Anti-Smallpox Vaccine Sentiment Grows
Gov't Admits to Uncertainty About Vaccine Safety
From: Michael Wright <MPWright9@aol.com>
http://educate-yourself.org/vcd/antismallpoxsentimentgrows26jan03.shtml
January 26, 2003
USA Today reported (January 21) that a growing number of doctors and
hospital administrators are expressing extreme doubts about the Bush plan
for mass smallpox vaccinations. The story followed an announcement
by doctors at the Medical College of Virginia Hospitals that they would not
participate in the Bush vaccination program.
There are good reasons for the resistance. In a 1997 article
in the Public Health Reports, the government admits to "substantial uncertainty"
in the interpretation of data from ongoing surveillance programs concerned
with vaccine safety. For more information, see my article in the Idaho
Observer:
In the article I argue that there is some likelihood of neurological
damage due to repeated traces of mercury and other factors in vaccines given
to infants and small children, and that the problems can manifest over time
as behavioral disorders and learning disability.
Just a few days after I submitted it, evidence predictable by my hypothesis
emerged in the Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine (Vol. 157,
No 1). Researchers reported that 6% of American children are now using
psychiatric drugs, and that the incidence of this type of treatment for children
increased 200% to 300% from 1987 through 1996.
You are of course welcome to link to my article if you find it useful.
A brief introduction describing the findings about children on psychiatric
drugs would be appropriate, since this information surfaced after the article
was submitted.
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