Hot Topics - Vaccine-related issues - Changing epidemiology/serotypes/resistance

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The Topics: *Alternatives *Big pharma *Big trouble *Conferences *Conflict of interest *Diseases and their vaccines *Legal/political *Miscellaneous *Research  *Vaccine-related issues

Vaccine-related issues - Changing epidemiology/serotypes/resistance

March 1-7, 2004

►March 4, 2004 - Doctors and Patients Start to Curb Use of Antibiotics (requires registration or subscription) - The New York Times - "The inappropriate use of antibiotics has led illness-causing microbes to become resistant to such drugs. Antibiotic resistance is a major public health problem throughout the world and is particularly common among the bacteria that cause ear and respiratory infections."

►March 2004 - Decrease of Invasive Pneumococcal Infections in Children Among 8 Children's Hospitals in the United States After the Introduction of the 7-Valent Pneumococcal Conjugate Vaccine - journal article (Pediatrics) - "Conclusions. Since the introduction of the PCV7, the number of invasive pneumococcal infections caused by vaccine-serogroup isolates among 8 US children’s hospitals has decreased >75% among children <=24 months old. In addition, penicillin resistance decreased in 2002 for the first time since our surveillance began in 1993–1994. However, we have noted that replacement may be developing with serogroups 15 and 33. Furthermore, penicillin resistance seems to be increasing among nonvaccine serogroups. Surveillance must be continued to detect the emergence of changes in the distribution of serotypes as well as antibiotic susceptibility."

Comment:  For more on this problem of serotype replacement, go to Scandals: Changing Disease Epidemiology Via Vaccines - Are We "Robbing Peter To Pay Paul"?.

►March 2, 2004 - Bacteria Run Wild, Defying Antibiotics (requires registration or subscription) - "A new chapter in the continuing story of antibiotic resistance is being written in doctors' offices across the country, as a group of common bacteria rapidly becomes resistant to the antibiotics that have been used to treat them for decades...The bacteria are called Staphylococcus aureus, or staph for short. Staph are the most common cause of skin infections like boils and can also cause lung infections, bloodstream infections and abscesses in the body's internal organs...In hospitalized patients, infections caused by antibiotic-resistant staph have been common for years. Among healthy people, though, antibiotic resistance in staph has not been a big problem. Since the 1970's, doctors have routinely, and successfully, treated staph infections in healthy patients with penicillin-like drugs...Not anymore. Office doctors who follow this practice now may find their patients getting sicker instead of better."

Comment:  It's not easy to fool Mother Nature.  Are we creating the same problem with overuse of vaccines that we have with overuse of antibiotics?  For more on this, click here.

►February 25, 1999  - Antimicrobial Resistance: The NIH Response to a Growing Problem - National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and the National Institutes of Health

February 23-29, 2004

►February 26, 2004 - Superbug Deaths Climb in Britain - AP via Yahoo! - "Although new antibiotics are constantly being developed, some experts fear it is only a matter of time until virtually every drug is useless."

►February 25, 2004 - Capturing cell protein production in action could help fight antibiotic resistance - Imperial College of Science, Technology and Medicine via www.eurekalert.org 

►February 26, 2004 - "Superbug" deaths rise 15-fold in past decade - Reuters via Yahoo! - "Britain has vowed to reduce hospital infections caused by a "superbug" after new figures showed deaths from the drug-resistant bacteria had climbed 15-fold in a decade."

February 16-22, 2004

►February 18, 2004 - Higher rate of antibiotic resistance here puzzles researchers - 10% of pediatric strep cases here resistant, double the U.S. rate - Pittsburgh Post-Gazette 

February 9-15, 2004

none selected this week

January 26 - February 8, 2004 (2 weeks combined due to illness)

►February 7, 2004 - When viruses start jumping - Deadly diseases can leap across the gap between species with very little warning - Taipei Times

Comment:  And yet we have blithely used animal cell cultures for vaccines and other biologicals, with no apparent concern for them crossing the so-called "species barrier".  For more on this, go to Scandals: On "mad cows" and sick monkeys: From the people who brought you SV40 in vaccines.... and Scandals: Concern About Bird Flu But Indifference to Using Avian Cell Cultures To Create Vaccines, Including Flu Vaccine

►January 26, 2004 - Study Links Ear Drops With An Increase In Resistant Bacteria - Temple University via www.sciencedaily.com -  "Eardrops, widely prescribed for the treatment of pediatric ear infection, can lead to an increase in resistant bacteria and fungi in the ear, according to Glenn Isaacson, MD, professor and chair of otolaryngology/head and neck surgery, Temple University School of Medicine. Isaacson presented his findings yesterday (January 25, 2004) at the Eastern Sectional Meeting of the Society of Laryngology, Otology and Rhinology...Traditionally, doctors have prescribed oral antibiotics for the treatment of ear infection, one of the most common disorders in children. In 1998, however, eardrops containing a very broad-spectrum antibiotic, fluoroquinolone, were introduced and billed as the treatment of choice. Recently, experts have raised concerns about overuse of the ear drops and the development of resistant bacteria."

Comment:  Why don't the "experts" concern themselves with the fact that the pathogens being "prevented" by vaccine also seem to develop such "resistance"?  It's obvious, however, why some of them wouldn't.  Those with ties to the industry don't have any incentive to do so because resistance to vaccines simply creates the opportunity for them to cook up demand for new ones.

January 19-25, 2004

none selected this week

January 12-18, 2004

►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."

Comment:  For more on this, go to Scandals: Changing Disease Epidemiology Via Vaccines - Are We "Robbing Peter To Pay Paul"?.

January 5-11, 2004

►January 2, 2004 - Potential For Pathogens To Evolve Missing From Emerging-disease Models - University of Washington via ScienceDaily - "Tracking the evolution of pathogens is not a new concept, but mutations are usually not taken into account in the models used to assess the emergence of infectious disease."

Comment:  Nor is the role vaccines might play in the emergence of mutant disease.

►January 1, 2004 - Prevalence of Multidrug-resistant Bacteria Rising - Reuters Health via www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus

December 29, 2003 - January 4, 2004

none selected this week

 

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