Is The Cancer Virus Vaccine Going To Be Another Disaster? (Questions parents should ask their doctor.)
Is The Cancer Virus
Vaccine Going To Be Another Disaster? (Questions parents should ask their
doctor.)
Vernon Coleman
From autumn 2008
British schoolgirls aged 12 to 13 will be vaccinated against cervical
cancer.
The contract for supplying the vaccine against the human
papillomavirus is said to be worth hundreds of millions of pounds.
Gosh,
there's a surprise.
Parents won't (yet) be forced to have their children
vaccinated.
(Personally, I doubt if it will be long before all
vaccination programmes are compulsory.)
Parents who feel genuinely
responsible will, of course, want to think carefully before allowing their
daughters to be vaccinated.
Here's one question they might like to ask:
`How safe is the vaccine?'
If a doctor or nurse replies `Perfectly safe'
then they are stupid or lying or, quite possibly, both. There is no such thing
as a perfectly safe vaccine.
Here's another question parents might ask:
`Are there any side effects?'
If a doctor or nurse replies `No' then they
are lying.
According to Judicial Watch, the US Food and Drug
Administration has reported that 1,637 adverse reactions have been reported as a
result of girls being vaccinated with one of the new vaccines.
And here's
another question: `Have any girls died after being given this
vaccine?'
And that, of course, is the big question.
According to
information I've seen three girls have so far died shortly after receiving a jab
against human papillomavirus (HPV).
Bottom line is this: parents who want
to have their child vaccinated might like to ask their doctor or nurse to sign a
form taking legal responsibility for any adverse reaction.
They might
find doctors and nurses slightly reluctant to do this.