23 August 2009
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The vaccines are far more deadly than the swine flu. Mass
vaccinations is a recipe for disaster Dr. Mae-Wan Ho and Prof. Joe
Cummins
This report has been submitted to Sir Liam Donaldson, Chief
Medical Officer of the UK, and to the US Food and Drugs Administration
A swine flu outbreak occurred in Mexico and the United States in
April 2009 and spread rapidly around the world by human-to human
transmission. The new type A H1N1 influenza virus is unlike any that
had been previously isolated [1, 2], judging from the first data
released in May.
It is a messy combination of sequences from bird, human and
swine flu virus lineages from North America and Eurasia. A senior
virologist based in Canberra, Australia, told the press he thought that
the virus could have been created in a laboratory and released by
accident [3]. Some analysts even suggest, without corroborating
evidence, that it was made intentionally as a bioweapon [4], while
others blame the intensive livestock industry and extensive trafficking
of love animals over long distances, which provide plenty of
opportunity for generating exotic recombinants [5].
But what worries the public most is the mass vaccination
programmes governments are putting in place to combat the emerging
pandemic, which could well be worse than the pandemic itself.
Watchdog opposes fast-track vaccine for school children
The US government is intending to vaccinate all children in
September when school re-opens, and the country’s vaccine watchdog
National Vaccine Information Center (NVIC) has called on the obama
Administration and all state Governors to provide evidence that the
move is [6] “necessary and safe”, demanding “strong mechanisms for
vaccine safety screening, recording, monitoring, reporting and vaccine
injury compensation.”
The US Departments of Health and Homeland Security had declared a
national public health emergency in April soon after the swine flu
outbreak. As a result, some schools were closed, people quarantined,
and drug companies were given contracts worth $7billon to make vaccines
that are being fast tracked by the Food and Drugs Administration [7].
That means they will only be tested for a few weeks on several hundred
children and adult volunteers before being given to all school children
this fall.
Furthermore, under federal legislation passed by Congress since
2001, an Emergency Use Authorization allows drug companies, health
officials and anyone administering experimental vaccines to Americans
during a declared public health emergency to be protected from
liability if people get injured. US Secretary of Health and Human
Services Kathleen Sebelius has granted vaccine makers total legal
immunity from any lawsuits that may result from any new swine flu
vaccine. And some states may make the vaccination mandatory by law.
The NVIC is asking whether the states are prepared to obey vaccine
safety provisions in the 1986 National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act,
which include: 1. Giving parents written information about vaccine
benefits and risks before children are vaccinated; 2. Keeping a record
of which vaccines the children get, including the manufacturer’s name
and lot number; 3. Recording which vaccines were given in the child’s
medical record; and 4. Recording serious health problems that develop
after vaccination in the child’s medical record and immediately making
a report to the federal Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System.
NVIC also wants to know if the states are prepared to provide
financial compensation to children injured by the swine flu vaccines,
whether parents will be given “complete, truthful information about
swine flu vaccine risks”, and have the right to say “no” to vaccination.
Co-founder and president of NVIC Barbara Loe Fisher said [6]:
“Parents and legislators should be asking themselves right now: Why are
children the first to get experimental swine flu vaccines? Are schools
equipped to get signed informed consent from parents before
vaccination, keep accurate vaccination records and screen out children
biologically at high risk for suffering vaccine reactions? Will people
giving these vaccines know how to monitor children afterwards and
immediately record, report and treat serious health problems that
develop? And will states have the financial resources to compensate
children who are injured?”
WHO and mass vaccination fever
The mass vaccination order has come from the World Health
Organization (WHO) [8]. In early July 2009, a group of vaccination
experts concluded that the pandemic is unstoppable, and Marie-Paul
Kieny, WHO director on vaccine research said all nations will need
access to vaccines, and that a vaccine should be available as early as
September.
Critics point out that the ‘vaccination experts’ are dominated by
the vaccine makers standing to gain from the enormously lucrative
vaccine and antiviral contracts awarded by governments. But the
decisive argument against mass vaccinations is that flu shots simply
don’t work and are dangerous [9].
Flu shots ineffective and increase risks of asthma
There are widely acknowledged reasons why flu vaccines won’t work,
as already pointed out with regard to the much touted vaccines against
the ‘pandemic bird flu’ that has yet to materialize [10] (How to Stop
Bird Flu Instead, SiS 35). The flu virus changes quickly – even without
the help of genetic engineering in the laboratory, and especially with
the help of the intensive livestock industry – whereas the vaccines
target specific strains. Furthermore, flu vaccination does not give
permanent protection, and must be repeated annually; the vaccines are
difficult to mass-produce, and some strains won’t grow at all under
laboratory conditions.
Numerous studies have documented that flu shots give little or no
protection against infection and illness, and there is no reason to
believe that swine flu vaccines will be different.
A review of 51 separate studies involving more than 294 000 children
found that in children aged from two years, nasal spray vaccines made
from weakened influenza viruses and injected vaccines made from the
killed virus prevented 82 and 59 percent of illnesses. The prevention
of ‘flu-like illness’ caused by other types of viruses was only 33 and
36 percent respectively. In children under the age of two, the efficacy
of inactivated vaccine was similar to placebo. It was not possible to
analyse the safety of vaccines from the studies due to the lack of
information, and lack of standardization on the little information
available [11]. A report published in 2008 found flu vaccines in young
children made no difference in the number of flu-related doctor and
hospital visits [12].
On the other hand, a study of 800 children with asthma found that
those receiving a flu vaccine had a significantly increased risk of
asthma-related doctor and emergency room visits [13]; the odds ratios
were 3.4 and 1.9 respectively. This was confirmed in a report published
in 2009, which showed children with asthma who received FluMist had a
3-fold increased risk of hospitalization [14]
Flu vaccines are equally useless for adults, including the elderly,
giving little or no protection against infection or illnesses including
pneumonia (see [9]).
Toxic adjuvants in flu vaccines
Vaccines themselves can be dangerous, especially live, attenuated
viral vaccines or the new recombinant nucleic acid vaccines [10], they
have the potential to generate virulent viruses by recombination and
the recombinant nucleic acids could cause autoimmune diseases.
A further major source of toxicity in the case of the flu vaccines
are the adjuvants, substances added in order to boost the
immunogenicity of the vaccines. There is a large literature on the
toxicities of adjuvants. Most flu vaccines contain dangerous levels of
mercury in the form of thimerosal, a deadly preservative 50 times more
toxic than mercury itself [9]. At high enough doses, it can cause
long-term immune, sensory, neurological, motor, and behavioural
dysfunctions. Also associated with mercury poisoning are autism,
attention deficit disorder, multiple sclerosis, and speech and language
deficiencies. The Institute of Medicine has warned that infants,
children, and pregnant women should not be injected with thimerosal,
yet the majority of flu shots contain 25 micrograms of it.
Another common adjuvant is alum or aluminium hydroxide, which can
cause vaccine allergy, anaphylaxis, and macrophage myofascitis, a
chronic inflammation syndrome, In cats, alum also gives rise to
fibrosarcomas at the site of injection [15]. Numerous new adjuvants are
no better, and could be worse. According to a recent review in a
science and business pharmaceutical publication [15], most newer
adjuvants including MF59, ISCOMS, QS21, AS02, and AS04 have
“substantially higher local reactogenicity and systemic toxicity than
alum.”
Current status of swine flu vaccines
Five different companies have been contracted to produce vaccines
worldwide: Baxter International, GlaxoSmithKline, Novartis and
Sanofi-Aventis and AstroZeneca [16]. Already stretched beyond capacity,
there is every intention to make smaller vaccine doses go further with
a range of new adjuvants [17], with the blessing of the WHO (see later).
Flu vaccines are traditionally produced from non-virulent
(attenuated or weakened) influenza viruses (see Box for a description
of the viruses). To be effective, the genes of the non- virulent virus
used must match those of the viral strain spreading in the population.
Activation of the immune system by exposure to the non pathogenic form
of the circulating pathogenic strain leads to the production of
antibodies that will confer protection against the pathogenic strain.
Producing the non-virulent virus involves first identifying and then
recreating the subtypes of two of the virus’s surface proteins,
haemagglutinin (H) and neuraminidase (N), which determine the strain’s
virulence and ability to spread, and are also the target proteins for
vaccine production.
Influenza viruses
There are 3 types of influenza viruses, A, B and C. The influenza A
type virus is the main one that cause diseases in birds and mammals.
Its genome consists of 8 segments of RNA coding for 11 proteins, and
the viruses are further classified by subtype on the basis of the two
main surface glycoproteins (proteins with complex carbohydrate side
chains): haemagglutinin (H) and neuraminidase (N) [18]. The segmented
genome enables the virus to’ reassort’ (shuffle) segments as well as
recombine within segments, thereby greatly increasing the rate of
evolution and generation of new strains. Reassortment is also widely
exploited in the laboratory in the process of creating vaccine strains.
To-date, 16 H and 9 N subtypes have been detected in numerous
combinations circulating in wild birds [19].
Seed viruses are first made to provide the starting material for
large scale production of live non-virulent flu viruses. The seed
viruses are approved by the WHO or the United States Food and Drug
Administration (USFDA). The usual method of seed virus production is
reassortment (see Box). Fertilized chicken eggs are injected with both
a standard non-pathogenic influenza strain known to grow well in eggs
and the strain that carries the genes expressing the desired vaccine H
and N protein subtypes. The two viruses multiply, and their eight
genome segments reassort with 256 possible combinations. The resulting
recombinant viruses are then screened for the desired virus with the
six genome segments that allow the standard strain to grow so well in
eggs and the H and N genes from the circulating strain. The seed virus
is then injected into millions of eggs for mass production of vaccine.
This conventional method of seed stock production takes about one to
two months to complete [20].
Cell culture systems may eventually replace chicken eggs. Baxter
International applied for a patent on a process using cell culture to
produce quantities of infecting virus, which are harvested, inactivated
with formaldehyde and ultraviolet light, and then detergent [21].
Baxter has produced H5N1 whole virus vaccines in a Vero cell line
derived from the kidney of an African green monkey, and conducted phase
1 and 2 clinical trials with and without aluminium hydroxide as
adjuvant [22, 23]. The main finding was that the toxic adjuvant did not
increase neutralising antibodies against the vaccine strain. Baxter has
agreed to ship H1N1 vaccine by the end of July or early August 2009 but
details of the production of that vaccine have not yet been released to
the public [16].
In December, a Baxter facility in Austria sent a human flu vaccine
contaminated with the deadly H5N1 live avian flu virus to 18 countries,
including the Czech Republic, where testing showed it killed the
ferrets inoculated [24]. Czech newspapers questioned whether Baxter was
involved in a deliberate attempt to start a pandemic.
Norvatis, another big pharma, announced on 13 June that it, too, has
produced a swine flu vaccine using cell-based technology and the
proprietary adjuvant MF59®. The MF59® adjuvant is oil based and
contains Tween80, Span85, and squalene [25]. In studies of oil-based
adjuvants in rats, the animals were rendered crippled and paralyzed.
Squalene brought on severe arthritis symptoms in rats, and studies in
humans given from 10 to 20 ppb (parts per billion) of squalene showed
severe immune system impact and development of autoimmune disorders
[26].
Novartis was in the news in 2008 for a clinical trial of a H5N1
vaccine in Poland. The trial was administered by local nurses and
doctors who gave the vaccine to 350 homeless people, leaving 21 died;
and were prosecuted by the Polish police [27, 28]. Novartis claimed the
deaths were unrelated to the H5N1 vaccine [29], which had been “tested
on 3500 other people without any deaths.”
GlaxoSmithKline’s vaccine will be made up of antigens of the
recently isolated influenza strain, and also contains its own
proprietary adjuvant system AS03 that has been approved in the EU along
with its H5N1 bird flu vaccine in 2008. According to the European
Public Assessment Report [30], AS03 adjuvant is composed of squalene
(10.68 milligrams), DL-α-tocopherol (11.86 milligrams) and polysorbate
80 (4.85 milligrams). The H5N1 vaccine also contains 5 micrograms
thiomersal, as well as Polysorbate 80, Octoxynol 10, and various
inorganic salts. The company is aggressively promoting various adjuvant
systems as its ‘adjuvant advantage’ that reduces the dose of vaccines
[31].
A recent WHO survey of primary vaccine producers concluded that the
potential output of 4.9 Billion doses of H1N1 vaccine per year is a
best-case scenario, assuming among other factors that the most
dose-sparing formulation (that will include toxic adjuvants) be
selected by each manufacturer and that production will take place at
full capacity. WHO Director-General, Dr .Margaret Chan, and the United
Nations Secretary-General, Mr Ban Ki-moon, met with senior officials of
vaccine manufacturers on 19 May and asked them to reserve part of their
production capacity for poor countries that would otherwise have no or
little access to vaccine in the case of a pandemic [32].
The last mass-vaccination in the US was a disaster. In 1976, cases
of swine flu were found in soldiers at Fort Dix, New Jersey, and one of
them died, most likely of physical overexertion rather than from the
infection [7]. This led to the launch of a mass vaccination of 40
million against a pandemic that never materialized. Thousands filed
claims for injury. At least 25 died and 500 developed paralyzing
Guillain-Barre syndrome [33, 34].
swine flu syndromes mostly mild
As of 22 July 2009, the CDC listed a total of 40 617 cases in the
US, with 319 fatalities, giving a fatalites/case ratio of 0.8 percent
[35]; though the real death rate – among all cases of infection
including the mild ones that go unreported – is probably much lower.
Experts estimate that only 1 out of 20 cases are reported [36].
The UK is the worst affected European country, and the pandemic is
in the headlines everyday in July. A new telephone helpline was set up
on 23 July to let people get advice and tamiflu without seeing a
doctor. In that week, there has been a record rise in cases to 100 000
and a total of 30 deaths so far [37], giving a fatalities/case ratio of
0.03 percent, a more accurate reflection of the actual death rate.
UK’s chief medical officer Sir Liam Donaldson has ordered the NHS to
plan for as many as 65 000 deaths, with 350 a day at the peak [38].
There has been no plan as yet for mass vaccination; but the UK
government has advance orders for 195 million doses of vaccine with
GlaxoSmithKline (GSK).
The vaccine that GSK is developing will be tested on a limited
number of people as the UK drug company reportedly [39] “weighs the
pandemic danger against the risks of an unsafe shot.” This was
criticized as “risky” by Prof. Hugh Pennington, a retired
microbiologist at the University of Aberdeen, Scotland. “By limiting
clinical trials, Glaxo raises the danger that the vaccine dose isn’t
properly calibrated, and could lead to shots that don’t protect people
from the virus or at worse are unsafe,” Pennington said.
Pennington added that the shot’s ability to trigger the body’s
defences is crucial and requires tests to determine the best dose and
whether an adjuvant is needed to bolster the immunity. (As we know, GSK
is definitely promoting its new range of toxic adjuvants.) He also
referred to the Fort Dix incident in 1976 (see earlier).
France has ordered vaccines from Sanofi, GSK and Novartis, but sees
no reason to ask vaccine makers to shorten or skip clinical trials
[16]. Sanofi-Aventis, the French drug maker developing its own swine
flu vaccine will begin testing the product in early August, and
estimates it will need as much as two and a half months of tests before
having a shot that’s “both safe and protective”, according to Albert
Garcia, speaking for the company’s vaccine unit, “the vaccine will be
ready in November or December, he said.
Baxter, however, will produce a vaccine by early August for clinical tests.
Glaxo also said it is developing a face mask coated with antivirals
to prevent infection and boosting production of its Relenza drug for
patients already suffering from swine flu.
There are obviously safer and more effective ways to combat the
pandemic than mass vaccinations: washing hands often, sneezing into a
tissue that can be safely disposed of, avoiding unnecessary gatherings,
and delay opening schools – all advised by governments – and we would
add, eating healthily, exercise, and getting enough vitamin D to boost
your natural immunity [10].
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