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SUNDAY EXPRESS MAY 14 2006
FRONT PAGE STORY
ALERT OVER NEW 5-IN-1 BABY JABS
EXCLUSIVE By Lucy Johnston
HEALTH EDITOR
Brain damage fears after trial results show that two-thirds of patients
experience bad reaction
Babies given the new five-in-one jab face a risk of convulsions, brain damage or
even death. Results of medical trials by the firm which makes the vaccine have
revealed that the "superdose" vaccination, which was introduced 18 months ago,
can have serious side-effects. The five-in-one is designed to protect children
against diphtheria, tetanus, whooping cough, Hib influenza and polio in a single
shot.
Evidence from the vaccine's manufacturers, Sanofi Pasteur, shows that in
clinical trials 64 per cent of 451 babies given the Pediacel jab experienced bad
reactions. Ten per cent of these were "moderate to severe". These included
convulsions, loss of consciousness and high-pitched or persistent inconsolable
crying. Other studies showed that components of the vaccine can cause breathing
difficulties, blue discolouration of the skin due to lack of oxygen, swelling of
the brain, low blood pressure and extreme allergic shock.
The document prepared for the Medicines Healthcare Regulatory Authority and
publicised by What Doctors Don't Tell You, a monthly newsletter that questions
conventional medicine, has angered doctors
and MPs. Professor Steve Webb, Liberal Democrat health spokesman, criticised the
Government saying: "I am very concerned that these apparently wide spread
side-effects have not been disclosed. The Government should investigate these
concerns urgently".
Dr Richard Halvorsen, a London GP who specialises in innoculations said: "I'm
concerned that this five-in-one is overloading a child's immune system. "The
risks of vaccinations have been played down by the Government and parents have
been fobbed off with bland reassurances". And Dr Peter Mansfield, who won a
case against the doctor's governing body, the General Medical Council, for
refusing to give the combined controversial measles, mumps and rubella to
infants, said: "This is scandalous. We're vaccinating babies when their immune
systems are not ready".
Jackie Fletcher from the vaccine damage support group JABS, is also concerned.
She said: "The Department of Health is failing to acknowledge the dangers of the
vaccines and the damage they can
cause. It claims the five-in-one is perfectly safe, but clearly it is not. "The
only person taking a risk here is the baby and parents are not being given
correct information about it". Health officials claim it is safer than the
four-in-one-jab it replaced which contained the controversial preservative
mercury, which has been linked with autism. The new jab is also deemed to
be safer because it contains inactivated polio to remove the risk that children
could contract polio paralysis from the old oral vaccine that contained a live
sample of the virus.
However, the revelations will ignite debate about the over-use of innoculations
and could hinder Government plans to bring in an even more intensive vaccination
programme that will see children receiving 25 vaccines in 12 injections by the
time they are two. The new proposed schedule contains the controversial MMR jab,
the five-in-one jab, a new pneumococcal vaccine and the meningitis C vaccine.
When the five-in-one was launched the Government vaccine chief urged parents: "
Please do not delay having your child vaccinated. Our vaccines are extremely
safe." Nicholas Kitchin, medical director of Sanofi Pasteur, insisted: "There
are fewer side-effects with the five-in-one than were reported with the older
four-in-one vaccine. "All drugs and vaccines have potential side-effects, which
parents should be aware of and these are listed in the information leaflet
included with every dose of the vaccine. Severe reactions are rare and the
benefits of vaccination far outweigh the risks."
A spokeswoman for the Department of Health added: "The Joint Committee on
Vaccination and Immunisation thoroughly assesses the evidence on the safety and
efficacy of all new vaccines before they are added to the childhood immunisation
programme. Pediacel has an excellent record. "Every parent is informed about the
potential side effects of every vaccine in a guide which is given to parents by
health visitors."
SUNDAY EXPRESS MAY 14 2006 OPINION Health chiefs must act now on
five-in-one vaccine fears
The Government must move fast to prove that its new super-drug is completely
safe for British babies. The five-in-one vaccination, introduced 18 months ago,
was claimed to be a major breakthrough in the fight against childhood killer
diseases. The drug, which is intended to provide protection against polio,
diphtheria, whooping cough, tetanus and meningitis, is given to babies as young
as two months and was claimed to be risk-free. But evidence collected by the
drug's manufacturer tells a different story.
The Sunday Express has revealed that the maker's clinical trials showed that
nearly two out of three infants given an injection of its super jab experienced
significant side effects. The trials, when linked with other data, revealed a
danger that children could suffer convulsions and even run the risk of brain
damage. This is devastating news for parents. Some health campaigners warn that
the combination of five powerful vaccines adminstered in this way overwhelms a
baby's immune system. It is vital that the Department of Health intervenes now
to restore public confidence. Every parent knows that no threat to a baby's
health is ever tolerable.
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