Oct. 28, 2009 - Issue #732: Dan Mangan
Well, Well, Well
Flu Vaccine
Take the shot?
Follow flu news and you'll soon be a little nervous, confused and probably
bored. So why am I adding yet another piece? Because our major media outlets
have massively underreported important findings of the Cochrane Collaboration
on flu vaccines. "There is no evidence whatsoever that seasonal influenza
vaccines have any effect, especially in the elderly and young children. No
evidence of reduced [number of] cases, deaths, complications," the Cochrane
Collaboration's Tom Jefferson recently said in an interview with Maryann
Napoli of the Center for Medical Consumers.
Who is Jefferson that we should take seriously a statement as startling as
this one? He is a medical doctor, an epidemiologist and the leader of an
international team of researchers who have combed through a mountain of flu
vaccine research.
This is highly relevant to the current swine flu vaccine frenzy—not
only will Alberta be offering the regular flu shot alongside the swine flu
shot, but the swine flu strain isn't nearly as novel, nor as dangerous, as
we've been led to believe. An analysis published in the British Medical
Journal says it is of "the same subtype as seasonal H1N1 that has been
circulating since 1977."
In Australia, where the flu season is ending, there have been 186 deaths out
of nearly 22 million people. That was with no vaccine available. Our thinking
has again been shaped by, as Noam Chomsky in his signature matter-of-fact
manner would say, a media that is primarily a public relations industry whose
function isn't so much to inform as to manufacture consent.
The constant message has been that flu vaccines—swine or regular, with
or without largely untested adjuvants—are necessary, safe and
effective. But that message doesn't line up with the science. Flu-related
mortality rates in the US have been flat over the past 20 years, despite
ever-rising immunization rates. Higher vaccination rates in the elderly have
actually resulted in higher mortality rates in that same group. During years
where viral-vaccine mismatches have occurred, or where production or
compliance was particularly low, death rates remained the same.
"Will you be lining up for your flu shot?" I asked one of Canada's own
vaccine scientists, Health Canada whistleblower Dr. Shiv Chopra. "No," he
said. "There's no out-of-the ordinary threat, and no evidence of either
safety or efficacy."
Which lines up with what Jefferson said—trials have been small, short
term, and rather than measure real outcomes against control groups, they've
measured results on antibody levels. They tell us almost nothing about how
safe or effective they are in the long term.
Chopra's answer also lines up with what we know about vaccine adjuvants from
lab research—squalene, a previously unapproved adjuvant but present in
the new GlaxoSmithKline shot we'll be receiving, causes rheumatoid arthritis,
lupus and an MS-like paralysis in lab animals. It has been strongly linked to
anthrax vaccines and Gulf War Syndrome.
For those who dismiss adjuvant fears as baseless, the German news magazine
Der Spiegel has reported that German government officials, the military and
pregnant women will be receiving an adjuvant-free vaccine; Glaxo's Pandemrix
(similar to the Canadian version now approved) has been ordered for the rest
of the population.
"In 1976 we experienced similar panic about impending swine flu disaster,"
says Chopra in his refreshingly quiet and calm manner. "Two hundred fifty
million doses of vaccines were distributed." That vaccine program was halted
because it was harming so many.
The gap between public health measures and the science is, once again,
disturbing. As is the World Health Organization's new definition of pandemic.
While a pandemic was once defined as a rapidly spreading virus resulting in
widespread death, it is now defined as simply a rapidly spreading virus. The
requirement of high mortality has been dropped. It's a handy change, when you
consider that fast-track vaccine approvals need the justification of a
pandemic.
The flu vaccine frenzy simply isn't supported by the science; that it is
medical science fundamentalists who are most outraged by vaccine resistance
is highly ironic. V
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