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Issue 283

December 22, 2001

Surgical Mistakes on the Rise

New Impotence Drug

Optimism May Protect Heart

Pain and Pleasure

Folate & Childhood Leukemia

Air Quality on Planes

Childhood Growth & Adult Obesity

Autism Doctor Vicitimized

Fluoridation

The Vaccine Reaction

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Home Page New Patients Nutrition Help


The Vaccine Reaction
Barbara Loe Fisher, Editor

In this time of great sadness, fear and confusion, Americans have a choice to
make: either we defend the individual freedoms our forefathers fought and died
to give us, or we sacrifice those freedoms and let the terrorists win. What we
choose to do will define who we are as a nation for many years to come.

- Barbara Loe Fisher

[ Page 1 | Page 2 | Page 3 | References ]

The terrorist attacks on New York City and Washington, D.C. on September 11,
2001 and the subsequent threats of biological warfare against US citizens have
prompted calls by public health officials to prepare for mass vaccination
campaigns for anthrax and smallpox.1,2

National vaccination programs targeting civilians, including children, are being
proposed in model state legislation that would give public health officials the
power to use the state militia to enforce vaccination during state-declared
health emergencies.3,4

While it is critical for the US to have a sound, workable plan to respond to an
act of bioterrorism, as well as enough safe and effective vaccines stockpiled
for every American who wants to use them, there are legitimate concerns about a
plan which forces citizens to use vaccines without their voluntary, informed
consent.

All mass vaccination campaigns result in casualties because every vaccine, like
every drug, carries an inherent risk of injury or death.5,6,7,8,9 Some
individuals are genetically or biologically more vulnerable to vaccine reactions
than others,10 but there are few reliable biomarkers to predict who they
are5,6,7,8,9 which is why legally protecting the informed consent rights of all
citizens becomes a moral imperative.

The human right to be fully informed about all known and unknown risks, as well
as benefits, of any medical intervention and make a voluntary decision about
whether to take the risk, has been the centerpiece of bioethics ever since the
Nuremberg Code was adopted after World War II 11 and the doctrine of informed
consent was introduced into U.S. case law in 1957.12

In evaluating the potential risk of a bioterrorism attack with real, as well as
unpredictable, risks of exposing large numbers of children and adults to a
prophylactic mass vaccination program for smallpox, some health officials have
already concluded that the risks of mass vaccination outweigh the theoretical
benefits.13,14,15

However, even in the event of a proven biological weapons assault and smallpox
outbreak, sacrifice of the informed consent ethic would result in state-forced
vaccine-induced injury and death of a biologically vulnerable minority in
service to the majority, posing serious constitutional and moral questions.

Although there have been suggestions that federal vaccine testing regulations
should be curtailed in an effort to get a national supply of smallpox vaccine
produced quickly,16,17 no mass vaccination campaign should be initiated without
sound scientific evidence proving the vaccines to be used are safe and effective
in protecting against an organism that may be used in a bioterrorism attack.

This is particularly important if the organism, such as the smallpox virus, may
have been genetically engineered to be vaccine and treatment resistant.18
Untested vaccines have the potential to give the illusion of safety and efficacy
to the public when, in fact, they may cause far greater harm and be far less
effective than predicted.

The old live vaccinia virus vaccine for smallpox was never tested for safety or
efficacy in controlled trials prior to mandates19,20 and it may have caused more
reactions, injuries and deaths than any vaccine ever used by humans on a mass
basis. Those recently vaccinated become infected with vaccinia virus and can
transmit the virus to others, leading to injury and death for
some.13,20,21,22,23,24,25

Unless the old vaccine for smallpox or a newly formulated vaccine is fully
tested for safety and efficacy before being released for public use, legally and
ethically the vaccine would have to be considered experimental and the mandated
use of it a state-enforced national scientific experiment.

Public Health Different Today: Scientific evaluation of the mass use of any new
vaccine must be viewed in context with the other vaccines Americans are getting
today and in consideration of the general health of different segments of our
population. The most significant difference between the health of the U.S.
population today compared to 1971, when routine vaccination for smallpox was
halted in America, is that the numbers of Americans suffering with autoimmune
and neurological disorders has increased significantly.21,26,27

In the past three decades, the numbers of children and young adults with asthma,
learning disabilities and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) have
doubled; diabetes has tripled; and autism has increased 200 to 600 percent in
nearly every state.29,30, 31,32,33,34,35,36,37,38

Live vaccinia virus vaccine for smallpox, for example, would be given to
children already receiving 37 doses of 11 other live virus and killed bacterial
vaccines, including diphtheria, pertussis, tetanus (DTaP), polio, measles,
mumps, rubella (MMR), haemophilus influenzae B, hepatitis B, chicken pox, and
pneumococcal vaccines.39 In 1971, most American children were only receiving
DPT, polio, measles and rubella vaccines.40

In addition, today there are many more adults suffering with HIV, lupus,41
herpes42 and other diseases affecting the immune system. Without appropriate
safety studies evaluating the risks of an old or a new vaccine in the real world
of today, there is no reliable way to predict the potential negative impact on
the health of children and adults, especially on the tens of millions of
Americans already suffering with chronic autoimmune and neurological disorders.

Biological Warfare

Biological warfare is not a new phenomenon. History is full of examples of
warring factions trying to weaken each other’s troops or civilian populations by
making them sick.

From the ancient Greeks and Romans, who polluted the water supplies of their
enemies with dead animals, to warriors in medieval times who catapulted corpses
of people infected with bubonic plague into the castles of their enemies, to
European conquerors who came to the New World and used smallpox contaminated
blankets to kill native Indians with no natural immunity to smallpox, there is a
long history of man using disease as a weapon. 43

Modern biological weapons using lethal microorganisms were developed in the
1930’s by Japanese scientists, including aerosolized anthrax that was designed
to be used in a specially designed fragmentation bomb. US and British scientists
developed biological weapons during World War II using anthrax, botulinum toxin,
encephalitis virus, staph enterotoxin and other deadly organisms.

Even though the US has had biological weapons capability, the US has never used
biological weapons on any nation and, since the Biological Weapons Convention in
1972, has supported a worldwide ban on development and use of biological
weapons.

There is evidence, however, that other nations have not stopped making
biological weapons and that the Soviet Union, in particular, may have weaponized
smallpox virus after 1972 in large quantities and that some of the virus may
have been supplied to other countries such as Iraq, North Korea and China.

There are still outstanding questions about whether Soviet scientists succeeded
in making the smallpox virus a more lethal weapon by genetically engineering it
so that any vaccine or drug would be ineffective. 1,18

Smallpox Disease

Smallpox is a highly contagious, serious disease caused by the variola virus, a
double stranded DNA virus which belongs to the genus orthopoxvirus that includes
cowpox, monkeypox, and vaccinia. Poxviruses primarily affect the skin and cause
disease in both humans (smallpox) and animals (swinepox, camelpox, sheeppox,
goatpox, fowlpox).19

History: The first recorded cases of smallpox were in Asia in the first century
A.D. but there is evidence the disease was present in China, India and Africa
before that time. Smallpox was rarely seen in Europe until the Crusades, when
Crusaders invaded the Holy Land during the Middle Ages and brought the disease
back home with them.

The Americas did not see smallpox until the Spanish invaders brought the disease
to native Indian populations, who had no experience with the virus at all, which
resulted in high mortality and significant destruction of tribes. In 18th
century England, smallpox caused one in 10 deaths and was the leading cause of
death in children.43,46

After worldwide mass vaccination campaigns in the 20th century, in 1979 the
World Health Organization declared wild smallpox virus eradicated from the
earth. The only remaining smallpox virus at that time was reported to exist in
secure labs in the Soviet Union and the United States.

However, since then, there have been reports that Soviet scientists developed
the capacity to produce large quantities of the virus modified to survive
delivery by missile warhead and that some of these stocks were supplied to
countries hostile to the US.47

In addition, there is the possibility that the smallpox virus has been
genetically or otherwise biologically altered to make it an even more lethal
bioterrorism weapon, which may limit the effectiveness of the vaccinia virus
vaccine used to prevent smallpox in the past.18,48

Viability As A Bioterrorist Weapon: Variola is a relatively stable virus in the
natural environment and may retain its infectivity for as long as 24 to 48 hours
if it is aerosolized and not exposed to sunlight or ultraviolet light. 49

There are several delivery routes that have been discussed if smallpox were to
be used as a bioterrorist weapon to cause large numbers of infections in a
population: release of the virus into a building, subway or airplane ventilation
system or an area-wide drop of the virus by a plane or missile.

Each of these theoretical scenarios requires that the terrorists: (1) have
succeeded in obtaining the smallpox virus from one of the official laboratory
storage facilities in the US or Russia or from a country which has secretly
obtained the virus; (2) have the technical expertise and laboratory facilities
to culture and maintain the viability of the virus; (3) have the ability to
transport the virus in liquid or powder form without destroying its
effectiveness; (4) have the technology to deliver it to large numbers of
susceptible people. 45,50

Some have hypothesized that several “volunteer” infected carriers could silently
transmit the disease,18 perhaps in large cities during the first week of the
contagious period before the characteristic smallpox lesions appeared on their
faces and limbs.

Theoretically, this could happen although it would not be as effective as
delivery of the organism to large numbers of people in a wide area. Still, even
one person carrying smallpox could cause others to become infected who, in turn,
could infect others.

Reportedly, in 1970 a single smallpox infected man returning to Germany from
Pakistan caused the direct or indirect infection of 19 others in a German
hospital.51 In 1970, virtually everyone in Europe and the U.S. had been
vaccinated against smallpox.

Variola Virus: The variola virus which causes smallpox is an orthopoxvirus and
has not been documented to infect animals or insects. Cowpox, monkey pox and
vaccinia are the three other orthopoxviruses and all three of these viruses can
cause disease in both animals and humans.49

Two Kinds of Smallpox: There are two kinds of smallpox: variola minor and
variola major. Variola minor causes a milder case of the disease resulting in a
case-fatality ratio of less than one percent. Variola major is much more serious
with a case fatality of between 20 and 30 percent.

The variola virus causing both variations of smallpox are biologically and
immunologically indistinguishable from each other in the laboratory and a mild
case of variola major can look like a case of variola minor. Endemic variola
major was eradicated from the US in 1926 and variola minor disappeared from the
US in the 1940’s.19,22

Infection and Contagion: According to the Working Group on Civilian Biodefense,
“Historically, the rapidity of smallpox contagion was generally slower than for
such diseases as measles and chickenpox. Patients spread smallpox primarily to
household members and friends; large outbreaks in schools, for example, were
uncommon.”49

Face-to-face contact with an infected person is usually required to transmit
smallpox, which is spread from one person to another through nasal secretions
and saliva by coughing and sneezing.52 A person usually becomes infected by
inhaling the virus, which enters the respiratory tract and multiplies there and
in the spleen, bone marrow and lymph nodes. The liver, spleen and lymph nodes
can become enlarged.19,49

Coming into direct contact with the secretions from open smallpox skin lesions
can also spread the disease. Secretions from smallpox lesions can contaminate
clothing, bedding, or other materials, which have been used by an infected
person, so disinfection of articles used by an infected person is necessary.

Hot water containing hypochlorite bleach and quaternary ammonia has been used to
decontaminate clothing, bedding and cleaning surfaces possibly exposed to the
virus and formaldehyde has been used to fumigate contaminated areas.52

No Contagion for One or Two Weeks: A person with smallpox is infectious from a
day before the rash appears (about 10 to 14 days after infection) until all
lesions have healed and the scabs have fallen off. In the incubation period of
the disease during the two weeks prior to the appearance of a fever and flu-like
symptoms, there is no evidence that the smallpox virus sheds and can be
transmitted to others and the person looks and feels healthy.

Only after the fever and flu-like symptoms begin and then disappear before the
outbreak of a rash, will the person be highly contagious and able to infect
others through the release of virus in the mouth, throat and respiratory tract.
The large amounts of virus shed from the skin lesions can be infectious but are
not as infectious as the virus released by the respiratory tract.49.52

Although persons suffering from variola major, the more severe smallpox, are
visibly sick and often bedridden even before the outbreak of the rash, those who
have variola minor, the milder smallpox, may not know they are sick until the
rash and lesions erupt. Therefore, unsuspecting carriers of a less severe form
of smallpox could spread the disease more easily during the early part of the
contagious period.

There are estimates that one infected person may transmit the disease to between
5 and 10 other persons in populations with no natural or vaccine-induced
immunity.52 Those persons can, in turn, infect 5 to 10 others and that is how an
epidemic can begin.

Incubation and Symptoms: The incubation period of smallpox from the time of
infection to the time that symptoms begin to appear is about 12 to 14 days at
which time the person develops a fever of 102 to 106 F., extreme fatigue, severe
headache and back pain, and, occasionally, abdominal pain and vomiting.

After 3 or 4 days the fever goes down and the patient may appear to recover but
then a rash appears on the face and forearms and spreads to the trunk, legs,
and, sometimes, appears on the palms and soles of the feet.20,22,49,52

On the third or fourth day after the rash appears, hard lumps (papules) form
under the skin. These papules swell and turn into vesicles (sacs under the skin
filled with fluid) that eventually turn into pustules (open skin lesions
containing clear, then cloudy fluid filled with pus).

A fever often accompanies the rash and formation of papules and vesicles. The
pustules, which can resemble chicken pox lesions but are much deeper in the
skin, also develop and ulcerate in the mucous membranes of the nose, mouth and
throat and release large amounts of virus into the mouth and throat. 20,22,49,52

The deep ulcerative skin lesions eventually form crusts and scabs that usually
fall off within three weeks after the beginning of the illness. The patient can
be left with small scars or deep pits in the skin if the sebaceous glands of the
skin are destroyed.20,22,49,52

Rare Types of Smallpox: A milder illness may occur both in those who have been
vaccinated and those who have not been vaccinated, including cases that include
a rash but no eruption of any lesions (variola sine eruptione). But in another
rare form of smallpox, known as malignant smallpox, the disease remains in the
rash stage and pustular lesions do not erupt.

Malignant smallpox is almost always fatal, as is another rare form of smallpox,
known as hemorrhagic smallpox. A person with hemorrhagic smallpox develops
fever, bone marrow depression, a drop in platelets (thrombocytopenia) and
uncontrollable bleeding into the skin and mucous membranes leading to
death.22,49

Complications and Mortality: The smallpox lesions can become infected, leading
to bacterial superinfections usually caused by staphylococcus aureus. Other
complications include conjunctivitis (inflammation of the membrane covering the
eyeball); bacterial pneumonia; viral arthritis; sepsis (blood infection);
encephalomyelitis (inflammation of the brain) and osteomyelitis (inflammation of
the bone).

Permanent damage can include blindness, brain damage, and severe facial and body
scarring. In the past, smallpox killed between one percent and 30 percent of
those infected, depending upon whether the person had variola minor or variola
major, and mortality was highest in infants and the elderly.19,22,46,49

Misdiagnosis Can Occur: Before smallpox was eradicated in 1977, doctors
sometimes confused chicken pox with smallpox During the first two to three days
of the rash, it is almost impossible to distinguish between the two diseases.
The main symptomatic difference between the two is that smallpox lesions are all
in the same stage of development while chickenpox lesions can be in various
stages of development on different parts of the body.

Also, the smallpox rash primarily affects the face and limbs of the body and the
chickenpox rash is primarily on the trunk of the body and almost never affects
the palms of the hand or soles of the feet like smallpox. Lab tests can
distinguish between a herpes group infection (chicken pox) and a poxvirus
infection (smallpox).19,22,52

Other diseases that can mimic smallpox are eczema vaccinatum, eczema herpeticum,
rickettsialpox, drug reactions, contact dermatitis, and erythema multiforme
(inflammation of the skin and mucous membranes). Meningococcemia, typhus and
hemorrhagic fevers can also be mistaken for the more severe fulminant,
hemorrhagic smallpox.22

Human monkeypox, which occurs in Africa, is difficult to distinguish from
smallpox. Also, sometimes disseminated vaccinia virus infection (from the
vaccine) can be confused with smallpox.19

Definitive Lab Diagnosis: Lab detection of smallpox can occur within a few hours
but definitive identification requires growth of the virus in cell culture or on
the chorioallantoic egg membrane and characterization of strains by use of
biologic assays, such as polymerase chain reaction (PCR) techniques.22,49

Treatment for Smallpox Limited: Vaccinia virus vaccine given up to four days
after exposure to the virus reportedly can provide protection or lessen the
severity of smallpox.49 Antibiotics will not cure smallpox because it is a
viral, not a bacterial, infection. There are a number of anti-viral medications
being investigated, such as cidofovir, but there is no drug currently on the
market licensed as a specific treatment for smallpox.52

Like with chicken pox, preventing bacterial infection of the skin lesions is
important. Sterile sheets, clothing and other sterile procedures can help reduce
complicating bacterial skin infections. Antibiotics to treat secondary
infections are given by injection or orally as topical antibiotics are not used.
Antihistamines may reduce itching and scratching of the lesions and help prevent
their spread to other parts of the body, such as the eyes.22,52

Continued on Page 2

[ Page 1 | Page 2 | Page 3 | References ]


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Mon Dec 24, 2001 2:18 am

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Surgical Mistakes in US on the Rise - The number of operations where the wrong patient is operated on, or the wrong body site is operated on is on the rise. Find out how you can protect yourself or your family members from being harmed by these shocking mistakes.

New Impotence Drug, But Can You Believe Bayer? - Two new Viagra alternatives are coming out. Read some of the practical nutritional alternative options to these drugs.

Optimism May Protect Against Heart Disease - Having a positive outlook on life may have an effect on how long you live your life, as this study shows that pessimists are more likely to get heart disease than their more optimistic counterparts.

Still Loooking For The Perfect Christmas Gift? - Not many Christmas presents have a one year money back guarantee. You can change someone's life with the EFT videos.

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Pain and Pleasure Take Similar Path in Brain - The way the brain interprets pain may show us a way to help those with chronic pain in a natural, non-surgical way.

Folate May Also Reduce Childhood Leukemia - Learn how taking two simple supplements during pregnancy can drastically reduce the liklihood of one's newborn getting a deadly type of Leukemia.

Panel Says Air Quality on Planes May Be a Problem - Low quality of air in airplane cabins may be causing respiratory problems, skin irratations, and blood clots, due to several contaminants passengers are exposed to on a flight.

What Are You Going to Eat For Breakfast? - This is the most common question new patients ask me. Find out the answer to this and how you can successfully apply the eating plan so you can regain your health.

Childhood Growth May Give Clues to Adult Obesity - Read how a child's birthweight and growth can have a direct impact on whether or not the child is obese when they are an adult. It also shows how following a proper eating plan can prevent obesity as an adult.

Leading British Autism Doctor Vicitimized - Learn how Dr. Andrew Wakefield, a brilliant doctor that has uncovered many dangers of immunization, was fired, simply for doing the right thing.

Scientists Find Fluoridation Outdated & Question Its Morality - Too much fluoride can have many negative effects, and not just cosmetic ones; it can also have a profound effect on bone and teeth growth.

The Vaccine Reaction - In this time of great sadness, fear and confusion, Americans have a choice to make: either we defend the individual freedoms our forefathers fought and died to give us, or we sacrifice those freedoms and let the terrorists win. Find out how vaccinations play a part in our freedom.

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