A Smallpox outbreak: What to do
by Sherri
Tenpenny, DO
July 7, 2002
© 2002
We interrupt the current programming to bring you this important news update
there
has been a reported case of smallpox in Washington, D.C
What will happen next?
Pandemonium.
The press has done its job over the last few months reinforcing the belief that an
epidemic is about to occur, potentially causing millions of deaths. Americans thousands of
miles from Washington will demand the smallpox vaccine, a vaccine with the highest risk of
complications of any vaccine ever manufactured and with a dubious track record for
success.
However, because you are informed, you will have a different response. You will not panic.
You will turn off the TV. You wont listen to your hysterical neighbors. And more
importantly, you wont rush to be vaccinated. Heres why:
On June 20, 2002,I attended the Center for Disease Controls (CDC) meeting of the
Advisory Committee for Immunization Practices (ACIP) and listened to one and a half days
of testimony prior to posting the recommendations for smallpox vaccination that are
currently being considered by the CDC and the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS.) Many
testimonies and comments were presented by public participants and by various physicians
and researchers associated with the CDC. Noting that two weeks have past since the June
20th meeting and the media has still not reported on this historic event, I decided it was
imperative to report the content and outcome of this meeting to the general public. After reading this report you
will gain a new perspective on smallpox and, hopefully, in the event of an outbreak, you
will understand that you have nothing to fear.
Generally accepted facts
Nearly every article or news headliner regarding smallpox is designed to instill and
continually reinforce fear in the minds of the general public. Apparently the goal is to
make everyone demand the vaccine as soon as it is available and/or in the event of an
outbreak. A very similar media campaign was developed prior to the release of the Salk
polio vaccine in 1955.The polio vaccine had been in development for more than a year prior
to its release and was an untested investigational new drug, just as the
smallpox vaccine will be. The difference is that the potential side effects and
complications of the smallpox vaccine are already known, and they are extensive.
Generally accepted facts about smallpox include:
1. Smallpox is highly contagious and could spread rapidly,
killing millions
2. Smallpox can be spread by casual contact with an infected
person
3. The death rate from smallpox is thought to be 30%.
4. There is no treatment for smallpox
5. The smallpox vaccine will protect a person from getting
the disease
As it turns out, these accepted facts are not the real facts.
Myth 1: Smallpox is highly contagious
Smallpox has a slow transmission and is not highly contagious, stated Joel
Kuritsky, MD, director of the National Immunization Program and Early Smallpox Response
and Planning at the CDC. This statement is a direct contradiction to nearly everything we
have ever heard or read about smallpox. However, keep in mind that this comes straight
from the horses mouth and should be considered the real story
regarding how smallpox is spread.
Even if a person is exposed to a known bioterrorist attack with smallpox, it doesnt
mean that he will contract smallpox. The signs and symptoms of the disease will not occur
immediately, and there is time to plan. The infection has an incubation period of 3 to 17 days,[i] and the first symptom will be the development
of a high fever (>101º F), accompanied by nausea,
vomiting, headache, severe abdominal cramping and low back pain. The person will be ill
and most likely bed-ridden; not out mixing with the general public.
Even with a fever, it is critically important to realize
that at this point the person is still not contagious. In fact, the fever may be caused by something else,
such as the flu.
However, if a smallpox infection is developing, the characteristic rash will begin to
develop within two to four days after the onset of the fever. The person becomes
contagious and has the ability to spread the infection only after the development of the
rash. The characteristic rash of variola
major is difficult to misdiagnose, stated Walter A. Orenstein, M.D., Director of the
National Immunization Program (NIP) at the CDC. The classic smallpox rash is a round, firm
pustule that can spread and become confluent. The lesions are all in the same stage of
development over the entire body and appear to be distributed more on the palms, soles and
face than on the trunk or extremities.
ACTION ITEM: In
the event of an exposure, it is imperative that you do everything you can to improve the functioning of your
immune system so that an exposure does not have to result in an outbreak.
a. Stop eating all foods that contain refined white sugar
products, since sugar inhibits the functioning of your white blood cells, your first line of defense.[ii]
(There are many other health-conscious dietary considerations to consider, but that is
beyond the scope of this article.)
b. Start taking large doses of Vitamin C. Vitamin C has been
proven in hundreds of studies to be effective in protecting the body from viral
infections,[iii]including smallpox.[iv] For an
extensive scientific review on the us eof this nutrient
and a dosing recipe, read Vitamin C, The Master Nutrient, by Sandra Goodman, Ph.D. http://www.positivehealth.com/permit/Articles/Nutrition/vitcpre.htm
c. If you develop a fever, you still have time to plan. Purchase enough fresh, organic
produce and filtered water to last three weeks. Move the kids to grandmas or the
neighbors house.
d. Remember: YOU MAY NOT GET THE INFECTION AND YOU ARE
NOT CONTAGIOUS UNTIL YOUGET THE RASH!
Myth 2: Smallpox is easily spread by casual contact
with an infected person
Smallpox will not rapidly disseminate throughout the community. Even after the development
of the rash, the infection is slow to spread. The infection is spread by droplet
contamination and coughing or sneezing are not generally part of the infection. Smallpox will not spread like wildfire, said
Orenstein. He stated that the spread of smallpox to casual contacts is the exception to the rule.
Only 8% of cases in Africa were contracted by accidental contact.
Transmission of smallpox occurs only after intense contact,
defined as constant exposure of a person that is
within 6-7 feet for a minimum of 6-7 days.[v] Dr.
Orenstein reported that in Africa, 92% of all cases came from close associations and in
India, all cases
came from prolonged personal contact. Dr. Tom Mack from the University of Southern
California stated that in Pakistan,27% of cases demonstrated no transmission to close
associates. Nearly 37% had a transmission of only one generation, meaning that the second
person to contract smallpox did not pass it onto the third person. These statistics
directly contradict models that predict an exponential spread to millions.
Even without medical care, isolation was the best way to stop the spread of smallpox in Third World, population dense areas. With a
slow transmission rate and an
informed public, Mack estimated that the total number of smallpox cases in America would
be less than 10, a far cry from the millions postulated by the press.
Dr. Kuritsky said at the CDC Public Forum on Smallpox on June 8 in St. Louis, Given
the slow transmission rate and that people need to be in close contact for nearly a week
to spread the infection, the scenario in which a terrorist could infect himself with
smallpox and contaminate an entire city by walking through the streets touching people is
purely fiction.
Point to ponder: Mass
vaccination was halted in Third World countries because it didnt work. In
India, villages with an 88%
vaccination rate still had outbreaks. After the World Health Organization began a
surveillance and containment campaign, actively seeking cases of smallpox, isolating them
in their homes, and vaccinating family members and close contacts, outbreaks were
virtually eliminated within 2years. The CDC and the WHO organization attribute the
eradication of smallpox to the
ring vaccination of close contacts. However, since the infection runs its course in 3-6 weeks, perhaps ISOLATION
ALONE would have effectively accomplished the same thing.
Myth #3: The death rate from smallpox is 30%
Nearly every newspaper and journal article quotes this statistic. However, as pointed out
in the presentation by Dr. Tom Mack, it appears that the 30% fatality rate has
come from skewed data. Dr. Mack has worked with smallpox extensively and saw more
than 120 outbreaks in Pakistan throughout the early 1970s. Villages would apparently have
an importation every 5-10 years, regardless of vaccination status, and the outbreak could always be
predicated by living conditions and social arrangements. There were many small
outbreaks and individual
cases that never came to the attention of the local authorities.
Mack stated that even with poor medical care, the case fatality rate in adults was much
lower than is generally advertised and thought to be 10-15%.He said that the statistics were
loaded with children that had a much higher fatality, making the average death
rate reported to be much higher. Amazingly, he revealed his opinion that even without mass vaccination, smallpox would have died out anyway.
It just would have taken
longer.
Even so, people died. Why? After all, smallpox is a skin disease and
other organs are seldom involved.[vi] I posed
this question to the committee on two separate occasions. Kathi Williams of the
National Vaccine Information Center
asked this question at the Institute of Medicine meeting on June 15th.On June 20, an
answer was finally forth coming when a member of the ACIP committee
said, That is a good question. Does anyone know
the actual cause of death from smallpox?
At that point, Dr. D.A. Henderson, from the John Hopkins University Department of
Epidemiology volunteered a comment. Dr. Henderson directed the World Health Organization's global smallpox eradication campaign (1966-1977)
and helped initiate WHO's global program of immunization in 1974. He approached the
microphone and stated, Well, it appears that the
cause of death of smallpox is a mystery. He stated that a medical resident had been asked to do a complete review of the
literature and not much information was found. It is postulated that the
people died from a generalized toxemia and that those with the most severe forms of smallpoxthe
hemorrhagic or confluent malignant typesdied of complications of skin sloughing,
similar to a burn. However, he concluded by saying,
its frustrating, because we dont really know.
COMMENT: I find this to be
extremely frightening. If we knew why people died when they contracted smallpox, perhaps
current medical technology could treat the complications, making the death rate much
lower. Considering that the last known case of smallpox in the U.S. was in Texas in 1949, continuing to report that smallpox has a 30% death rate is
similar to saying that all heart attacks are fatal. Based on 1949 technology, that would be accurate reporting.
But in 2002, all heart attacks are NOT fatal. Neither would smallpox have a mortality rate
of 30%.
Myth #4: There is no treatment for smallpox
A more accurate statement is there are no pharmaceutical drugs for the treatment for
smallpox. But they are working on that too. There are 274 antiviral drug compounds
and testing is underway to see if one can be useful in the treatment of smallpox.[vii]One such drug is called hexadecylosypropyl-cidofovir (HDP-CDV). Not yet
available for human use, it has been found to be 100 times more potent than its cousin,
cidofovir, a drug used to treat retinal infections in HIV patients. If studies pan out, HDP-CDV will be offered
in a pill or capsule form over 5-14 days for the prevention and treatment of people
exposed to smallpox.[viii] Unfortunately, this drug
is being developed in
Europe and will most likely be kept out of the US market until long after the general
public has been subjected to mass vaccination.
It is important to note that there are several different presentations of a smallpox
infection. The most common is called ordinary discrete smallpox, occurring in
more than 40% of the cases. The outbreak is seen as a small scattering of pustules
distributed across the body. The person with this type of smallpox needs minimal medical
care and the reported death rate is <10%.[ix]
For mild cases of smallpox, adequate hydration and anti-fever products are essential for
comfort and maintaining a temperature below 102ºF. Keeping the skin clean to prevent
secondary bacterial infections is also important. A 1927 Textbook of Medicine recommends applying
gauzed soaked in carbolic acid to decrease itching and prevent extensive scarring.[x]Carbolic acid is used acutely for burns that tend to ulcerate and other skin
conditions that cause burning or prickling pain. Homeopathic forms of carbolic acid are
also available.
For the severe complications of smallpox, modern day treatment options are available. The hemorrhagic type of smallpox,
occurring in approximately 3% of cases, presents as hypotensive shock and can be treated
accordingly. In another 3% of serious cases, the confluent-type has extensive skin
involvement. These patients can be treated the same as a burn patient. All severe
cases need to be treated for dehydration and watched for signs of bacterial
suprainfection.
Research done by Dr. Peter Havens, MS, MD from the Medical College of Wisconsin proposed
that death from smallpox was due to multisystem organ failure, a complication of an
untreated acute cytokine (inflammatory) response. Massive oxidative stress occurs, leading
to free-radical damage in the kidneys and other internal organs. However, Dr. Havens
estimates that modern medical technology would indeed decrease the death rate,
to possibly as low as 2-3%.
COMMENT: The
treatment of choice for severe free-radical stress is high dose intravenous Vitamin C. If
conventional medicine would recognize the value of this treatment, they would also be
forced to realize mass vaccination is simply not necessary.
Treating severely ill patients would require hospitalization
and unfortunately, smallpox spreads the most quickly in
the hospital setting due to poor isolation techniques. In addition, most patients in
hospitals are ill and immunosuppressed by disease or medication, making them more
susceptible to infection. Dr. Mike Lane, former director of the CDCs smallpox eradication program in the 1970s, said
severely ill smallpox patients could be treated in a suburban motel or remote government
building. You can bring care to the patient if you elect to use the Motel 6 on the
edge of town rather than put smallpox victims in a hospital where the disease could
spread to patients with weakened immune systems.
Side bar with Dr. Mike Lane:
Dr. Lane and I had a private conversation during a coffee break.
During his presentation, he had been adamant that those within the first ring
would need to be mandatorily vaccinated with100% compliance. The first ring
includes those that have had immediate, close contact with patients who had confirmed
cases of smallpox. Lane stated that this was the only way that ring vaccination
would work. When I questioned his definition of 100% compliance, he said,
>Medical contraindications would not apply
there would be NO exceptions.
"I would rather vaccinate them and take my chances treating the potential
complications. In India, we vaccinated everyone. The only medical contraindication was
leprosy, and we sometimes vaccinated them. Im sure that we killed a few people, but
we did the best that we could. Pressed the issue further by saying, if the death rate really is 30% (which I doubt), doesnt that mean
the survival rate is 70%? Shouldnt that person have the right to play the odds with
his health if he chose to? His answer was the same: If the person is exposed,
there will be NO exceptions, medical or otherwise. Those people in the first ringregardless
of health status MUST be vaccinated.
That means that all people with medical contraindicationsorgan transplants, cancer, HIV, eczema and other skin conditionswould
be vaccinated, even it was against their will and with the use of force, if necessary. He was quite the zealot
about it; hopefully, in the event of a smallpox exposure, more reasonable minds will
prevail.
Myth #5: The vaccine will keep me from getting the infection
Most people believe that all vaccines work to protect them,
meaning that the vaccine will be clinically effective.
What most people do not know is that vaccines have never been proven to protect them from
getting the infection.
This little known fact is not only true for all vaccines, it
is also true for the smallpox vaccine. Here are a few
examples:
Chickenpox vaccine:
No data exists regarding post-exposure efficacy of the current
varicella vaccine.
Vaccinated persons have a less severe out break than unvaccinated
(300vs. 50 lesions.)[xi]
Pertussis vaccine:
"The findings of efficacy studies have not demonstrated a direct
correlation between antibody response and protection against pertussis disease.[xii]
Smallpox vaccine:
Neutralizing antibodies are reported to reflect levels of protection, although this has not been
validated in the field. [xiii]
Dr. Harold Margolis, Senior Advisor to the Director for
Smallpox Planning and Response, stated in Atlanta that
the vaccine decreased the death rate among those vaccinated
by modifying the disease,
not by preventing infection.
TAKE HOME POINTS:
1-Smallpoxis NOT highly contagious. You have time. Dont panic.
2-Smallpoxis only spread by close contact of less than 6 feet for at least 6-7
days. You arent that close to
coworkers or commuters.
3-Treatment for smallpox should be surveillance and containment, without vaccination.
4-Smallpoxis not highly fatal. There are treatments for smallpox.
5-The vaccine will not protect you from getting the infection. The vaccine has high
complication rates, is an experimental drugand there are many contraindications. (Please
see article at http://www.mercola.com/2002/jun/12/smallpox_update.htm)
Addendum:
As I was completing this report this morning, I read in the New York Times that the CDC
plans to increase the number of first responders who receive the vaccination
from 15,000 to 500,000.[xiv] Preparations are also
underway for rapid mass vaccination of the general public. The more extensive vaccination plan is possible because
supplies are increasing. As I have stated before, the
government spent more than $780 million to develop its
arsenal.
Now that we have it, we will use it.
In addition to medical first responders, a presentation at the June 20th meeting suggested that first
responders should also include a class to be defined as economic first responders,
those who would be necessary in keeping the economy moving in the event of a nationwide
lockdown caused by an outbreak. This group would include pilots, truck
drivers, food handlers, etc. It is
the etc. that is of concern. Where do you draw the line? Obviously, the line will be drawn
after Tommy Thompsons vision of a vaccine for
every man, woman and child has been fulfilled.
One of the major problems is the lack of vaccinia immune globulin(VIG), the antidote
that is needed for those who experience a severe reaction to the vaccine. The Times
article reports that there are only 700 doses currently available. Dr. Tom Mack, among
others at the CDC warned that, in the absence of
VIG, extensive vaccination would be extremely dangerous.
With the continued rhetoric regarding the US plans to go to war with
Iraq, we are essentially taunting
Saddam into launching a biological attack on our own people. We are not given an exact
knowledge as to Saddams capability but are given euphemisms such as reasonably
high or quite high. But we dont know for sure. And if the
government knows, it is not telling. And if Saddam does have biological smallpox, what is
the chance he has other weapons of biological destruction, those for which we do not have
a vaccine?
We are developing grounds for a war with Iraq in spite of the rest of the
world telling us to stay out of there. I encourage all to spend some time on this site:
www.globalpolicy.org forsome
eye-opening information on policy that you wont see in the popular press.
We are setting the stage for a health disaster unlike anything we have seen before in
America, and it will be our own
doing. World health records (England, Germany, Italy, the Philippines,
British India, etc.) document that devastating epidemics
followed mass vaccination. The worst smallpox disaster occurred in the Philippines
after a 10 year compulsory US program administered 25 million vaccinations to its
population of 10 million resulting in 170,000 cases and more than 75,000 deaths from
smallpox, in a country having only scattered
cases in rural villages prior to the onslaught of vaccines.[xv]
I received an excellent bulletin from Larken Rose (www.Theft-By-Deception.com)who is an activist regarding taxes. So much of what he said applies to the
vaccine movement, that I got his permission to include part of his letter here. It is time
to STAND AGAINST forced vaccination. Stop the hysteria! Information is power. However,
after gaining power, you must ACT.
Here is something to inspire you:
More than 200 years ago, the people of this country chose to tell King George, not just
that he was unreasonable, not just that they didnt like him, not just that they had
complaints about him, but that they were going to RESIST BY FORCE his tyrannical ways. The Declaration was not a threat to take King George
to court; it was not a petition, or a request for
fairness, or even a demand. It was a STATEMENTa DECLARATIONthat the
people of America REFUSED TO TOLERATE the oppression, and were going to openly resist it,
and didnt give a damn what the King thought about it.
Though it may be politically incorrect to describe it this way, the Declaration of
Independence was a bunch of people openly stating that they were going to IGNORE the law
(not debate it or litigate it), and OVERTHROW their
present government. (King George was not a foreign invader; he was "the
government".) Again, in the words of the Declaration, "when a long train
of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same object, evidences a design to reduce them under absolute despotism, it is the peoples right, it is their duty, to throw
off such government."
Where are the Americans who still have that attitude?
There are a few (very few), and most people consider them to be "fringe
extremists." Where do YOU draw the line? What injustice would government
agents have to commit, before YOU would openly resist? Is there a line for you?
Or would you complain and bicker all the way to absolute tyranny?
"Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did, and it never will. Find out
just what people will submit to, and you have found out the exact amount of injustice and
wrong which will be imposed upon them, and these will continue till they have resisted
with either words or blows, or with both. The limits of tyrants are prescribed by
the endurance of those whom they suppress"
-Frederick
Douglas
-
This is a very different country today from what it was 226 years ago. We have become a
country of sheep. We occasionally "baaa" at government injustice, but we do not
ACT. For the most part, our rebelliousness" now consists of pushing buttons in
voting booths, to hopefully elect the less scummy of two lying scumbags (after a debate
about which one is scummier).
For most people that is the extent of their resistance to government-imposed injustice.
Each of us cowers in a corner for fear that we will be the next one that government makes
an "example" of. While self-preservation is no sin, at some point
a country of "self-preservers" will "preserve"
itself into total submission to tyrants.
We are one step away from that now.
Once upon a time, a group of individuals declared to the world that they would fight and
risk death, rather than tolerate the oppressions of an abusive government. Now, we are too
comfortable for that. We are spoiled. We are cowards. For todays battle, we need
only the smallest fraction of the courage our fore fathers demonstrated.
We do not need to lie in the mud, squinting in the cold to see the rifle sites, waiting for the glimpse of British Troops
that we know are headed our way just over the next ridge. We do not need to run into the
open field, in heavy enemy fire, to retrieve our buddy who just had his leg blown off by a
cannonball. We do not need to leave
our families and friends to fight, and possibly to die. No, today the price for our
freedom (at least a huge chunk of it) is a pittance compared to what others have paid, but
I have my doubts about whether we are willing to pay even that.
What is that price? What do we need to do?
We need to just say NO by affirming the following:
I will overcome
fear.
I will find ways to
avoid becoming part of forced medical experimentation.
I will avoid being injected with an experimental new drug based on a hunch or
based on something that happened hundreds or thousands of miles from where I live.
I will resist the
governments efforts to take away my right to do what I believe is best for my body
I will take
personal responsibility for my health and for the health of my family.
==============
[i] JAMA, June 9, 1999; Vol. 281, No. 22, p 3132
[ii]Bernstein J et al. Depression of lymphocyte transformation following oral
glucose ingestion. Am. J. of Clin. Nut. 1977;30:613
[iii] MurataA. Virucidal Activity of Vitamin C: Vitamin C for Prevention and Treatment of Viral Diseases. Proceedings of the First
Intersectional Congress of Microbiological Societies, Science Council
of Japan3:432-442. 1975.
[iv] KliglerIJ, Bernkopf H. Inactivation of Vaccinia Virus by Ascorbic Acid and
Glutathione. Nature, vol. 139:pp.965-966. 1937
[v] Am. J.Epid. 1971; 91:316-326.
[vi] JAMA, June 9, 1999; Vol. 281, No. 22, p 2130
[vii]
Leduc, James and Jahrling, Peter B.
Strengthening National Preparedness for Smallpox: an Update. Emerging Infectious Diseases, Jan-Feb 2001, Vol. 7., No. 1
[viii]Highfield, Roger. New drug could conquer smallpox, http://www.news.telegraph.co.uik 3-21-02.
[ix] Datafrom Rao, 1972, quoted in Fenner Table 1.2
Blumgarten, A.S. A Textbook of Medicine for
nursing students. 1927.
[xi] MMWR July 12, 1996/45(RR11); p. 12
[xii] MMWR March 28, 1997/Vol.46/No. RR-7, pg. 4
[xiii] JAMA, ibid. p 2131
[xiv]
http://www.nytimes.com/2002/07/07/national/07SMAL.html?todaysheadlines
[xv]Physician William Howard Hay's address of June 25, 1937; printed in the
Congressional Record.
Dr. Sherri Tenpenny
Cleveland, Ohio
w-440-268-0897
www.nmaseminars.com