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Patients'
Survey At Dover AFB Indicates Anthrax Vaccine Ills
Feb
23, 2001
Dave Eberhart
Stars and Stripes Veterans Affairs Editor

Unhappy
with the official system for reporting adverse reactions to the Anthrax
vaccine, servicemembers, patients and family members at Dover Air Force Base,
Del. have collected their own data.
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The information
can't be pried out of the Department of Defense.
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- Dr. Nass
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"The absence of valid statistical data has been a stumbling block for
those interested in understanding how safe--or unsafe--the anthrax vaccine really
is," said Dr. Meryl Nass of Freeport, Maine. "The information can't
be pried out of the Department of Defense."
"So now," she said recently, "the patients themselves at Dover
Air Force Base, Del., are initiating scientific studies to gather the information
we all need."
Nass played a major role in forming a coalition that has fought the
Pentagon's controversial anthrax vaccine immunization program. She has
consulted for the General Accounting Office, testified before the House
Government Reform subcommittee on national security, veterans affairs and
international relations and the House Armed Services Committee, and provided
testimony to the Institute of Medicine.
Long Term Illness
According to Nass, members of the 9th Airlift Squadron at Dover Air Force
Base began receiving the anthrax shots in the early autumn of 1998. Since
then, she said, a number of individuals have developed long-term illnesses
and been removed from flight status. Many other members say they have begun
experiencing health problems.
The Vaccine Adverse Events Reporting System (VAERS) should reveal such
information, said Nass.
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They have seen
their peers removed from flying status because of medical problems and are
unwilling to risk the same fate.
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- Survey
Authors
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However, in conversation, many who are experiencing problems are afraid to
report their symptoms to the medical community, and will not fill out a VAERS
report, said the authors of the informal survey. "They have seen their
peers removed from flying status because of medical problems and are
unwilling to risk the same fate." the authors said.
In reaction to the dearth of data, servicemembers, hospital patients and
other parties at Dover drafted and distributed an unofficial survey to learn
the true extent of these problems.
Questions
A list of questions along with a cover letter was sent to the home addresses
of 265 squadron members, according to the survey authors. The only members
excluded were the administrative workers who had not yet been vaccinated.
"It is obvious that this report has some limitations," the survey
authors said, admitting that "causality cannot be established"
between the symptoms reported and the anthrax vaccine because of the absence
of a control group.
"Therefore, it would be impossible to scientifically conclude that
anthrax has caused these reported symptoms, or even that the number of
symptoms reported is higher than that experienced by the general population.
Additionally, no medical expert was used in formulating the survey."
Of the 265 surveys sent out, 139 (55 per cent) were returned. The subjects
were asked: "From the time you received your first anthrax vaccination,
have you started to experience any of the following symptoms?" The
numbers following the symptoms are affirmative responses.
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Ringing in the ears--12
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Significant hearing loss--3
· Skin
rashes not near injection site--17
· Itchy
skin--21
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Numbness/loss of sensation in body parts--16
· Joint
and/or muscle pain including arthritis--57
· Loss
of energy/constant tiredness--41
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Recurring headaches--26
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Difficulty sleeping--24
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Nausea, loss of appetite or abdominal pain--9
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Severe hair loss--8
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Vertigo--8
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Balance problems/light-headedness--15
· Short-term
memory loss--34
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Reduced concentration--36
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Chills and fever immediately following vaccine--11
· Other--24
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