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"The more things change, the more they stay the same."
More Hepatitis B Vaccine Reactions Among
Children Reported Than Cases Of the Disease - NVIC
http://www.909shot.com/PressReleases/prhepb012799.htm
"Protecting the health and informed consent rights of children since
1982."
Contact: 703-938-0342
For Immediate Release
January 27,1999
HEPATITIS B VACCINE REACTION REPORTS OUTNUMBER REPORTED DISEASE CASES
IN CHILDREN ACCORDING TO VACCINE SAFETY GROUP
National Poll Reveals Majority of Americans Want Informed Consent Rights
Washington, D.C. – The National Vaccine Information Center (NVIC)
released figures this week which show that the number of hepatitis B
vaccine-associated serious adverse event and death reports in American
children under the age of 14 outnumber the reported cases of hepatitis
B disease in that age group. NVIC is calling the government-mandated
hepatitis B vaccination of all children a "dangerous and scientifically
unsubstantiated policy." At the same time, a national poll reveals that
two thirds of all Americans want the right to make informed, voluntary
decisions about vaccination.
Independent analysis of raw computer data generated by the
government-operated Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS)
confirms that in 1996, there were 872 serious adverse events reported
to VAERS in children under 14 years of age who had been injected with
hepatitis B vaccine. The children were either taken to a hospital
emergency room, had life threatening health problems, were hospitalized
or were left disabled following vaccination. 214 of the children had
received hepatitis B vaccine alone and the rest had received hepatitis
B vaccine in combination with other vaccines. 48 children were reported
to have died after they were injected with hepatitis B vaccine in 1996
and 13 of them had received hepatitis B vaccine only before their
deaths. By contrast, in 1996 only 279 cases of hepatitis B disease were
reported in children under age 14. (
Click here to see graph)
1997 hepatitis B disease statistics from eight states reinforce the
lack of hepatitis B disease in young children, particularly in children
under 5 years old. For children under 5 years old, New Hampshire
reported 1 case of hepatitis B; Washington state reported 2 cases;
Michigan reported 9 cases; and Texas reported 13 cases. Pennsylvania,
Massachusetts, New Jersey and Illinois reported no hepatitis B cases in
children under 5 years old.(
Click here to see graph)
By contrast, in 1997 there were a total of 106 VAERS reports of
hepatitis B vaccine-related serious adverse events and 10 deaths in
children under age 5 living in the eight states with 13 of the reported
serious adverse events and 2 deaths occurring in children receiving
only hepatitis B vaccine. (
Click here to see graph)
There were 24,775 hepatitis B vaccine-related adverse events reported
to VAERS in all age groups, including 9,673 serious adverse events and
439 deaths between July 1, 1990 and October 31, 1998. Out of this
total, 17,497 reports were in individuals who received only hepatitis B
vaccine without any other vaccines. 5,983 of the reports were for
serious events and there were 146 deaths, which means that 35 percent
of reports in all age groups after receipt of hepatitis B vaccine only
are for serious events. (
Click
here to see graph)
During the same time period, there was a total of 2,424 adverse event
reports, with 1,209 serious events and 73 deaths in children under age
14 who got hepatitis B vaccine alone without any other vaccines. This
means that 52 percent or 1 out of 2 reports for children under age 14,
who only receive hepatitis B vaccine, are for serious events.
VAERS depends primarily upon physicians reporting and causation cannot
be conclusively determined without in-depth follow-up of each serious
event and death report. NVIC maintains that reports made by doctors to
VAERS represent only a small fraction of the vaccine-related injuries
and deaths which occur in the U.S. every year. A former FDA
Commissioner wrote in JAMA in 1993 that one study showed "only about 1
percent of serious events" attributable to drug reactions are reported
to the FDA.
A 1994 NVIC survey of 159 doctors’ offices in 7 states revealed that
only 28 out of 159 doctors (18%) said they make a report to the
government when a child suffers a serious health problem following
vaccination. In New York, only one doctor out of 40 surveyed reported
vaccine adverse events to the government.
In a related development, NVIC also released the results of a national
poll of 1,000 registered voters, taken by The Polling Company on
December 8-11, 1998, which showed that 2 out of 3 (68%) Americans
support a parent’s right to be informed of the risks of diseases and
risks of vaccines and be able to choose whether or not their children
receive certain vaccines which could potentially hurt them. A plurality
(45%) of Americans oppose state laws requiring all five-year olds to
get the hepatitis B vaccine before being allowed to attend kindergarten
and, when given information about risks of hepatitis B vaccination, 59
percent of respondents were less likely to support such mandatory
vaccination laws.
Only 25 percent of Americans believe that people, after getting
information about risks and benefits of medical procedures such as the
administration of prescription drugs and vaccines, should then be
required to follow the orders of their doctors or public health
officials. The poll’s margin of error is +/-3.1% at the 95% confidence
level (i.e. the same survey could be administered to a similar
population and yield comparable results in roughly 19 of 20 cases).
Hepatitis B is primarily an adult disease most often transmitted
through infected blood. Highest risk populations are IV drug users and
people with multiple sex partners. In 1991 the CDC recommended that all
infants be injected with the first dose of hepatitis B vaccine at birth
before being discharged from the hospital newborn nursery, even though
the only newborns at risk for contracting hepatitis B are those born to
hepatitis B infected mothers. By 1998, only 15 states required
mandatory screening of pregnant women for hepatitis B infection so
babies born to infected mothers could be effectively targeted for
hepatitis B vaccination, and yet 35 states required all children to get
3 doses of hepatitis B vaccine or be denied entry to daycare,
kindergarten, high school or college.
The U.S. has historically had one of the lowest rates of hepatitis B
disease in the world even before a hepatitis B vaccine was in use. In
1990, a year before the CDC issued the order for all children to get
the vaccine, there were 21,102 cases of hepatitis B reported in the
U.S. out of a total US population of 248 million. In 1996, there were
10,637 hepatitis B cases reported. According to the October 31, 1997
Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report published by the Centers for
Disease Control, "Hepatitis B continues to decline in most states,
primarily because of a decrease in the number of cases among injecting
drug users and, to a lesser extent, among both homosexuals and
heterosexuals of both sexes."
In October 1998, France became the first country to end hepatitis B
vaccination requirements for schoolchildren after reports of chronic
arthritis, symptoms resembling multiple sclerosis and other serious
health problems following hepatitis B vaccination became so numerous
that the Health Minister of France suspended the school requirement.
"As more states mandate hepatitis B vaccination, NVIC is getting more
reports of children dying or suffering rashes, fevers, seizures,
arthritis, diabetes, chronic fatigue and other autoimmune and brain
dysfunction following their hepatitis B shots," said NVIC co-founder
and president Barbara Loe Fisher. "Newborn babies are dying shortly
after their shots and their deaths are being written off as sudden
infant death syndrome. Parents should have the right to give their
informed consent to vaccination and Congress should give emergency,
priority funding to independent scientists, who can take an unbiased
look at this vaccine, instead of leaving the search for the truth in
the hands of government officials who have already decided to force
every child to get the vaccine," she said.
Drug companies marketing the genetically engineered recombinant DNA
hepatitis B vaccine in the U.S. used studies to demonstrate safety
which only monitored children for 4 or 5 days after vaccination.
Professor Bonnie Dunbar, Ph.D., a Texas cell biologist and pioneering
vaccine researcher, said "It takes weeks and sometimes months for
autoimmune disorders, such as rheumatoid arthritis, to develop
following vaccination. No basic science research or controlled, long
term studies into the side effects of this vaccine have been conducted
in American babies, children or adults." Dr. Dunbar has joined
consumers in calling for informed consent to hepatitis B vaccination as
well as NIH funding for independent research to determine the
biological mechanism for hepatitis B vaccine reactions, to identify
high risk factors and to develop therapies to repair vaccine damage.
Founded in 1982, the National Vaccine Information Center is the oldest
and largest vaccine safety and informed consent rights advocacy
organization representing health care consumers and the vaccine
injured. NVIC was instrumental in the creation of the National
Childhood Vaccine Injury Act of 1986, which has paid out nearly $1
billion dollars for vaccine injuries and deaths. For more information
or to report a vaccine reaction, call 1-800-909-SHOT or access
http://www.909shot.com.
The National Vaccine Information Center is a non-profit educational
organization founded by parents of vaccine-injured children in 1982.
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Sandy Mintz