[Dr John Griffin, the former editor of the medical journal Adverse Drug Reactions, said: "For fatalities, it is probably only one in two which gets reported and for other side effects one in 10." Fail to see why fatalities would be reported 1 in 2, and the real rate of reporting is 1 to 10% at the best. More likely 1-4%. See here. Prof Peter Openshaw: But vaccines are extraordinarily safe compared to the diseases they prevent." That is a medical industry mantra that always comes out when discussing vaccine deaths and disease, they don't want anyone figuring out MMR kills more than measles. They aren't safe, and they aren't safer than the diseases, which are safe if managed properly, eg with vitamin C. It also gives legs to the lie that vaccines prevented or eliminated diseases. Dr Richard Halvorsen, "but this does not mean that children died as a result of MMR or other jabs." We know MMR kills as the US gov has paid out for deaths, and so has the UK Gov, without admitting it kills. Halvorsen should know that. Japan, Japan, Japan, UK, UK, UK, UK, UK. 26 UK families claim MMR deaths. MMR Urabe]
Secret report reveals 18 child deaths following
vaccinations
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2006/02/12/nmmr12.xml&sSheet=/news/2006/02/12/ixhome.html
Beezy Marsh, Health Correspondent
(Filed: 12/02/2006)
Eighteen babies and toddlers have died following childhood vaccinations in
just four years, a secret Government report reveals.
Four deaths have been linked to suspected adverse reactions to the measles,
mumps and rubella (MMR) triple jab, according to documents prepared for the
Government's expert advisers on immunisation.
The controversial jab has been beset by fears of a link to autism and bowel
disease, although since its introduction in 1998, yearly deaths from
measles have fallen from 16 to zero, while the jab against meningitis C is
thought to save 50 lives a year.
The report, covering the period between 2001 and 2004, details how one baby
suffered a cot death following MMR vaccination in 2003. Two more infants
were reported to have died after having the MMR jab in 2001, but the cause
of death in both cases was unknown.
After the death of a child who developed meningitis and swelling of the
brain three weeks after an MMR jab in 2004, a claim for compensation was
made by the child's parents. It is not known if this was successful.
Six fatalities followed meningitis C vaccinations between 2001 and 2003.
The deaths of seven other babies were linked to combined vaccines against
diphtheria, tetanus and whooping cough and reported to the Medicines and
Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA). They include a baby who died
from a heart attack. Another died after a polio jab.
Almost 800 other reports of suspected complications of childhood
vaccination - including convulsions and hyptonia, in which the baby becomes
floppy like a "rag doll" - were also made, including 160 for MMR.
Medics raised the alarm under the MHRA "yellow card" warning system, set up
to monitor suspected adverse drug reactions. Although making such a report
does not prove that vaccination caused death or injury, it means that
doctors fear it may have played a part.
Their reports were considered by the Joint Committee on Vaccination and
Immunisation, which concluded that no significant safety issues were
identified.
Details of the document, which emerged after a request under the Freedom of
Information Act, come amid fears of "vaccine overload" due to a rise in the
number of jabs given to infants.
The Department of Health last week announced the introduction of a new jab
against the pneumococcal bug, which causes a deadly strain of meningitis,
in addition to a booster for Hib disease, which can cause meningitis. This
means that by the time a child is two he will have had 25 vaccinations,
although some will be given in five-in-one or three-in-one combinations.
Dr Richard Halvorsen, a general practitioner who runs a private single jabs
clinic at Holborn Medical Centre in London, said: "We know vaccines have
potential side effects, but this does not mean that children died as a
result of MMR or other jabs. However, it is not insignificant because these
are reports from health professionals who suspect an adverse vaccination
reaction."
Experts last night said that the true figures for suspected fatalities and
serious side effects could be much greater. Dr John Griffin, the former
editor of the medical journal Adverse Drug Reactions, said: "For
fatalities, it is probably only one in two which gets reported and for
other side effects one in 10."
This means that almost 40 baby deaths could have occurred following jabs
between 2001 and 2004, and 8,000 serious adverse reactions.
Prof Peter Openshaw, a leading immunologist from Imperial College London,
said parents should not be alarmed by the report's findings.
"A lot of vaccine reactions are just inexplicable," he said. "It may be
that someone had an infection before they got a jab, it may be something in
their genetic make-up or sometimes there are allergic reactions. But
vaccines are extraordinarily safe compared to the diseases they prevent."
Overall, thousands of lives have been saved by childhood immunisation.
Smallpox and polio have been eradicated.
A spokesman from the Department of Health said: "Immunisation programmes
are regularly reviewed to ensure that all children have the best possible
protection."