited supply throughout Canada,' Cheryl McIntyre of the B.C.
Centre for Disease Control said Thursday."
►January
15, 2004 -
Scientists warn big AIDS vaccine trial in Thailand will fail - AP via
www.sfgate.com - "A massive human
experiment testing an AIDS vaccine now underway in Thailand is bound to fail and
the U.S. government is wasting $119 million funding it, 22 leading HIV
researchers charged...The scientists allege the 16,000 Thai volunteers who are
expected to receive a shot over the next two years will receive a cocktail made
of two antiquated AIDS vaccines, each of which failed previous human tests."
►January
15, 2004 -
Experts: Halt HIV Vaccine Trial - HealthDayNews via The Atlanta
Journal-Constitution - "Continuing a U.S. government-sponsored, large-scale
trial of an HIV vaccine in Thailand is throwing good money after bad, a team of
leading experts claims...The U.S. government defends the trial, saying this
combination has not been tested on humans before now and it should at least be
attempted."
►January
16, 2004 -
6 Nations to Intensify Polio Vaccinations
(requires registration or subscription) - The New York Times - "Health ministers
from the six countries where polio is now spreading said yesterday that they
would intensify efforts to immunize 250 million children against the crippling
disease by the end of this year...If they succeed, they would move up the World
Health Organization's goal by one year."
►January 16, 2004 - Polio
Eradication Under Gun - Atlanta Journal-Constitution via
www.immunizationinfo.org
(abstract) - "The
World Health Organization (WHO) and the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) say that to eradicate polio entirely from the planet, at least
250 million children in several high-risk areas must be vaccinated at least
three times during 2004, lest the 15-year program to eliminate the disease be
for nothing."
Comment: Continuing to
recommend a vaccine that they admit probably does not work? What more proof do
we need that the CDC is on the side of industry and not the consumer?
►January 14, 2004 - Immunization
Policy to Booster Shot - Lowell Sun via
www.immunizationinfo.org
(abstract) - "With
only 92 percent of students in Massachusetts-based Lowell Public Schools
up-to-date on all of their required immunizations, School Committee member
Regina Faticanti believes language in a state law that allows students to attend
classes without immunizations should be altered. Currently, students attend
classes after providing evidence that efforts are underway to receive
immunizations. Faticanti believes only a doctor's appointment should be
considered evidence, rather than just a verbal agreement as is permitted now."
►January
16, 2004 -
Immunisation drive could wipe out polio by end of 2004 - The Guardian, UK -
"Polio, which used to kill and disable many thousands of children every year,
could be eradicated by the end of 2004 in one final last ambitious push to
immunise 250 million children several times each, the head of the World Health
Organisation's campaign said yesterday...'We really do have a one-time
opportunity to get it finished,' said Bruce Aylward, its global coordinator.
'The goal is to finish it by the end of 2004, but we may still be mopping up at
the beginning of 2005...If we are still dealing with widescale transmission in
2005, the world will have squandered that opportunity.'"
►January 15, 2004 - Room
is ray of hope for brain-damaged kids - Adopting a therapy that originated
in the Netherlands, Jackson Memorial Hospital unveils a new multisensory room to
treat children with brain injuries. - The Miami Herald
►January 15, 2004 - Love
of horses, children in womans blood - Sun Current - "Though Jodi Townsend
may receive a state award this year, she feels rewarded almost daily watching
young children ride horses on her ranch...Townsend, 33, operates Majestic Hills
Ranch in southern Lakeville. The ranch functions as a place where children with
special needs can ride horses as a form of therapy. Townsend and her team of
volunteers have operated the ranch since 1997."
►January
16, 2004 - Mercury: The Latest
Green Scare Campaign -
www.anxietycenter.com - "The Greens have mastered the ability to
conjure up a scare campaign about almost anything to such perfection, one almost
forgets that they are a lying bunch of lowlifes whose past lies have harmed the
timber industry, those engaged in ranching and agriculture, those who provide
the chemical building blocks of everything we use every day, and those
responsible for providing the energy this nation requires to function."
►January 13, 2004 -
Bird Flu Kills
3 in Vietnam, Spreading - Bird Flu Continues to Spread in Vietnam, WHO
Determining if It Is Linked to More Human Deaths - AP via ABC News
►January 14,
2004 -
Bird flu 'may be worse than Sars' - Bird flu could be "worse than
Sars", if it mutates so it can spread between humans, experts have warned. - BBC
►January 19, 2004 -
Smallpox mixes make a stir- USNews.com - "To many
public-health experts, it's disturbing enough that plain old smallpox lives on,
albeit under lock and key, at the CDC and a second lab in Russia. Now the World
Health Organization's committee on smallpox research is grappling with what to
do about strange variants of the deadly virus. While urging the CDC to get rid
of the old-fashioned hybrids, the panel is weighing proposals to create new
smallpox chimeras using the powerful tools of genetic engineering."
►December 31, 2003 -
Hepatitis B Rates on the Decline in U.S. - AP via The Herald-Sun - "Hepatitis
B infections have declined by two-thirds in the United States in the past
decade, reflecting the routine use of childhood vaccinations against the
liver-attacking virus, the government said Wednesday...However, infections are
still on the rise among adults, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
said. Since 1999, hepatitis B cases have risen by 5 percent among men ages 20 to
39 and by 20 percent and 31 percent, respectively, for men and women 40 or
older."
Other diseases/conditions (some already in the vaccine pipeline)
►January
15, 2004 -
Mad cow as bioterrorism?
- Scientists worry that US gov't
classification of BSE prions as 'select agents' could hinder research -
The Scientist
►January 16, 2004 - Mad
People Disease (opinion) - The Jewish Journal - "In the Torahs story about
Joseph, Pharaoh has a dream in which seven sickly cows consume seven healthy
cows. Joseph interprets this, and Pharaohs other dream of seven withered ears
of corn consuming seven full ears of corn, to indicate that there will be seven
years of plenty in Egypt followed by seven years of severe famine...Today, we do
not have a Pharaohs dreams to warn us of impending dangers, but we have a
somewhat comparable situation in which cows with 'Mad Cow Disease' in England,
Canada, the United States and other countries are having devastating effects on
cattle industries in these countries."
►January 15, 2004 - Navy
Enlists Microbes To Cut Costs - SpaceDaily - "Microbes
have been exploited for thousands of years to help us make bread and alcohol,
and more recently, to make antibiotics and clean up toxic spills. Now the Office
of Naval Research is hoping the one-celled organisms will reduce the costs of
producing a missile propellant, and in the process, lead to a new age of 'bioproduction.'"
►December 2003 - Mycobacterium
tuberculosis: a model system for structural genomics - (requires
registration) - Current Opinion in Structural Biology via BioMedNet Magazine -
Over the past five years, genomics has had a major impact on Mycobacterium
tuberculosis research. With the publication of the sequences of two virulent
strains (H37Rv and CDC1551) and three closely related sequences, M.
tuberculosis is becoming a model system for proteomics and structural
genomics initiatives. Together with the promise of structures of proteins with
novel folds, high-resolution structures of drug targets are providing the basis
for rational inhibitor design, with the goal of the development of novel anti-tuberculars.
In addition, this work is aiding scientists in the quest for an effective
vaccine against this persistent pathogen.
►January 2004 - VEGF
and ALS: the luckiest growth factor? - (requires registration) - Trends in
Molecular Medicine via BioMedNet Magazine - Converging evidence points to a role
for vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) in neuronal protection from
hypoxic, ischemic and related forms of injury. Recent findings also suggest a
previously unsuspected connection between VEGF and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
(ALS), a major neurodegenerative disease of unknown etiology. Further
investigation of the relationship between VEGF and ALS could provide insight
into the pathogenesis of ALS, and facilitate the development of therapeutic
approaches for this currently untreatable and fatal crippling disease of motor
neurons.
►December 21, 2003 -
SIDS -
serotonin insufficiency during sleep? - (requires registration) BioMedNet
Magazine - Should sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) be renamed in light of
evidence for the importance of the serotonergic system in unexplained infant
death? Some US researchers certainly think so.
►January 16, 2004 - Corporate
CEOs Call Tort Costs a National Economic Problem - Insurance Journal - "The
high cost of the U.S. tort system makes products more expensive for all
Americans and inhibits investment that can create jobs. It is not an insurance
industry problem, but a national economic problem, industry leaders told
insurance executives attending the eighth annual Property/Casualty Joint
Industry Forum, held this week in New York City."
►December 23, 2003 - Human
stem cells show abnormalities - (requires registration) - BioMedNet Magazine
- The first report of chromosomal abnormalities in human embryonic stem (ES)
cells has appeared, prompting concern that the phenomenon may be more widespread
than has been recognized until now. It suggests that caution should be taken
over developing stem cell-based therapies in future.
►January 6, 2004 - The
symmetry of schizophrenia - (requires registration) - BioMedNet Magazine -
High-resolution mapping of brain areas that are altered in schizophrenia has
highlighted regions associated with language and personality. The results lend
support to a theory that schizophrenia might be the evolutionary price we pay
for language.
►January
16, 2004 -
Kathy Sykes: We need to see the human side of scientists and their role in
society (opinion) - Independent, UK - "Finally, school science should equip
people with skills they need to tackle ethical issues involving science, such as
the MMR debate. People need to be able to find out information, to assess
different points of view. They need to see their way through some tricky ethical
debates to make wiser decisions. And scientists similarly need to be equipped to
discuss ethical issues around their work in a world where it is no longer
acceptable for them to say 'deciding how the science is used is not my
business'."
►January 13, 2004 -
Some
programs still over-working young doctors - In early July, days after new
rules were supposed to limit the number of hours he and other new doctors could
work, Dr. Troy Madsen almost made a fatal mistake. - AP via CNN
►January 15, 2004 - Analysis:
Disparities report in dispute - UPI via
http://interestalert.com - "A report on U.S. healthcare disparities has
stirred up controversy over its editing, with Democrats accusing the
administration of watering down the severity of the problem and Republicans
answering they simply focused on the positive rather than the negative."
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?"