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Woodlands Healing Research Center |
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Family, Environmental & Preventive Medicine |
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5724 Clymer Rd. Quakertown, PA 18951 |
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215-536-1890 * 800-517-9545 |
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Fax 215-529-9034 * Email: foffice@woodmed.com |
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Web Page- http://www.woodmed.com |
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Vaccine Scene 2004: Overview &
Update |
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Date: 01/01/2004 |
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Introduction This is termed "informed consent" and should be the basis of every medical test or treatment; vaccinations being no exception. Consequently, our Healing Research Centers honor and respect the patient's or parent's choice in this matter and will immunize or not immunize accordingly. |
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Any medical therapy must balance the "effectiveness" versus the "safety" of its actions on the human body. For instance, aspirin therapy is effective in preventing a second heart attack after having a first heart attack and it is quite safe, only having a very small incidence of stomach or intestinal bleeding as a potential long-term side effect. As you read the following monographs, please keep these key points in mind in terms of "effectiveness" versus the "safety" of vaccinations:
In early August of this year Congressional hearings were held in Washington
D.C. dealing with questions of vaccine safety. Congressman Dan Burton, Chairman
of the U.S. House Government Reform Committee, called the hearings. On the
weekend of October 2nd and 3rd, 1999, an autism conference was held at Cherry
Hill, New Jersey, sponsored by the Autism Research Institute of San Diego,
California. Over l,000 people were in attendance, the great majority of whom were
parents of autistic children. At one point in the meeting, when those parents
who thought their child's autism was caused by vaccines were asked to stand, a
large majority of the audience stood. With these and other indications of
growing public concerns about current childhood immunization programs, it is
hoped that this review will be of timely interest.
Inadequate Proof of Benefit of Vaccines
It is true that there may be situations where extreme measures may be justified
to preserve life and health as the lesser of two evils. The basic question,
therefore, is whether the benefits of current childhood vaccines outweigh the
harm, or whether the reverse is true. As to the benefits of vaccines, polio has
been eliminated from the Western Hemisphere; smallpox may have been eliminated
worldwide, although there are disturbing reports that it is still to be found
in parts of the Far East.
Vaccine proponents would have us believe that vaccines have been largely
responsible for controlling virtually all of the former epidemics of killer
diseases in the U.S.A. With the exceptions cited above, the facts do not bear
this out. According to the records of the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company,
from 1911 to l935 the four leading causes of childhood deaths from infectious
diseases in the U.S.A. were diphtheria, pertussis (whooping cough), scarlet
fever, and measles. However, by l945 the combined death rates from these causes
had declined by 95%, before the
implementation of mass immunization programs1. By far the greatest factors in this decline were
sanitation through public health measures, improved nutrition, better housing
with less crowded conditions and the introduction of antibiotics. Also, the
virulence of microorganisms tends to become weakened or attenuated with the
passage of time and serial passages through human hosts2, one example of which is whooping cough (pertussis) which
is clearly a much milder disease today in Western nations than it was l00 or so
years ago3.
Safety Not Proven
It should be pointed out that today's children receive 22 or more vaccines
before school age, whereas today's senior citizens received only one, the
smallpox vaccine. Some of these vaccines contain mercury, although the impact
of this potentially toxic metal remains unknown as concerns the vaccines. With
growing public concerns about potential adverse reactions of these heavy
burdens of foreign immunologic materials on the immature immune systems of
children, it is reasonable to ask ourselves what is known about these
reactions.
A small but growing minority of physicians and scientists are becoming aware that safety testing for the various vaccines has been woefully inadequate. As one of many examples, a l994 special committee of the National Academy of Sciences published a comprehensive review of the safety of the hepatitis B vaccine. When the committee, which carried the responsibility for determining the safety of vaccines by Congressional mandate, investigated five possible and plausible adverse effects, they were unable to come to conclusion for four of them because they found that relevant research had not been done4.
The clear implication of this and other revelations5 concerning a general deficiency of safety testing in the vaccine field, especially as concerns possible long-term side effects, is that adverse reactions may be taking place on a large scale without being recognized as to their true nature.
There is a school of thought that the so-called minor childhood illnesses of former times, including measles, mumps, rubella (German measles) and chicken pox), which entered the body through the mucous membranes, served a necessary and positive purpose in challenging and strengthening the immune system of these membranes6. In contrast, so the theory goes, the respective vaccines of these diseases are injected by needle directly into the system of the child, thereby bypassing the mucosal immune system. As a result, mucosal immunity remains relatively weak and stunted in many children, complications of which may be the rapid increase in asthma and eczema now being seen, both in terms of frequency and severity7.
This concept tends to be confirmed by four controlled studies, widely separated geographically, in which vaccinated children were found to have significantly more atopic disorders than controls8, 9, 10, 11. In commenting on the increased incidence of asthma and other atopic disorders in the United Kingdom in the article, "Measles and atopy in guinea-Bissau," cited above, the authors made the following comment:
"The rise of allergic disease among children in the UK over the past 30 years remains unexplained. One hypothesis is that infections in early childhood prevent allergic sensitization, and that successive generations of children have lost his protection as their exposure to infectious disease in early life has declined. Consequently the prevalence of atopy and concomitant allergic disease has risen."
It is true that in
former times there were occasional serious complications from these childhood diseases,
but this is an area in which nutritional approaches and homeopathy
traditionally have been at their best. If these approaches were made widely
available, it is probable that most of these complications could be eliminated.
No one wants to see serious complications in our children, but the vaccine
route may in time prove to be the worst possible choice that could have been
made, as concerns the minor childhood diseases.
Threat of Brain damage from the Vaccines
Perhaps the greatest concern with vaccines today rests with their possible
causal relation to the growing epidemic of childhood autism, developmental
delay and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Regarding the
latter, recent news item stated that ADHD has increased from 900,000 in l99l to
nearly 5 million today12. Parenthetically, statistics may
be open to question, but one cannot question the observations of veteran
elementary school teachers who, in our experience, unanimously and emphatically
report a marked increase in this disorder in recent years. Regarding autism, a
recent survey mandated by the California state legislature found an increase of
273 percent in California in the past eleven years13. Reports from education departments of several states and
reports to the U.S. Congress on the rapidly increasing needs of classrooms for
developmentally delayed children reflect comparable changes throughout the
nation14.
At present primary suspicion for this epidemic of neurobehavioral disorders rests with the MMR (measles-mumps-rubella) vaccine. Although scientific evidence has not yet reached the standards of scientific proof, one pioneer researcher in this area, Dr. Vijendra Singh with the Department of Pharmacology, University of Michigan, has published the report of a study in which he found that a large majority of autistic children tested had antibodies to brain tissue in the form of antibodies to myelin basic protein. He also found a strong correlation between myelin basic protein antibodies and antibodies to measles (almost all of the children had been immunized with the MMR vaccine, and none had had these diseases)15.
This study tends to confirm the results of a similar study published in The Lancet in l998 by Dr. Andrew Wakefield and coworkers of the Royal Free Hospital in London, indicating a possible link between MMR vaccination and Crohn's disease of the bowel and autism16.
If the MMR vaccine were
causing an autoimmune reaction involving the brains of autistic children, what
would be the mechanism? Although research in this area is in its infancy, we do
know some things. Both the measles and mumps fractions of the MMR vaccine are
cultured in chick embryo tissue. As purely genetic material, viruses are highly
susceptible to the process of "jumping genes," in which they may incorporate
genetic material from tissue in which they are cultured17. Furthermore, protein sequences in the measles virus have
been found to have similarities to those found in brain tissues18. As a result, once this foreign genetic material is
introduced into the child, it may set in motion an immunologic battleground, a
process, which the work of Dr. Singh would tend to confirm.
Stealth Virus
A similar process may have taken place with the oral (Sabin) polio vaccine,
which is cultured in monkey kidney tissue. Years ago Dr. John Martin, then
serving as director of the viral oncology branch within the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration, found foreign DNA in contemporary polio vaccines. He later
learned that a simian (monkey) cytomegalic virus had been found in all of the
eleven African green monkeys imported for production of the polio vaccine19.
After leaving the FDA Dr. Martin took a position as professor of pathology with the University of Southern California. There he tested blood samples from patients with chronic fatigue syndrome, autism and other nervous system disorders. This work led to his discovery of unique cell-destroying viruses that were not recognized by the immune system. Termed "stealth viruses," some of which he thought had clearly originated from the simian cytomegalic virus, these viruses were missing specific genes, which, if expressed, would induce immune responses from the host20, 21. It should be admitted that this work is preliminary. No definitive conclusions can be drawn from it, but the need for further intensive investigation should be apparent.
Overdue in the opinion of many, on June l7, l999 US government officials voted to withdraw their recommendation for the use of the live oral polio vaccine and to recommend exclusive use of the inactive (Salk) polio vaccine, because the former has been the only remaining source of polio cases, though rare, in the USA since l979.
In summary, it is
possible that either the MMR or the oral polio vaccines, by mechanisms
described above, may induce a process of encephalitis or brain inflammation,
which may be highly prevalent but as yet rarely recognized for its true nature.
Genetic Implications of "Live
Virus" Vaccines
In a letter-to-the-Editor of Science magazine in October l967, Joshua Lederberg,
Department of Genetics, Stanford University School of Medicine, warned about
live-virus vaccines:
"In point of fact, we (are practicing) biological engineering on a rather large scale by use of live viruses in mass immunization campaigns …Crude virus preparations, such as some in common use at the present time, are also vulnerable to frightful mishaps of contamination and misidentification.22"
With this sobering
warning, made over 3 decades ago, it may sadly prove to be prophetic for what
we are seeing today.
Damage May Yet Escalate
As another concept, it is highly pertinent that many of today's children are
second-generation vaccines; that is, they are born to mothers previously
vaccinated with the measles, mumps, and/or rubella vaccines. It is possible
that the reaction rates in the second-generation vaccines may be happening on a
much large scale due to previous sensitization of mothers from their vaccines,
this sensitization being transmitted in turn to the fetus during pregnancy23. If this process is taking place, something we cannot know
until appropriate research is done, there predictably will be additional
increases in autism beyond that already taking place, should the process be
continued into yet another, a third generation.
Time may prove that vaccine programs went awry when they deviated from the most basic of all medical ethics, the right of parents to accept or reject vaccines for their children. Freedom-of-choice provides a system of checks and balances now lacking. At the very least, this would provide the parents the power to compel better safety screening of vaccines. The remedy? Parents should be allowed the right of informed consent, or the right to accept or reject vaccines for their children based on full and uncensored disclosure of pros and cons.
Today we have a system
in which vaccine production by the pharmaceutical companies is largely
self-regulated. Naturally these companies are interested in profits from their
products which, in itself, is not wrong. However, when arbitrary decisions in
the mandating of vaccines are made by government bureaucracies, who are highly
partisan to the pharmaceutical companies, with no recourse open to parents, we
have all the potential ingredients for a tragedy of historical proportions.
Conclusion
In closing, it may be appropriate to cite an item which, though seemingly small
in itself, may be indicative of the problems with which we are faced. In
January l993 a scientific journal published the results of a study of 89
children with adverse clinical reactions following administrations of various
combinations of vaccines24. Detailed case histories were
taken and blood tests were done to examine various parameters of cellular and
humoral immunity. It was found that children with adverse reactions had marked
increases in abnormal blood parameters as compared with children who had had no
reactions.
The first study of its kind as far as we are aware, perhaps the most striking and significant feature of the report is not the results of the tests, which might have been anticipated, so much as the fact that it came from a foreign country, Czechoslovakia. American science has been foremost in the development and promotion of vaccines. That it should be laggard in basic safety testing, of which this study may represent one of the modest beginnings, is a sad reflection on the American scientific community. Do we not have a right to expect better?
Shots
in the Dark
Attempts at eradicating infectious diseases are putting our children at risk
As published in The Next City, Summer 1999
By Barbara Loe Fisher, co-founder and president of the National Vaccine
Information Center
http://www.909shot.com
THE WORLDWIDE ACCEPTANCE OF MASS VACCINATION TO SUPPRESS INFECTIOUS childhood
diseases - once fiercely resisted - is one of the most successful public
relations stories in the history of medicine. As a result, epidemics of
smallpox, which once swept through 18th- and 19th-century port cities such as
Halifax, New York, and Boston without warning and cut down entire families, are
now dry facts relegated to medical books. Images of children struggling through
whooping cough, walking down the street coughing spasmodically, and stopping at
curbs to spit up sticky mucus are only fading memories for grandparents alive
to talk about what their parents told them. Baby boomers and their parents
still remember lining up in school in 1955 for polio vaccinations, with the
hope that this magic bullet would keep them out of the dreaded iron lung.
Mass vaccination has dramatically suppressed childhood diseases. In Canada,
recorded diphtheria cases dropped from 9,000 in 1924 to two to five by 1994.
When measles vaccination began in the United States between 1963 and 1965,
doctors reported more than 400,000 cases annually; by 1995, that number had
dwindled to 309. Cases of tetanus are almost unheard of in North America and
Europe. Yet the universal use of vaccines as a worthy goal that prevents
needless suffering and that benefits all mankind has begun to be challenged.
The voices of critics are heard in the living rooms of families whose children
have been injured or have died from reactions to routine childhood
vaccinations, and in courtrooms, where parents are suing vaccine makers and
challenging mandatory vaccination laws. In the U.S. Congress, legislators who
have heard them have set up a vaccine injury compensation program. At
scientific conferences and in the pages of prestigious medical journals,
researchers and physicians are risking their careers by discussing vaccine side
effects. On network TV, millions are watching parents, who say vaccines hurt
their children, square off with policy makers, who say vaccines rarely hurt
anyone at all.
At the heart of the controversy lies a scientific challenge to the very premise
that mass vaccination with multiple vaccines safely and effectively controls
diseases and improves individual and public health. Simultaneously, ethical and
legal arguments challenge the right of government health officials to force
vaccination on everyone. Wrapped up in this scientific, legal, and political
battle are beleaguered pediatricians losing the trust of parents and a booming
pharmaceutical industry with billions of dollars invested in new vaccine development.
How it all began
IN 1796, BRITISH PHYSICIAN EDWARD JENNER, ACTING ON A HUNCH, SCRAPED cowpox pus
onto the arm of an eight-year-old boy. He theorized that a mild bout of cowpox
would prevent a more virulent case of smallpox, and he was right. The procedure,
which he dubbed inoculation, enjoyed limited success at first. But it failed in
Jenner's own 11-month-old son, and bad reactions to smallpox inoculation, which
eventually used lymph from the cow itself, were legendary.
One mother in England bitterly complained in 1883 about mandatory vaccination
laws that allowed public health officials to issue summons, threaten parents
with imprisonment, and impose stiff fines for refusing to vaccinate their
children. She said, "In no country has the cry of the mothers been allowed
a hearing. They who see and realize that their children suffer from this
practice have never been consulted as to its initiative or its continuance. If
the will of the mothers could be made potent and effective, this cruel
legislation would be at once and universally repealed."
But 19th-century physicians quickly adopted and promoted Jenner's new procedure
despite public protests. Physicians and politicians were desperate for anything
that appeared to keep epidemic pestilences from invading the overcrowded,
filthy cities of Europe and the New World. They failed to realize that
eliminating the root causes of poor health - poverty, malnutrition, water
contaminated by human and animal waste, spoiled food, and industrial air
pollution among others - would help prevent the spread of many diseases.
Government-enforced vaccinations led to burgeoning chemical/pharmaceutical
industries in France, Germany, and Britain. The Pasteur Institute, founded in
1887 by the famed inventor of the rabies vaccine, eventually created Canada's
largest vaccine manufacturer: Pasteur Mérieux Connaught. Today, vaccinations
are big business. In 1995, an international high-technology research firm,
Frost & Sullivan, projected that the worldwide human vaccine market will
increase from $2.9 billion to more than $7 billion by the year 2001.
Public health officials in every country assist the industry's growth, often by
force of laws that ensure citizens use about a dozen different viral and
bacterial vaccines, including ones to suppress even generally mild childhood
diseases such as chicken pox. Traditional public health measures - improving
sanitation, nutrition, living conditions, health education, and access to
affordable medical care, especially in underprivileged populations - often take
a backseat to achieving a 100 per cent vaccination rate.
Most medical doctors consider vaccines their single most important tool in
protecting public health. "Few would question the profound importance of
vaccines to public health," wrote Richard B. Johnston, Jr., MD, medical
director of the March of Dimes and chairman of the Institute of Medicine
Vaccine Safety Committee, in a 1994 National Academy of Sciences report,
Adverse Events Associated with Vaccines. "Not only have deaths from the
most common childhood infections been almost eliminated, but so have the
devastating morbidities of diseases like measles, paralytic polio, and
congenital rubella. This revolution has . . . led to major savings in medical
costs and gains in work productivity, as well as to reductions in deaths and
suffering."
Questioning authority
BUT CRACKS ARE APPEARING IN THE united front that the medical establishment has
maintained for two centuries. In industrialized countries, dissatisfied
patients and alternative health care proponents are questioning orthodox
medicine's basic foundations, especially its heavy reliance on surgery and
synthetic drugs. The proliferating number of vaccines are just one more target
for increasingly well-educated and Internet-savvy health care consumers, who
are wary of the many magic bullets drug companies promote.
Remembering when doctors wanted every child's tonsils out, mothers wonder why
doctors now insist that they should stay in. Where doctors once prescribed
antibiotics for every sore throat, prescription-dependent patients are now
being blamed for new strains of antibiotic-resistant bacteria. A new drug
promoted as a lifesaver today is sometimes pulled off the market tomorrow for
killing those who took it. In the April 15, 1998, issue of the Journal of the
American Medical Association (JAMA), an analysis of drug side effects found
that toxic reactions to correctly prescribed medications make more than two
million Americans seriously ill every year and kill 106,000, putting drug side
effects among the top 10 causes of death in the United States. Among children,
antibiotics and vaccines cause more adverse reactions than any other prescribed
medicines, according to a Canadian study presented at the annual meeting of the
American Academy of Allergy and Asthma in 1998. Sandra K. Knowles and her
colleagues at the Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre in Toronto reviewed
Canadian data on more than 1,500 cases of drug reactions between 1985 and 1995.
The antibiotics amoxicillan and ampicillin accounted for 24 per cent of total
adverse reactions, with vaccines coming in second at 19 per cent. Baby boomers
wonder what and who to believe.
Many believe health requires better nutrition, exercise, managing stress, a
positive attitude, and a less intrusive approach. A 1997 study in the Canadian
Journal of Public Health estimated that 15 per cent of Canadians had seen an
alternative therapy practitioner in the preceding 12 months. A 1998 survey in
JAMA found 39 million Americans made more than 600 million visits to
alternative health care practitioners in 1997, more than to primary care
physicians. The patients paid most of the $21.2 billion cost themselves because
health insurance plans generally don't reimburse patients for alternative
health care. The patients wanted alternative therapies primarily to
"prevent future illness from occurring or to maintain health and
vitality."
Embracing the more spiritual concept of achieving better health through better
living rather than through better chemistry, members of the Me generation - who
challenged every institution and social more as teenagers - continue to
exercise their counterculture instincts as adults by asserting their right to
make independent health care choices. Their demand to make vaccination choices
puzzles and worries MDs, including some outspoken alternative health care
advocates.
Andrew Weil, MD, a respected leader in the alternative health care movement,
defends mass vaccination. Sparring with Richard Moscowitz, MD, in Natural
Health magazine in 1997, Weil asserted, "The debate about immunization
could only be going on in a country where the people are mostly immunized. If
people in this country lived with these diseases, you wouldn't hear them
questioning immunization." Moscowitz, a clinician who specializes in
homeopathy, countered, "For us to bombard a newborn baby with a whole
battery of vaccines as, in effect, their very first immunological experience I
think is reckless beyond measure. I would say it borders on the criminal."
VACCINES ARE SUPPOSED TO fool the body's immune system into producing
antibodies to resist viral and bacterial infection in the same way that
actually having the disease usually produces immunity to future infection. But
unlike natural recovery from many infectious diseases, which stimulates
lifetime immunity, vaccines only provide temporary protection. That's why
booster doses are often required.
Vaccination raises two equally contentious questions. First, is it better to
protect children against infectious diseases early in life through temporary
immunity from a vaccine or are they better off contracting certain contagious
infections in childhood and attaining permanent immunity? Second, do vaccine
complications cause more injury and death than diseases do? Both questions
essentially pit trust in human intervention against trust in nature.
The rise of asthma and other autoimmune
diseases
PHYSICIANS AND PUBLIC HEALTH OFFICIALS PROMOTING CHILDHOOD vaccination insist
that vaccines do not harm the immune system in any way. They defend the use of
vaccines - made in the laboratory from altered viruses and bacteria as well as
chemicals, such as formaldehyde, mercury, aluminum, monosodium glutamate,
sulfites, and antibiotics - as necessary weapons for shielding vulnerable
newborns from the suffering caused by viral and bacterial infections.
Visitors to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) web site
(www.cdc.gov) learn that "vaccines give your baby's immune system the
chance to practice and make protective antibodies before real germs invade. If
left totally to chance, your baby's first exposure to a disease may be from a
germ too strong for your baby to fight. That's why before parents had vaccines
for their children, many children died from whooping cough, measles, diphtheria
and other diseases. Those same germs exist today, but today's babies are
protected by vaccines."
The CDC warns that "Immunizations must begin at birth and most
vaccinations [be] completed by age 2. . . . Children under 5 are especially
susceptible to disease because their immune systems have not built up the
necessary defenses to fight infection."
YET A GROWING BODY OF SCIENTIFIC EVIDENCE SUGGESTS THAT VACCINES MAY have
inadvertently done more than just suppress infectious childhood diseases.
Vaccine critics point out that the increase in autoimmune and neurological
disorders in the past three decades in industrialized countries coincides with
the addition of new vaccines to the childhood vaccination schedule as well as
rapidly increasing vaccination rates.
Between 1964 and 1992, the U.S. added six new vaccines to the mandatory
vaccination schedule, including five doses of live virus polio; two doses of
MMR (measles, mumps, and rubella); four doses of Hib (haemophilus influenzae
type b, which is a type of meningitis); and three doses of hepatitis B vaccine,
while more strictly enforcing existing laws mandating five doses of DPT
(diphtheria, pertussis- also known as whooping cough - and tetanus).
Vaccination coverage hepatitis B, and Hib vaccines.
Asthma is an autoimmune disorder, an allergic condition that tops the list of
chronic respiratory diseases found in children in Western societies today. A
1997 study published in Science reported that "the prevalence of asthma in
westernized societies has risen steadily this century, doubling in the last 20
years. Asthma now affects one child in seven in Great Britain, and in the
United States it causes one-third of pediatric emergency room visits."
Another study found that between 1964 and 1980, asthma in children aged six to
11 years increased 50 per cent. In 1995, the CDC reported that, between 1982
and 1992, asthma increased 52 per cent for persons between the ages of five and
34 years old, and deaths from asthma increased 42 per cent.
The 1978 Canada Health Survey found that only 2.3 per cent of Canadians 15
years and over reported having asthma. By 1991, its prevalence was at 6 per
cent. More than 1.5 million Canadians of all ages suffer from asthma. Even more
worrisome, however, are the findings of a large survey of Canadian school
children in 1995-96 that found a 13 per cent prevalence of asthma. From the
early 1970s to the late 1980s, the number of Canadian patients under 35 years
discharged from hospital with a diagnosis of asthma tripled. The greatest
increase has been in children under four years of age. As in the U.S., asthma
deaths in Canada have climbed along with its increased prevalence.
Asthma's economic burden is formidable. According to Canada's 1994 National
Population Health Survey, the long-term disability costs associated with
asthma, emphysema, and chronic bronchitis in 1993 totaled $1.8 billion, without
counting costs associated with treating asthma in children under 11 years old.
In the U.S., the total cost of illness related to asthma in 1990 was estimated
at $6.2 billion.
Although public health officials attribute the recorded increases in asthma to
better case diagnoses, more air pollution indoors and outdoors, and smoking,
some scientists find evidence that vaccination and lack of contagious
infectious diseases in early childhood may later encourage the development of
asthma and other allergic conditions.
In 1996, the British medical journal, The Lancet, published Danish and British
findings concerning child health, lung function, and allergy. Noting that the
incidence of early childhood diseases in Britain has fallen this century while
those of allergic diseases such as asthma, hay fever, and eczema rose sharply,
the researchers hypothesized that certain childhood infections, specifically
measles, may protect against allergy.
They compared evidence of atopy (allergy) in two groups of young adults, aged
14 to 21, in Guinea-Bissau, West Africa. One group had recovered from measles
during a 1979 epidemic (before the measles vaccine was introduced); the other
did not get measles as children and were later vaccinated.
The researchers confirmed their hypothesis: About 26 per cent of the vaccinated
young adults had allergic conditions, twice the rate of those who had recovered
from measles. After adjusting for breast-feeding and other variables, they
concluded that their findings may indicate that "measles infection
prevents allergic sensitization." Because this was the first
population-based study to relate reduced allergies to a specific childhood
viral infection, they urged further studies in developing countries, where
childhood diseases are still widespread due to low vaccination rates.
Vaccine promoters point out that measles complications kill one million
children annually, mostly in underdeveloped countries. In Guinea-Bissau's 1979
measles epidemic, the case-fatality rate in children under 3 was 25 per cent:
it is better to have asthma for the rest of your life that die from measles.
Mass vaccination critics counter that West Africa's health and living
conditions, which could account for the high death rate, don't apply to Europe
and North America, where toddlers who get measles usually recover without
complications. Why not eliminate poverty, malnutrition, poor sanitation, and
substandard medical care in developing countries so that measles-related death
rates come down, as in industrialized countries even before vaccination?
Another study, this time comparing the prevalence of asthma and other allergic
disorders in child populations throughout the world, appeared in The Lancet in
1998. The authors found that the wealthier, more developed countries in Western
Europe and North America and Australia and New Zealand had higher incidences of
asthma than did the poorer countries in Eastern Europe, Asia, and Africa.
The authors of the 1997 Science article "Asthma: An Epidemic in the
Absence of Infection?" tentatively answered yes to their own question,
concluding that "childhood infections may, therefore, paradoxically
protect against asthma." In a 1997 issue of Epidemiology, New Zealand
researchers hypothesized that "it is theoretically possible that
immunization may contribute to the development of allergic disease." Of
1,265 New Zealanders born in 1977, 23 received no childhood vaccinations, and
none suffered childhood asthma. Among the 1,242 who got polio and DPT shots, 23
per cent later had episodes of asthma, 23 per cent had asthma consultations,
and 30 per cent had consultations for other allergic illness. Their conclusion
was, "The findings presented here are consistent with the hypothesis that
some component of infant immunization may increase the risk of developing
asthma in childhood."
A tripling of diabetes
DIABETES, A CHRONIC AUTOIMMUNE DISORDER THAT DISRUPTS THE blood's glucose
levels, afflicts some 125 million people worldwide. That number is expected to
double by 2025. In the U.S., where 600,000 new cases are diagnosed every year,
the number of diabetics has increased a record threefold since 1958, to nearly
16 million, and millions more may unknowingly have it. Now the fourth leading
cause of death in the U.S., diabetes can cause blindness, kidney failure,
stroke, and heart disease and lead to amputations. In 1992, the U.S. National
Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases estimated that diabetes
cost the U.S. $45 billion for medical treatment plus $47 billion for lost work
time, disability payments, and premature death. In Canada, the Laboratory
Centre for Disease Control found that the 1993 cost burden of diabetes exceeded
$1 billion, including $565 million in drug, physician, and hospital costs and
$559 million in mortality-related costs.
As early as 1949, the medical literature reported that some children injected
with the pertussis vaccine had reduced blood glucose levels. The pertussis
vaccine can cause diabetes in mice. In recent decades, scientists have
suggested that viral infections may be a co-factor in causing diabetes. Because
both rubella and mumps infections have been associated with juvenile diabetes,
the introduction of the live virus vaccines for measles, mumps, and rubella in
the 1960s and 1970s also raised questions about whether live vaccine virus could
be a contributing co-factor to the onset of diabetes.
In the May 24, 1996, New Zealand Medical Journal, J. Barthelow Classen, MD, a
former researcher at the U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the
founder and CEO of Classen Immunotherapies in Baltimore, reported that juvenile
diabetes increased 60 per cent following a massive hepatitis B vaccination
campaign for babies six weeks or older in New Zealand from 1988 to 1991. In the
October 22, 1997, Infectious Diseases in Clinical Practice, Classen showed that
Finland's incidence of diabetes increased 147 per cent in children under five
after three new vaccines were introduced in the 1970s, and that diabetes
increased 40 per cent in children aged 5 to 9 after the addition of the MMR and
Hib vaccines in the 1980s. He concluded that "the rise in IDDM [juvenile
onset diabetes] in the different age groups correlated with the number of
vaccines given."
Classen discounts the conclusions of many vaccine safety trials, especially
48-hour or several-day vaccine reaction follow-ups, which can miss the
development of autoimmune dysfunction that can take years to develop. According
to Classen, "Previous vaccine trials are flawed because they are not
designed to detect associations between vaccination and autoimmune diseases,
such as diabetes. Prospective clinical trials are needed."
Government health officials dispute Classen's research, and that of others
concerned about mass vaccination policies. In 1997, U.S. federal health
officials did admit that one of their own studies showed that "the
possibility that hepatitis B vaccination, particularly at older ages, may
increase IDDM risk cannot be ruled out and will require larger more detailed
studies." Nevertheless, in 1998, they told the public in a report written
to rebut Classen's findings, "Dr. Classen's results are not consistent
with current scientific thinking and have not been verified by other
researchers. . . . Comparison of diabetes rates between countries with
different vaccination policies also provides weak evidence because many
factors, including different vaccination schedules, may differ by country. Many
factors, including genetic predisposition and a number of possible
environmental exposures unrelated to vaccines, may influence the development of
diabetes in different countries."
Last year, after Classen discussed the possible link between diabetes, certain
vaccines, and the timing of early childhood vaccinations on ABC's World News
Tonight, he was summoned to a closed meeting at Johns Hopkins University
chaired by Neal Halsey, MD, chairman of the American Academy of Pediatrics
Committee on Infectious Diseases, AAP liaison member of the CDC's Advisory
Committee on Immunization Practices, and Director of the Institute of Vaccine
Safety at Johns Hopkins University. Officials from NIH, the Food and Drug
Administration (FDA), and the CDC, as well as representatives from several
vaccine manufacturers also attended the meeting. There, they criticized Classen
for speaking publicly about his findings. Later, World Health Organization
officials joined U.S. health officials in berating Classen.
Undaunted, Classen and a colleague appealed to vaccine policy makers in a
letter published in the January 16, 1999, British Medical Journal. "We
believe that the public should be fully informed that vaccines, though
effective in preventing infections, may have long-term adverse effects,"
he said. "An educated public will probably increasingly demand proper
safety studies before widespread immunization. We believe that the outcome of
this decision will be the development of safer vaccine technology."
Autism soars
OTHER SCIENTISTS RESEARCHING HEALTH PROBLEMS ASSOCIATED WITH vaccines have also
felt the ire of public health officials. In 1998, an unsuspecting young British
gastroenterologist suddenly found himself in the eye of a hurricane for
discovering a possible connection between the MMR vaccine and autism.
In the February 27, 1998, issue of The Lancet, Andrew Wakefield, MD, and 13
colleagues reported on a new syndrome involving inflammatory bowel disease and
autism in children. Eight out of 12 normal children who developed severe
intestinal disorders soon after an MMR vaccination also became autistic.
Previously, five of those eight children had reacted adversely to vaccinations.
The team of British scientists, who had inadvertently stumbled upon the
connection while studying Crohn's disease and other inflammatory bowel
dysfunction in children, emphasized that they had not proved a cause-and-effect
relationship. They called for more studies to investigate whether persistent
viral infection, either from natural disease or live virus vaccines, can lead
to central nervous system damage in some children.
Nevertheless, in the same issue of The Lancet, CDC officials Robert Chen, MD,
and Frank DeStefano, MD, charged in an editorial that "vaccine safety
concerns such as that reported by Wakefield and colleagues may snowball"
when the public and the media "confuse association with causality and shun
immunization." Other CDC officials discounted the study's importance,
saying that the children's health problems were "coincidental" and
not caused by vaccination.
Soon after, a Reuters newswire story quoted Johns Hopkins's Halsey saying it
was "highly inappropriate" for Wakefield and his colleagues to
discuss a possible connection between the children's health problems and
measles or MMR vaccines. Wakefield was later called before the Medical Research
Council where British, U.S., and WHO health officials criticized his report for
unnecessarily scaring the public.
In contrast, autism experts defended Wakefield. Bernard Rimland, who has a PhD
in experimental psychology and is founder and director of the Autism Research
Institute in San Diego, said, "It is ludicrous to claim that the link
between many causes of autism and vaccination is just coincidental. Dr.
Wakefield's group has greatly expanded our understanding of one possible
mechanism. The blunt truth is that some children are harmed by vaccinations.
Research, not denial, is the proper response to this report."
Portia Iverson, founder and president of CAN, the Cure Autism Now foundation in
Los Angeles, also took issue at the government-led criticism:
"Approximately one-half of the hundreds of parents who call our office
each month report that their child became autistic shortly after receiving a
vaccination. Isn't it the responsibility of the government to take a pro-active
position on behalf of these children rather than a defensive one?"
Like incidences of asthma and diabetes, the incidence of autism has climbed
dramatically in the past 30 years. Although the medical literature identified
only a handful of cases in the 1940s, by the mid-1960s, after the DPT vaccine
had been widely used and the measles vaccine introduced, autistic children
began flooding doctors' offices. (Parents in the U.S. and Canada who report
vaccine-associated autism most often mention that their children's autistic
behaviors followed DPT or MMR vaccination.) Today, 1 in 1,000 children are
diagnosed as autistic, making autism more prevalent among children than cancer,
multiple sclerosis, or cystic fibrosis. A recent California study put the
figure at 1 in 312 children, a 273 per cent increase between 1987 and 1998.
Hepatitis B vaccine takes a hit
CANADIAN PHYSICIANS HAVE ALSO FACED CRITICISM FROM GOVERNMENT HEALTH officials
who dismiss vaccine side effects. Byron Hyde, MD, chairman of the Ottawa-based
Nightingale Research Foundation and an internationally recognized authority on
myalgic encephalomyelitis (chronic fatigue syndrome), has accumulated data on
several hundred cases of serious immune and neurological dysfunction following
hepatitis B vaccination. His first case reports, in the early 1990s, came from
Quebec nurses who reported a constellation of autoimmune symptoms, including
pain, fatigue, and mental dysfunction, and were unable to work.
Hyde, a vaccination advocate, spoke out publicly about the side effects in
September 1997 at the First International Public Conference on Vaccination
sponsored by the National Vaccine Information Center in Washington, D.C. He
told more than 500 parents and doctors that in the early 1990s, both the
vaccine manufacturer and the Canadian health authorities repeatedly rebuffed
his requests for an investigation into signs of demyelinating disease,
measurable loss of IQ, loss of stamina, intractable pain, blindness, skin
lesions, and other problems affecting health care workers following their
hepatitis B vaccinations.
Hundreds of cases later, he has concluded that "almost all of these people
who had adverse reactions after the first immunization, after the second
immunization were individuals who had immunological side effects and who told
their physicians, and the physicians did nothing about it but continued to
proceed with immunization. . . . I think part of the problem is the
pharmaceutical companies and the governments themselves have attempted to say,
'Here, take this sugar pill, it is danger-free, it is a wonderful thing, it has
no risk, no problems,' and doctors have become lazy and actually believed this
dangerous philosophy put out by the pharmaceutical companies and the
governments."
Researchers like Hyde are at the centre of a growing controversy about the
recombinant DNA hepatitis B vaccine licensed in the U.S. in 1986. Although
health officials estimate that more than 300 million people worldwide have
chronic hepatitis B, both Canada and the U.S. have historically had among the
world's lowest rates, even before the vaccine was introduced. Unlike in parts
of Asia and Africa, where the disease often affects 5 to 20 per cent (and
sometimes more) of the population, in Canada and the U.S., less than 1 per cent
have hepatitis B, and about 95 per cent of those infected recover and get
permanent immunity. However, health officials emphasize that those who become
chronically infected suffer dire consequences: poor health, liver disease, and
sometimes liver cancer.
Unlike whooping cough, a respiratory disease that can kill babies and small
children, which the pertussis vaccine was designed to prevent, hepatitis B is
not a childhood disease. Spread through infected body fluids, primarily blood,
it is most prevalent in high-risk adult populations such as intravenous drug
users, prisoners, individuals with multiple sexual partners, those undergoing
blood transfusions, and health care workers exposed to infected blood. Doctors
reported about 10,000 hepatitis B cases in the U.S. in 1997 with only 306
occurring in children under 14.
The only babies at risk are those born to hepatitis B-infected mothers, but
because few hospitals screen pregnant women for hepatitis B infection, in 1991,
the CDC recommended vaccinating all newborns before discharge from the hospital
nursery. The CDC maintains its recommendation despite this 1997 admission:
"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, because of a decline in cases associated with both male homosexual
practices and heterosexual practices."
Widely touted as almost risk-free, health care workers in the U.S. and Canada
were among the first to get this, the first genetically engineered recombinant
DNA vaccine. Soon after, nurses and doctors in both countries reported postvaccination
symptoms like those described by Hyde, ranging from rashes and fevers that come
and go, debilitating fatigue, muscle weakness, joint pain, and memory loss to
paralysis and death. Many were diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis, multiple
sclerosis, lupus, and other autoimmune disorders, although most often they did
not suffer from classic forms of these diseases. As the U.S. passed laws and
Canada recommended children get three vaccine doses or be barred from school,
children began to report the same reactions.
Recombinant hepatitis B vaccine is also being challenged by Bonnie Dunbar, PhD,
professor of Cell Biology, Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, who has spent
most of her 25-year career in academic and laboratory science in new vaccine development.
After reactions to hepatitis B vaccinations disabled both her brother and a
research assistant, she intensively investigated the vaccine. With several
other U.S. scientists, Dunbar is investigating whether the genetically
engineered hepatitis B vaccine "tricks" the immune systems of
genetically susceptible individuals into attacking their own bodies, causing
debilitating autoimmune and brain dysfunction. Recombinant hepatitis B vaccines
contain polypeptide sequences similar to those present in human brain tissues
such as myelin while viral polypeptides can induce autoimmune diseases
resembling multiple sclerosis and rheumatoid arthritis.
"The drug companies report safety studies that monitored children and
adults for only four or five days after vaccination," said Dunbar.
"It takes weeks and sometimes months for autoimmune disorders such as
rheumatoid arthritis to develop following vaccination. In fact, a study group
on hepatitis B vaccine with members from the CDC, WHO, NIH, Merck & Co.,
SmithKline Beecham, Pasteur Mérieux Connaught, and Pasteur-Merieux, MSD Joint
Venture reported that 'a reasonable time limit to use for the onset of MS
postvaccination is about 60 days."
Dunbar is most critical of the science: "No basic science research to determine
the biological mechanism of vaccine injury or long-term studies into the side
effects of this vaccine have ever been conducted in babies or children. In
adults, only limited follow-up has been carried out in genetically restricted
populations." Dunbar and her colleagues have applied twice for government
funding to investigate the role that genetic factors may play in hepatitis B
vaccine reactions or in vaccine failures. Their goal of identifying high-risk
markers to screen susceptible children and adults out of the mass vaccination
program will have to wait. The NIH has twice turned them down.
To continuing reports that the hepatitis B vaccine negatively affects children
and adults, U.S. government officials respond, "there is no confirmed
scientific evidence that hepatitis B vaccine causes chronic illness, including
multiple sclerosis, chronic fatigue syndrome, rheumatoid arthritis, or
autoimmune disorders. . . . Surveillance of adverse events in the United States
after hepatitis B vaccination have shown no association between hepatitis B
vaccine and the occurrence of serious adverse events including Guillain-Barre
syndrome, transverse myelitis, optic neuritis and seizures."
The CDC insists on vaccinating all newborns and young children on the grounds
that they may act irresponsibly later in life. "While most hepatitis B
vaccine infections occur among older adolescents and young adults, vaccination
of persons in high-risk groups has generally not been a successful public
health strategy."
Yet the vaccine manufacturers themselves don't know how long vaccine-induced
immunity will last. Merck & Co. stated in its 1996 product insert,
"The duration of the protective effect of [the vaccine] in healthy
vaccines is unknown at present, and the need for booster doses is not yet
defined."
Government officials have also been on the defensive since last October, when
France became the first country to end hepatitis B vaccine requirements for
schoolchildren. France's health minister acted after numerous reports of arthritis-
and multiple sclerosis-like symptoms. Pending citizen lawsuits against
SmithKline Beecham and Pasteur-Merieux, which make and sell the hepatitis B
vaccine, may also have influenced the French decision. In addition, attorneys
representing 15,000 French citizens are suing government health officials for
understating the vaccine's risks and exaggerating its benefits.
The day after France withdrew the vaccine mandate, a dismayed World Health
Organization stated that "the decision taken yesterday may lead to loss of
public confidence in this vaccine, and decisions by other countries to suspend
or delay introduction of hepatitis B vaccine. . . . WHO strongly recommends
that all countries already using hepatitis B vaccine as a routine vaccine in
their national immunization programs continue to do so, and that countries not
yet using the vaccine begin as soon as possible."
Canadian parents take on the
establishment
IN CANADA, THE HEPATITIS B VACCINE CONTROVERSY IS ALSO HEATING UP. Although
only three provinces (Manitoba, Ontario, and New Brunswick) actually mandate
vaccines for school entry, parents can refuse on medical, philosophical, or
religious grounds. Even with these informed consent protections, Mary James,
co-founder of the Association for Vaccine Damaged Children (AVDC) in Winnipeg,
points out that "vaccination is never presented as a choice to parents.
Most parents are told that their child must be vaccinated. Since most parents
are not aware of vaccine risks or their rights, they comply without
questioning."
When parents were told last year that their children had to get three doses of
the new hepatitis B vaccine, James and her AVDC co-founder Leona Rew fought for
a court injunction to stop the program, arguing that Winnipeg public health
officials were inadequately informing parents of potential risks. Although they
lost their bid to stop the program, members of AVDC joined members of Parents
for Informed Consent and the Eagle Foundation in Winnipeg to raise their
objections through television and radio appearances.
To better monitor vaccine risks, the federal government's Laboratory Centre for
Disease Control operates a vaccine reaction reporting system called Vaccine
Associated Adverse Events (VAAE). Although most doctors are not required to report
health problems following vaccination (except in Ontario, where AVDC activists
got a law passed), the system does receive about 4,000 to 5,000 voluntary
reports every year. Laboratory Centre for Disease Control officials stress that
these reports only reflect "any event that is felt to be temporally
related to the administration of an immunization but not necessarily absolutely
causally related." They state, "Over 12 million doses of vaccine are
distributed every year and very few concerns arise despite intense searching.
Until diseases are eradicated, immunization remains our best defense."
Rew disagrees: "Doctors and nurses still do not report adverse reactions.
We need a reporting system that has some teeth in it so that doctors are
compelled to do their job and report serious health problems that occur after
someone gets vaccinated."
James, whose five-month-old daughter was partially paralyzed and died in 1984
following two polio vaccinations, and Rew, whose infant son had bouts of
high-pitched screaming and a seizure within hours of a DPT shot, emphasize that
AVDC does not advocate banning vaccines. Says James, "The vaccines should
be available like any other health care product, but parents should know the
risks as well as the benefits and be able to make an informed choice. Right
now, they are just getting one side of the story - the one that the government
and drug companies want everyone to believe."
American protest forces acknowledgment
CANADA'S GRASSROOTS MOVEMENT RESEMBLES ITS U.S. PREDECESSOR. In 1982, a
television documentary, DPT: Vaccine Roulette, prompted a handful of parents,
whose children had been injured by or died from the DPT vaccine, to found an
organization known today as the National Vaccine Information Center (NVIC).
Soon after, manufacturers threatened to stop producing vaccines unless they
were immune to lawsuits. Although most vaccine injury lawsuits were then either
won by drug companies or settled on the courthouse steps by weary, cash-poor
parents (with all evidence sealed from public view), plaintiffs had won large
enough punitive damages in the late 1970s and early 1980s to worry vaccine
producers about their liability.
The U.S. Congress immediately began writing legislation for a vaccine injury
compensation system and asked physician organizations, vaccine manufacturers,
and the co-founders of NVIC to present their concerns. The physicians and
manufacturers wanted Congress to remove all liability and to guarantee
protection from lawsuits for vaccine injury and death. Congress's final
decision required parents to first file for federal compensation by suing the
secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services. But parents won the
right to sue vaccine manufacturers or negligent physicians if vaccine-injured
children were offered too little financial support for their catastrophic
vaccine injuries or were turned down entirely - although bringing a lawsuit
would then be more difficult. Parents also retained the right to sue for
unlimited punitive damages where manufacturers engaged in "fraud or
intentional wrongful withholding of information relating to the safety or
efficacy of the vaccine," or engaged in "other criminal or illegal
activity relating to the safety and effectiveness of vaccines."
Government health agencies opposed the proposed federal compensation
legislation, maintaining that vaccinated children who developed serious health
problems had an "underlying genetic disorder" or a health problem
that would have spontaneously occurred even without a vaccination. It was only
after the book DPT: A Shot in the Dark (Coulter and Fisher, Harcourt Brace
Jovanovich, 1985) was published and parents held public demonstrations at the
CDC in Atlanta and in front of the White House the following year, that
President Ronald Reagan signed the National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act into
law in 1986. (Pressure by parents eventually led to the FDA licensing of a
purified pertussis vaccine in 1996, which has been associated with fewer
reactions.)
Today, parents of vaccine-injured children and their lawyers criticize the
law's implementation because three out of four applicants are turned away. With
government lawyers and health officials fighting every claim, more than $1
billion lies idle in a vaccine injury trust fund. Still, under the act, more
than $1 billion has been paid to 1,000 families whose members, the U.S. Court
of Claims in Washington, D.C., has judged, were harmed by routine vaccinations.
The majority of the awards have been for DPT-vaccine related brain damage or
death, with a lesser number for MMR and polio vaccine reactions. (NVIC's web
site, www.909SHOT.com, describes some of the vaccine injury cases.)
The 1986 law, which mandated the Institute of Medicine (IOM) of the prestigious
National Academy of Sciences (NAS) to review the medical literature for
evidence that vaccines can cause injury and death, was historic societal
acknowledgement that vaccines can be harmful. In 1991 and 1994, NAS published
the evidence in three landmark reports.
One high-level physician committee examining the medical literature wrote,
"the lack of adequate data regarding many of the adverse events under
study was of major concern. . . . The committee encountered many gaps and
limitations in knowledge bearing directly or indirectly on the safety of
vaccines." Nevertheless, the IOM did find enough scientific evidence to
confirm that the DPT vaccine can cause acute brain inflammation and permanent
brain damage that ranges from learning disorders to severe and profound
retardation; the DT (diphtheria and tetanus) vaccine can cause Guillain-Barre
syndrome, including death, as well as brachial neuritis; the rubella vaccine
can cause acute and chronic arthritis; the live oral polio vaccine can give
polio to the person being vaccinated or to someone who comes into contact with
that person's body fluids; and the MMR vaccine can cause shock as well as a
potentially fatal infection from a vaccine strain of measles virus.
Because scientific studies did not exist, physician committees could not
properly evaluate a long list of other vaccine-associated health problems,
including some of the chronic autoimmune and neurological disorders - such as
diabetes and multiple sclerosis - at the centre of the vaccine safety controversy.
The big news, though, was that the medical community had told the public that
vaccines can injure and kill. While health officials stressed anew that
"the benefits [of vaccines] outweigh the risks," parents of healthy
children better understood the cry of parents of vaccine-injured children:
"When it happens to your child, the risks are 100 per cent."
Under the 1986 law, the federal government also set up an improved vaccine
reaction reporting system, which, like Canada's reporting system, depends on
physicians' reports. The U.S. Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System receives
between 12,000 and 14,000 reports of hospitalizations, injuries, and deaths
following vaccination every year, but as in Canada, parent groups claim that
less than 10 per cent of doctors report vaccine-associated health problems and
that the government does not adequately follow up.
A matter of law
UNLIKE CANADA, HOWEVER, EVERY U.S. STATE LEGALLY REQUIRES vaccinations, and
public health officials vigorously enforce these laws. Refusing to vaccinate
one's children can result in denial of an education, including enrolment in day
care, elementary school, high school, college, and graduate school; denial of
health insurance; denial of employment; and threatened denial of government benefits
for poor children, including food and medical care. In addition, parents who
don't comply with vaccination laws have been charged with child medical neglect
and threatened with having their children taken from them.
All 50 states provide a medical exemption to vaccination laws that doctors
licensed to prescribe drugs can write. All but two states allow exemptions for
religious beliefs, but some states require that parents belong to a religion
that has a written tenet opposing vaccination (several state high courts have
found this requirement unconstitutional). Some 16 states provide for
philosophical or "personal belief" exemption, but most parents are
unaware of these exemptions and fewer than 1 per cent in most states exercise
them.
Although American vaccine laws fall under state, rather than federal,
jurisdiction, as soon as the CDC licenses a new vaccine and recommends it for
"universal use," state health officials automatically make it
mandatory. So, while state health officials only required children to show
proof of smallpox vaccination to enter school in 1949, in 1999, most states
require children to be injected with 33 or 34 doses of nine or 10 different
vaccines.
Tracking system to enforce vaccination
TO ENCOURAGE HIGH VACCINATION RATES, FEDERAL OFFICIALS GIVE GRANTS and other
financial incentives to state health and education agencies, or withhold them.
In 1993, the Clinton administration launched an "Immunization
Initiative," and Congress authorized more than $400 million for states that
enforced mandatory vaccination by using social security numbers to track
children from birth. Simultaneously, a grant program rewards state health
departments with up to $100 for each fully vaccinated child.
The government eventually plans to link state vaccine tracking systems together
to create a government-operated centralized electronic database monitoring
everyone's medical records, including vaccination status, from birth. One
federal proposal would link a national ID "smartcard" to obtaining a
driver's license and other societal privileges, such as health care or getting
a job. Individual legislators, at both the state and federal levels, have
already proposed tax penalties for citizens who don't fully vaccinate their
children.
In addition to government grants, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (Johnson
& Johnson) has awarded nearly $10 million to states to set up vaccine
tracking systems to enforce vaccine laws. In 1989, Johnson & Johnson joined
with Merck & Co., the U.S. manufacturer of the MMR, chicken pox, and
hepatitis B vaccines, to form Worldwide Consumer Pharmaceuticals Company, with
the goal of becoming "one of the premier worldwide consumer products
companies." By 1997, Merck's vaccine sales had reached $1 billion.
Tracking system would eventually become
global
A NUMBER OF PRIVATE COMPANIES AND ORGANIZATIONS ARE ALREADY WORKING with
governments around the world to ensure "the integration and harmonization
of immunization registries" through the promotion, standardization, and
acceptance of computerized patient records systems that would monitor the
health status of every citizen.
The Children's Vaccine Initiative (CVI), launched in 1990 at the World Summit
for Children in New York City, wants to develop global strategies for "the
development and utilization" of vaccines by all the world's children.
Headquartered in Geneva, CVI receives money from the United Nations Children's
Fund, the United Nations Development Programme, the World Bank, WHO, and the
Rockefeller Foundation. CVI is also financially supported by the world's
largest manufacturers and marketers of vaccines. To conform to CVI goals, in
1994, CDC health officials developed a National Vaccine Plan for the U.S.,
which "provides a framework in which diverse domestic and international,
public and private-sector activities in immunization and vaccine development
can be effectively coordinated" and "describes the way in which the
United States should promote immunization to protect the health of all people,
including "accelerating the development and use of promising new and
improved vaccine candidates."
An HIV vaccine for children?
IN A FEBRUARY 12, 1997, MEETING OF THE CDC's Advisory Committee on Immunization
Practices, which makes vaccine policy for the U.S., committee member Neal
Halsey reminded HIV vaccine researchers and developers that the government
plans to target preteens for universal application of an HIV vaccine. Halsey
told them, "One of the things that's happened in the past with vaccines is
that sometimes the manufacturers have developed them and tested them primarily
in an age group or a population which may not be the final target population
that this committee has considered. . . . We really see age 11 to 12 as the
target age for introduction vaccines for prevention of sexually transmitted
diseases. . . . It would be nice if there were studies that were planned in
parallel when you move another step in the direction of actually having a
candidate vaccine, realizing where we think we would want to use universal
application of such a vaccine."
As the number of reported AIDS cases in the U.S. continues to drop (about
58,000 in 1997 compared with 103,691 in 1993) and the number of AIDS cases in
the Third World veers out of control, vaccination supporters have accelerated their
push to put an AIDS vaccine on the market. In 1997, President Bill Clinton
challenged scientists and industry to make an AIDS vaccine available within 10
years and added more money to the yearly $150 million already committed to this
purpose. The U.S. media compared his call to President John F. Kennedy's
challenge to American scientists to put a man on the moon.
At least three dozen different experimental HIV vaccine trials are underway in
the U.S., using numerous approaches. Pasteur Mérieux Connaught has created one
vaccine from a weakened, genetically engineered canarypox virus. Researchers
are testing it as an injection, and it also will be swabbed or dripped onto the
genital and urinary tracts and nose and throat. Another experimental vaccine uses
a new strategy based on genetically engineered salmonella bacteria. In 1998,
the Chicago-based International Association of Physicians in AIDS Care called
for use of an experimental live HIV vaccine, although physician advocates
admitted that a live HIV vaccine could theoretically mutate into an
AIDS-causing strain. A report on monkey tests from the 12th World AIDS
Conference last July confirmed that many monkeys or their offspring died or
developed AIDS symptoms after receiving live HIV vaccines.
Last June, the FDA gave VaxGen, Inc., a San Francisco biotechnology company,
permission to start Phase III human clinical trials of a genetically engineered
vaccine containing recombinant forms of two HIV strains. VaxGen, which "is
committed to making an HIV vaccine for worldwide use," is testing its
vaccine on 5,000 volunteers in Thailand and North America, including cities
such as Philadelphia and Los Angeles.
Most HIV-negative volunteers who get an HIV vaccination in experimental AIDS
vaccine trials will test HIV-antibody-positive for life. In New York City,
technicians now ask those getting blood drawn if they have volunteered in an
AIDS vaccine trial - stark acknowledgement of a new generation of
vaccine-induced HIV positives who, researchers insist, are not HIV infected.
As public health officials increasingly define disease control in global,
rather than national, terms, mass vaccination proponents and vaccine makers
must find ways to finance delivery of newer and more expensive vaccines to poor
countries. They accomplish this by first making the vaccinations mandatory in
rich countries, as HIV vaccine developer Stanley Plotkin, MD, of Pasteur
Mérieux Connaught explained in 1996: "The keystone of the [global mass
vaccination] system is that the research costs [of drug companies] are recouped
in North America and Europe, and the vaccines are sold in the developing world
at much, much lower margins. . . . The relatively high rate of childhood
vaccination seen lately in most parts of the world is the result of that
system."
Just last year, the CDC illustrated this funding formula by recommending that
all American babies under six months receive three doses of the newly licensed
live rotavirus vaccine for diarrhea. Although a serious health problem in the
Third World, where 870,000 babies lacking adequate nutrition or medical care
die from dehydration caused by severe diarrhea every year, most American and
Canadian babies fully recover from bouts with rotavirus and are left with
permanent immunity. About 20 to 40 babies die of rotavirus infection in the
U.S. every year.
Vaccine production problems and new
epidemics
THE ROTAVIRUS VACCINE, WHICH WILL cost $40 a shot in the U.S., is the first
rhesus-human reassortment vaccine, created by co-cultivating rhesus monkey
rotavirus strains with human rotavirus strains to create a genetic human-monkey
hybrid strain of rotavirus. This production process, while more sophisticated,
recalls the use of rhesus monkeys to produce the original Salk polio vaccine.
In the rush to put a polio vaccine on the market in 1955, polio vaccine pioneer
Jonas Salk unknowingly used rhesus monkey kidney tissues contaminated with
monkey viruses. In the late 1950s, after lab technology advances could screen
for monkey viral contaminants, scientists identified simian virus 40 (the 40th
monkey virus identified in the vaccine). SV40 was found to cause cancer in lab
animals in 1959, but by then, some 98 million American children had already
received the vaccine. Today, Michele Carbone, MD, a molecular pathologist at
Chicago's Loyola University Medical Center, and other researchers around the
world are culturing out SV40 from cancerous brain, bone, and lung tumors in
adults and children in an effort to understand the inexplicable rise of these
rare cancers.
After they discovered the SV40 contamination, polio vaccine makers in the U.S.
switched from the rhesus monkey to African Green monkey kidney tissues to
produce live polio vaccine. However, African Green monkeys can be infected with
simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) and not appear sick. In 1992, Walter S.
Kyle, whose article "Simian retroviruses, polio vaccine and origin of
AIDS" was published in The Lancet, hypothesized that SIV contaminated both
experimental and general use oral polio vaccines using African Green monkey
kidney tissues. "There could have been multiple crossovers of the SIV
virus from monkeys into the human population at different points in time where,
in humans it took the form of HIV," he wrote. "This may explain why
different populations have been affected at different times with HIV during the
past 30 years" - a time span that correlates perfectly with the dates that
those populations were vaccinated in their respective countries during
different phases of the worldwide polio vaccination campaigns.
At the 1996 Eighth Annual Houston Conference on AIDS in America, a
retrospective scientific analysis by California microbiologist Howard B.
Urnovitz, PhD, supported the thesis that SIV, which is highly similar in
genetic structure to HIV-2, may have contaminated experimental live oral polio
vaccines. In some African children given this contaminated vaccine in the Congo
between 1957 and 1959, says Urnovitz, SIV could have recombined with their own
normal genes to create the monkey-human hybrid now known as HIV-1.
There is no scientific consensus on HIV's origin. Earlier this year, Beatrice
Hahn, MD, and Anthony Fauci, MD, pointing to chimpanzees that Congolese were
slaughtering and eating, announced that they had solved the mystery. Hahn reported
that three West African chimps were infected with SIV strains that very
strongly resembled three HIV subgroups.
Kyle and Urnovitz both challenge these findings. "They have been eating
monkeys in Africa for thousands of years," said Urnovitz. "Why did
HIV only crop up in the late 1950s? The buffet theory of the origins of HIV
just doesn't hold any water. . . . There are many confounding theories being
forwarded, but they all come back to contaminated polio vaccines." Adds
Kyle, "Hahn's discovery could as easily be explained by the fact that
chimps also eat African Green monkeys."
A Brave New World
IN 1997, CDC OFFICIAL WALTER ORENSTEIN, MD, TESTIFYING BEFORE THE U.S.
Congress, painted a picture of the future in his annual appeal for more vaccine
funding. "On the horizon are vaccine technologies that would have been
considered science fiction just a decade ago but are now reported at scientific
meetings," he said. "Snippets of synthetic DNA have worked as
experimental vaccines in animals. Edible plants have been bioengineered to
become vaccine factories. . . . Vaccines have been enclosed in microscopic
capsules, permitting them to be released slowly over time."
Vaccine researchers are seeking $500 million from all the world's governments
to create a genetically engineered "supervaccine" that will be given
orally at birth. This supervaccine - the CDC and CVI call it the "Holy
Grail" - will contain raw DNA from 20 to 30 viruses, parasites, and
bacteria that will insert itself directly into the cells of babies. The vaccine
will be time-released over several months. Disease organisms scheduled to be
included in the supervaccine, many containing multiple strains or types of each
virus, bacteria, or parasite, are pneumonia (three viruses), AIDS (two viruses),
dengue haemorrhagic fever (four viruses), diarrheal disease (several viruses
and bacteria), diphtheria, hepatitis, malaria (two parasites), measles,
meningitis (six viruses and bacteria), polio (three viruses), schistosomiasis
(one parasite), tuberculosis, typhoid fever, and pertussis.
In all, vaccine manufacturers and U.S. government researchers are developing
more than 150 different viral and bacterial vaccines. A nasal spray flu vaccine
targeting children will be ready by the fall of 2000; adhesive skin patch
vaccines and high technology jet guns will deliver vaccines designed to prevent
ear infections, strep throat, asthma, genital herpes, gonorrhea, stomach
ulcers, and even cancer and the common cold. If the microbe fighters have their
way, the "Brave New World" of the future will truly be
infection-free.
Or will it? In 1993, scientists at the American Society of Microbiology annual
meeting reported that diseases such as tuberculosis, meningitis, and gonorrhea
have become resistant to antibiotics because of their overuse in the past
decades. One study shows that pediatricians are prescribing antibiotics to 44
per cent of children with common colds. In 1998, evidence of
penicillin-resistant strep bacteria caused worry that more people will suffer
or die from severe pneumonia, bacteremia, and meningitis.
Last year, a U.S. Public Health Report warned that the overuse of antibiotics
in animals, which transfers resistant microbes from livestock to humans through
the food chain, is producing resistant bacteria, including antibiotic-resistant
salmonella, enterococci, and E. coli. Health officials warn food producers that
antibiotics should never substitute for "inadequate hygiene."
Now there are signs that viruses and bacteria, eager to survive, may be outsmarting
vaccines. A 1998 British Medical Journal study found that B. pertussis
infection (whooping cough) is occurring in vaccinated populations in the
Netherlands, Norway, and Denmark despite vaccination rates as high as 96 per
cent. Among other causes of the whooping cough outbreaks, scientists have found
an increasing incidence of strains of B. pertussis with a mutated surface
protein.
Last year, a CDC study identified eight distinct genotypes of a wild-type
measles virus in populations around the world, possibly because the vaccine put
pressure on the virus to mutate. In January of this year, the CDC reported a
1998 measles outbreak in Alaska in which 51 per cent of the children had
received one or more doses of measles vaccine. Will health officials add yet
another booster dose, as they did during measles outbreaks in the late 1980s
when they realized that one dose failed to do the job?
While the global village gets smaller and smaller, our health officials warn
parents that terrible diseases killing children in the Third World are
"just a plane ride away." The only way to protect yourself and your
children, say the doctors, is to do what we say and use all the vaccines we
have created to keep everyone safe. Yet some parents and doctors, concerned
about the future, are looking beyond the present. "What we forget is that
millions of years of evolution have taken place on this planet, and up until
the last 100 years, humans have lived in relative harmony with microbes. Yes,
there have been epidemic infectious diseases in history, but they have always
resolved themselves," said Richard Moscowitz, MD. "I don't think
there is any real appreciation for what we may be doing by using so many
vaccines to try to eradicate so many organisms."
If we stay the present course, will mankind be free from infectious disease but
crippled by chronic disease? Will eradication of feared diseases, such as AIDS,
through mass vaccination be one of man's greatest triumphs or will we live in
fear of deadly mutations of microbes that have outsmarted man's attempt to
eradicate them? We may look back at the crossroads we are at today and wish we
had decided to make peace with nature instead of trying to dominate it.
Whatever government and industry decide to do, public support for mass vaccination
programs may continue to erode if public policy precedes science and individual
health is dismissed as less important than the public health. Perhaps the peace
we need to make is not as much with nature, as with ourselves.
References:
1Dublin, L. Health Progress,
l935-l945, New York: Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, l948, Page l2.
2Diodati, CJM, Immunization:
History, Ethics Law an Health, Integral Aspects Incorporated, Windsor, Ontario,
l999, pp. 104-l06.
3In the text,Vaccination, l00 Years of Orthodox Research Shows that Vaccines Represent a Medical Assault on the Immune System, by Vera Scheibner, Ph.D.,l993, available from New Atlantean Press, PO Box 9638-925, Santa Fe, NM 87504, pp. 33-46. (The Swedish experience with pertussis exemplifies the relative mildness of this disease today in Western nations compared with earlier times. In l979 Sweden banned the pertussis vaccine because of a return of the disease in fully vaccinated children and also because of unacceptable side effects, including brain damage. In spite of this ban, which remains i