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Author Topic: Over 100 measles vaccine deaths since 2004, ZERO measles deaths in USA  (Read 1496 times)
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February 18, 2015, 03:59:23 AM
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From the New American, link:
http://www.thenewamerican.com/usnews/health-care/item/20132-over-100-measles-vaccine-deaths-zero-measles-deaths-since-04


Quote
Monday, 16 February 2015
Over 100 Measles Vaccine Deaths, Zero Measles Deaths, Since ’04
Written by Alex Newman


Over 100 Measles Vaccine Deaths, Zero Measles Deaths, Since ’04


Over the last decade in the United States, the deaths of over 100 children — at the very least — have been linked to receiving a measles vaccine, compared with zero children dying from the disease itself, according to the U.S. government’s own compiled data. Put another way, an American child would have been infinitely more likely to die after receiving a measles shot, percentage-wise, than from getting the actual measles disease in the last ten years. Thousands more have suffered from adverse reactions to the measles shot and other vaccines. The explosive numbers have massive implications for public health efforts, analysts said.

Of course, the establishment media entirely failed to report those figures as it hysterically demonized “anti-vaxxer” parents — at least until the facts went viral in the alternative press. USA Today even published an especially unhinged screed encouraging the jailing of parents who refuse to vaccinate their children, though it was not clear whether the Amish and other religious communities would be included in the proposed mass-roundups. Now, elements of the increasingly discredited and wildly mischaracterized “mainstream” media are engaged in a ham-handed damage-control effort.

While all of the data is publicly available online through the federal government, it appears that the first outlet to put the information together in one report was Health Impact News. Its article promptly went viral and sparked a cascade of follow-up stories in the alternative media. HealthImpactNews.com editor Brian Shilhavy first highlighted data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) showing that there have been no child measles deaths since 2003 in the United States.

Next, Shilhavy used a HealthSentinel.com graph (shown below) based on a variety of U.S. statistics to show measles mortality rates in America going back to 1900. Until about the 1920s, more than 10 per 100,000 were dying from the disease. However, by 1955, with advances in medicine and huge progress in sanitation, nutrition, and living standards, those rates steadily declined from 1900 levels by almost 98 percent to a mere 0.03 deaths per 100,000. The vaccine was introduced in 1963, and by then, measles was almost a non-problem in the developed world.

[measles mortality graph]

Then Shilhavy detailed the results of his search through the CDC’s “Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System” (VAERS). “The search result contained 108 deaths over this period, resulting from four different measles vaccines sold in the United States during the past 10 years,” he wrote. “This database reflects only deaths that were reported during the time frame, and therefore probably reflects a much lower number than actual deaths, since most doctors and health authorities believe vaccines are safe, and would not normally attribute a death to a vaccine and actually report it.”

As the facts were going viral, the largely discredited Snopes.com website labeled the facts as “false.” However, in its half-baked effort to supposedly expose the data as “false,” the radically pro-government website mostly attacked straw men while relying on data from Third World countries with widespread malnutrition and a lack of even basic healthcare services.

Meanwhile, Newsweek, still attempting to recover after the unprofitable and Big Pharma advertisement-supported magazine was sold for $1 dollar in recent years, also piled on. In an error-riddled propaganda piece, the embattled online outlet notes that “it’s true some people may have died as a result of the measles vaccine.” But it goes on to claim, citing Third World statistics from the United Nations’ “dictators club” that are not applicable in the United States, that “many more would have died without them.”     

Unsurprisingly, the CDC claims its vaccination program “eliminated” measles in 2000. “The United States was able to eliminate measles because it has a highly effective measles vaccine, a strong vaccination program that achieves high vaccine coverage in children and a strong public health system for detecting and responding to measles cases and outbreaks,” the CDC argued.

However, as the graph above shows clearly, measles was virtually a non-issue in the United States years before the vaccine for it was introduced in 1963. In fact, as more than a few doctors and experts have pointed out, fully vaccinated people continue to get and spread measles, as has been proven in countless official studies and in the peer-reviewed literature. A recent measles outbreak in New York, for example, was last year traced to a fully vaccinated person. Some patients even get measles from the shot!   

The U.S. government’s Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS), meanwhile, does caution that its reports of adverse reactions do not necessarily establish a cause-and-effect relationship. As numerous analysts including Shilhavy with Health Impact News pointed out, though, in reality, the system almost certainly underestimates the true count. This is primarily because unsuspecting parents and doctors — convinced that vaccines are entirely safe — would be unlikely to link the vaccine with the sudden death of their child, even though the package inserts clearly warn of possible death or serious injury as potential side effects.   

While those who rely on the establishment press for information might not know it, countless medical professionals have spoken out about the issue for decades. “After frightening you with the unlikely possibility of measles encephalitis, your doctor can rarely be counted on to tell you of the dangers associated with the vaccine he uses to prevent it,” explained the late Dr. Robert Mendelsohn in a paper e-mailed out as part of a health newsletter. “The measles vaccine is associated with encephalopathy and with a series of other complications such as SSPE (subacute sclerosing panencephalitis), which causes hardening of the brain and is invariably fatal.”

“Other neurologic and sometimes fatal conditions associated with the measles vaccine include ataxia (inability to coordinate muscle movements), mental retardation, aseptic meningitis, seizure disorders, and hemiparesis (paralysis affecting one side of the body),” Dr. Mendelsohn continued after explaining that, in the developed world especially, measles is hardly a deadly plague requiring national paranoia and vaccination at gun point. “Secondary complications associated with the vaccine may be even more frightening. They include encephalitis, juvenile-onset diabetes, Reye's syndrome, and multiple sclerosis.”

“I would consider the risks associated with measles vaccination unacceptable even if there were convincing evidence that the vaccine works,” the late prominent medical doctor concluded. “There isn't.” More recently, numerous high-profile doctors and experts have made similar statements, despite the overwhelming pressure and threats from government and Big Pharma to remain silent on the risks.

Indeed, unlike virtually any other product or industry in the United States, the federal government protects vaccine manufacturers from liability when vaccines kill or injure patients. This forces victims of vaccine-related injuries — or the families of those whose deaths are linked to vaccines — to rely on the dubious federal VICP to receive compensation from taxpayers, rather than the companies that produced and sold the potentially dangerous product. 

The National Vaccine Information Center, which encourages education and opposes government mandates on the issue, highlighted a number of other statistics that again have been glossed over by the establishment press. “As of January 5, 2015, there had been 946 claims filed in the federal Vaccine Injury Compensation Program (VICP) for injuries and deaths following MMR vaccination, including 57 deaths and 889 serious injuries,” the Center reported.

“Using the MedAlerts search engine, as of December 14, 2014 there had been 6,962 serious adverse events reported to the Vaccine Adverse Events Reporting System (VAERS) in connection with measles-containing vaccines since 1990,” the NIVC continued. “Over half of those serious measles vaccine-related adverse events occurring in children three years old and under. Of these measles-vaccine related adverse event reports to VAERS, 329 were deaths, with over half of the deaths occurring in children under three years of age.”

As the NIVC also pointed out, the vaccine does not necessarily protect a person from measles, contrary to the false narrative pushed by misleading establishment press articles and bureaucrats. “Evidence has been published in the medical literature that vaccinated persons can get measles because either the measles vaccine fails to provide temporary vaccine-acquired immunity or the vaccine’s effectiveness wanes over time,” it reported. Especially problematic: Vaccines may provide temporary protection but wear off, leaving adults vulnerable to measles at a later stage in life, when the disease can be far more harmful. 

Despite establishment media efforts to manufacture unwarranted hysteria and demands for “medicine at gun point,” studies and experts suggest that the approach may backfire in a major way. For one, parents who never even realized that medical professionals and studies have found vaccines to be far less than totally safe and effective become aware of the controversy.

Plus, with trust in government at historic lows, any PR efforts by politicians, lobbyists, and bureaucrats are almost assured to generate a backlash and fresh suspicions. That is unquestionably a positive development — especially when it comes to vaccines. Parents and patients should have all available information prior to giving consent and making important medical decisions in consultation with their doctors.     
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February 19, 2015, 03:28:42 AM
 #2

Pharma companies have perfected the art of making money.  Smiley
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February 19, 2015, 06:20:25 AM
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I wonder why everybody is only talking about death.
There are other possible serious side effects of the measles, like permanent brain damage.
You also can get measles from the vaccine and can spread it while vaccinated.
If you get measles from the vaccine then you get only mild symptoms.
And you can't spread it.

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February 20, 2015, 05:43:41 PM
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I agree that the current measles vaccine needs to be replaced. But at the same time, there is no alternative, as long as another one is not found. Measles is a highly contagious disease and vaccination is an absolute necessity.
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February 20, 2015, 06:27:18 PM
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Measles outbreak: California bill would end all vaccination loopholes except medical


SACRAMENTO -- In a move that could give California one of the nation's toughest vaccine laws, two state senators Thursday introduced legislation that would eliminate most exemptions that allow parents to avoid requirements to vaccinate their children.

If enacted, California would join only two other states -- Mississippi and West Virginia -- that permit only medical exemptions as legitimate reasons to sidestep vaccinations.

The clamor around the elimination of the "personal belief exemption" has been growing in California since a measles outbreak started in mid-December, when 39 people who visited or worked at Disneyland contracted the virus.

Currently, California is one of 19 states that allow exemptions based purely on parents' personal or religious beliefs.



Senate Bill 277 does not specifically address the religious exemption. But if passed as now drafted, the bill would end all "personal belief exemptions," including religious exemptions, said Sen. Richard Pan, a Sacramento Democrat and pediatrician who co-authored the bill with Sen. Ben Allen, D-Redondo Beach.

"There is no religious exemption in the statute," Pan told this newspaper Thursday. But he indicated that might change as the debate over the legislation plays out over the next several months. "I'm certainly open to the discussion about the necessity and the nature of any proposed religious exemption."

That could come through "the legislative process or the governor himself, if he wishes to be engaged early on," Pan said. "It's up to him."

When Pan, then an assemblyman, carried a bill in 2012 aimed at tightening vaccine policy, Gov. Jerry Brown signed it. But he directed state health officials to maintain the ease of religious exemptions.

Asked if Brown believes that the issue of religious exemptions needs to be revisited, Jim Evans, a spokesman for the governor, would only say that "the governor believes that vaccinations are profoundly important and a major public health benefit and any bill that reaches his desk will be closely considered."

The highly infectious measles virus -- once virtually eliminated in the U.S. -- has now infected 162 people in 17 states, including at least 119 Californians.

The current struggles over vaccine policy have raised tensions between advocates of public health and individual liberty. The Association of American Physicians and Surgeons, an Arizona-based libertarian doctors' group, says that compulsory vaccination overrides the rights of parents.

Keith Howe, 59, a San Jose chiropractor, has long opposed efforts to impose vaccinations requirements. He said when Pan introduced his legislation in 2012, "I sent him a scathing letter saying this is not Communist China and he is not Mao Zedong. He is violating the Constitution and the Bill of Rights."

But Dorit Reiss, a professor and vaccine law expert at UC's Hastings College of the Law in San Francisco, said eliminating both religious and personal belief exemptions "would be a dramatic improvement over what we have now."

Courts, she said, have established the right of a state to compel individuals to receive a vaccination -- and they've also upheld local government mandates that require vaccinations as a prerequisite for enrolling in school, she said.

Lawyers and vaccine experts caution against preserving the religious exemption while eliminating personal belief exemptions.

"It would be a terrible mistake," Reiss said. "We don't allow religions to put children at risk for other reasons."

She added that courts have also ruled that there is no constitutional right to offer exemptions based on religious grounds. Indeed, Reiss added, lower courts have ruled that such exemptions may be constitutionally suspect if they discriminate against people who have nonestablished religious beliefs against vaccination.

Critics of religious exemptions to vaccination also argue that parents could easily transform their secular anti-vaccination sentiment into a religious belief. They note that numerous websites offer relevant biblical quotations to include in letters of petition for exemption. Others offer mail-order religious groups, such as the Congregation of Universal Wisdom, headquartered in New Jersey.

Both Pan and Allen said they are aware of the potential to abuse a religious exemption. Pan said there is no major religion that "actually explicitly prohibits vaccination that we are aware of," although he said some leave the decision to individual ministers.

The call to consider eliminating the religious exemption has also been pushed by California's two U.S. senators, Dianne Feinstein and Barbara Boxer.

Along with other colleagues, they recently introduced legislation to ensure that all children in Head Start and Early Head Start programs nationwide are fully vaccinated unless they have been exempted for medical reasons.

Vaccine exemptions have been available since 1961, when California first required all public school teachers and students to be inoculated against polio. But there has been a surge in their popularity in recent years. From 2000 to 2014, the rate of parents seeking exemptions tripled, from 0.77 percent to 2.5 percent -- or one in every 40 kids.


http://www.mercurynews.com/health/ci_27562696/measles-outbreak-california-bill-would-end-all-vaccination


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As a democrat you believed it was a good idea to let illegal aliens to come in CA, WITHOUT ANY MEDICAL SCREENING. The people who voted for you believed it was a good idea. Now there is a medical crisis based on the consequences of your actions. Now you believe the solution is to force inject everyone's kids who voted for you...

Interesting...





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February 20, 2015, 07:08:50 PM
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No one is forcing injections. You're free to not get vaccinated in CA still.

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February 20, 2015, 10:11:42 PM
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No one is forcing injections. You're free to not get vaccinated in CA still.


Today's keyword is: "Still..."


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February 20, 2015, 10:12:45 PM
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No one is forcing injections. You're free to not get vaccinated in CA still.


Today's keyword is: "Still..."




I second that, only choice is the second amendment, it was designed for such case.

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February 21, 2015, 12:28:02 AM
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I wonder why everybody is only talking about death.
There are other possible serious side effects of the measles, like permanent brain damage.
You also can get measles from the vaccine and can spread it while vaccinated.
If you get measles from the vaccine then you get only mild symptoms.
And you can't spread it.

If this is true... how come the measles outbreak started in California, with most of the infected already having been vaccinated? California has something like a 95% vaccination rate. This proves the vaccine is clearly ineffective.
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February 21, 2015, 03:25:19 AM
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I wonder why everybody is only talking about death.
There are other possible serious side effects of the measles, like permanent brain damage.
You also can get measles from the vaccine and can spread it while vaccinated.
If you get measles from the vaccine then you get only mild symptoms.
And you can't spread it.

If this is true... how come the measles outbreak started in California, with most of the infected already having been vaccinated? California has something like a 95% vaccination rate. This proves the vaccine is clearly ineffective.

The overall vaccination rate doesn't matter. You need to know the vaccination rate of those infected here in order to draw that conclusion. If all those infected had both doses of the vaccine, then you can draw that conclusion.

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