|
Time for the Flu Vaccine?
Think Again
By Randall Neustaedter OMD
The flu vaccine gets the most-useless-vaccine-of-all-time award.
Now the CDC is recommending the vaccine for children under two years
old and all adults over 50. Dont fall for it. Read the flu
chapter from the new edition of my book, The Vaccine Guide, (available
here at the Healthy Child Online
marketplace).
Flu Vaccine
Everyone knows about the flu and the flu vaccine. What people do
not know is that flu vaccines are nearly useless in preventing flu,
they will cause the flu, and they often result in nervous system
damage that can take years for the body to repair. Other nations
chuckle at Americans infatuation with the flu vaccine. The
joke would indeed be funny, if it werent for the damaging
effects caused by the vaccine.
The history of the flu vaccine reads like one stumbling fiasco
after another. Take an example. Ever wonder how the particular viruses
are chosen for next years vaccine? The answer could be drawn
from a 1930s film noir of Shanghai villainy. Scientists kill migrating
ducks in Asia, culture the viruses and put those in next years
vaccine, because they have seen an association between bird and
pig viruses and the following years human flu epidemics. Perhaps
this desperate guesswork is responsible for so many years when the
flu vaccines viruses had nothing in common with circulating
viruses. According to a CDC report of the 1994-1995 flu season,
87 percent of type A influenza virus samples were not similar to
the years vaccine, and 76 percent of type B virus were not
similar to the virus in that years vaccine. During the 1992-1993
season, 84 percent of samples for the predominant type A virus were
not similar to the virus in the vaccine.
Here is a list of the most common side effects of the flu vaccine
as stated by the CDC fever, fatigue, muscle aches, and headache.
Sound familiar?
The primary targeted population for flu vaccine is the elderly,
yet the vaccine is notoriously ineffective in preventing disease
in that population. According to the CDC, the effectiveness of flu
vaccine in preventing illness among elderly persons residing in
nursing homes is 30-40 percent (CDC, 2001b). Other studies have
shown an even lower efficacy of 0-36 percent (averaging 21 percent).
The CDC proudly notes that for those elderly persons living outside
of nursing homes, flu vaccine is 30-70 percent effective in preventing
hospitalization for pneumonia and influenza. Yet the Department
of Human and Health Services found that, with or without a flu shot,
pneumonia and influenza hospitalization rates for the elderly are
less than one percent during the influenza season. Regardless of
vaccination status, 99 percent of the elderly recover from the flu
without being hospitalized. The ineffectiveness of flu shots in
the elderly led the CDC in 2000 to begin recommending the shots
for all persons age 50 years and older. The rationale being that
one third of Americans have a risk factor or chronic disease that
puts them at risk of increased morbidity from the flu.
Annual flu vaccination is recommended for those individuals with
asthma and other chronic respiratory and cardiovascular disorders.
However, those people with impaired immune systems are the most
likely to suffer adverse autoimmune reactions.
Children are the next frontier for the lucrative flu vaccine campaign.
Vaccination is currently recommended for children over six months
of age with high-risk medical conditions, but is not recommended
for healthy children. Experts in the field suggest that parents
of children age six months to two years be informed that their
children are at risk for serious complications of influenza, and
allowed to make individual informed decisions regarding influenza
immunization for their children (Neuzil et al., 2001). This
statement was made by Marie Griffin (and others), the same author
who was implicated in the flawed study that supposedly exonerated
the pertussis vaccine of nervous system damage. She is also a paid
consultant to one of the worlds largest vaccine manufacturers,
Burroughs Wellcome. The childrens market is the next big hope
for vaccine campaigners. A 1998 working group began investigations
to not only support, but also to recommend flu vaccine
for young children.
The next big change in flu vaccines will be the introduction of
a live intranasal flu vaccine, a dose that is actually sprayed into
the nose. This vaccine has already been tested on young children.
Live intranasal vaccine was found 93 percent effective in preventing
influenza in children age one to six years old (Belshe et al., 1998).
Unanswered questions about the live vaccine include the possibility
of transmitting other, more dangerous viruses through the vaccine,
the possibility of enhanced replication of the attenuated virus
in individuals with compromised immune systems, and the possibility
of bacterial superinfection if the replicating live virus disrupts
nasal membranes (Subbarao, 2000). This vaccine waits in the wings
for its chance as the next big gun in the vaccine arsenal aimed
at our children.
Guillain-Barré Syndrome
In 1976 the flu vaccine was dealt a near fatal blow when reports
appeared that the vaccine caused Guillain-Barré syndrome
(GBS), an autoimmune nervous system reaction characterized by unstable
gait, loss of sensation, and loss of muscle control. A mass vaccination
program was mounted that year by the US Government, and 45 million
Americans received the swine flu vaccine. Statistical studies have
confirmed a causal relationship between the vaccine and GBS. During
that year the rate of GBS in Ohio was 13.3 per 1,000,000 in vaccine
recipients compared to 2.6 per 1,000,000 in nonrecipients (Marks
& Halpin, 1980). A follow-up study also showed a significantly
increased incidence of GBS during the first 6 weeks following receipt
of the vaccine in patients residing in two other states. The rate
of GBS was 8.6 per million vaccinees in Michigan and 9.7 per million
vaccinees in Minnesota (Safranek et al., 1991). This episode, which
became known as the swine flu catastrophe, left doctors extremely
reluctant to administer flu vaccine, and shattered the public trust
in the flu vaccine campaign.
The association between GBS and flu shots was not unique to the
swine flu. Earlier reports had also summarized cases of nervous
system disorders occurring soon after the flu vaccine (Flewett &
Hoult, 1958; Horner, 1958). More recently, an increased risk for
GBS occurring in patients during the six weeks following the flu
vaccine was revealed in the 1992-1993 and the 1993-1994 flu seasons
(Lasky et al., 1998).
Pregnancy
One of the most bizarre twists on the flu vaccine saga is the CDC
recommendation of 2001 that all pregnant women receive the vaccine
in their second or third trimester. This recommendation even has
doctors confused, since the vaccine remains a category C drug (unknown
risk for pregnancy). No adequate studies have been conducted to
monitor safety of the vaccine for mother and fetus. The only studies
of adverse effects in pregnancy were conducted in the 1970s (Heinonen
et al., 1973; Sumaya & Gibbs, 1979). Some flu vaccines still
contain mercury as a preservative, despite a 1998 FDA instruction
to remove mercury from all drugs. According to the CDC, two groups
are most vulnerable to methylmercury¾the fetus and children
ages 14 and younger. An article published in the American Journal
of Epidemiology in 1999 stated, the greatest susceptibility
to methylmercury neurotoxicity occurs during late gestation
(Grandjean et al., 1999). How did CDC committee members determine
that flu vaccines were safe for pregnant women? They did not. The
committee, despite its own recommendation, states, additional
data are needed to confirm the safety of vaccination during pregnancy
(CDC, 2001b).
Flu Facts
·Flu vaccine manufacturers are notoriously inaccurate
at predicting the appropriate viruses to use in an individual
years vaccine, rendering the vaccine ineffective.
·Flu vaccine is relatively ineffective in those patients
most at risk of flu complications.
·The vaccine has caused GBS in recipients during several
different flu seasons.
·Those most at risk of flu complications probably share
a higher risk of adverse reactions to the flu vaccine as well.
Randall Neustaedter is the Author of The Vaccine Guide, North Atlantic
Books. You can subscribe to his Natural Health Newsletter by visiting
his website or e-mailing him.
Randall Neustaedter OMD, LAc
Classical Medicine Center
1779 Woodside Rd #201C
Redwood City, CA 94061
650 299-9170
www.cure-guide.com
email: randalln@concentric.net
|