GROW YOUR OWN GROCERIES!
I am proud and excited to introduce my friend Marjory Wildcraft. Marjory has produced for the aspiring gardener and farmsteader, the most comprehensive package of how-to instructions and advice. This one collection of video and print resources will replace all the how-to books on your shelf. But I won't waste words. Use this link to let Marjory tell her own amazing story. I promise, you will not be disappointed!
-
Administrator
CDC: Too few adults get their vaccines
This is the official CDC line. I hope readers of this site realize that most vaccines are ineffective and carry serious side effects. See more info following the post.
- Islander
Wed Jan 23, 2008
WASHINGTON - Vaccines aren't just for kids, but far too few grown-ups are rolling up their sleeves, disappointed federal health officials reported Wednesday.
The numbers of newly vaccinated are surprisingly low, considering how much public attention a trio of new shots — which protect against shingles, whooping cough and cervical cancer — received in recent years.
Yet many seem to have missed, or forgotten, the news: A survey by the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases found that aside from the flu, most adults have trouble even naming diseases that they could prevent with a simple inoculation.
"We really need to get beyond the mentality that vaccines are for kids. Vaccines are for everybody," said Dr. Anne Schuchat of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, who called the new data sobering. "We obviously have a lot more work to do."
The new CDC report found:
_Only about 2 percent of Americans ages 60 and older received a vaccine against shingles in its first year of sales.
There are more than 1 million new cases a year of shingles, an excruciating rite of aging that causes a blistering skin rash. Up to 200,000 of them develop a complication, severe nerve pain that can last for months or even years. Anyone who ever had chickenpox is at risk, especially once they hit their 60s, because the chickenpox virus hibernates for decades in nerve cells until erupting again.
"Many people describe the shingles pain as the worst pain they've ever endured," said Dr. Michael Oxman of the University of California, San Diego.
The shingles vaccine, Merck & Co.'s Zostavax, isn't perfect, but it cuts in half the risk of shingles — and those who still get it have a much milder case.
_About 2 percent of adults ages 18 to 64 got a booster shot against whooping cough in the two years since it hit the market.
The cough so strong it can break a rib is making a big comeback, because the vaccine given to babies and toddlers starts wearing off by adolescence. Older patients usually recover, but whooping cough can cause weeks of misery. Worse, those people can easily spread the illness to not-yet-vaccinated infants, who can die from the bacterial infection, also called pertussis.
The pertussis booster was added to another long-recommended shot, a booster against tetanus and diphtheria that adults should get every 10 years. The new triple combo is called "Tdap." Sanofi-Aventis's Adacel brand is for ages 11 to 64. There also is a version for 10- to 18-year-olds, GlaxoSmithKline's Boostrix.
_About 10 percent of women ages 18 to 26 have received at least one dose of a three-shot series that protects against the human papillomavirus, or HPV, that causes cervical cancer.
There are more than 100 different types of HPV, the most prevalent sexually transmitted infection. Usually, the body gets rid of HPV without symptoms. But certain high-risk strains can persist and cause genital warts or cervical cancer.
The vaccine, Merck's Gardasil, protects against four of those high-risk types. That's not complete protection — so even the vaccinated still need regular Pap smears — but those strains are responsible for about 72 percent of cervical cancer and 90 percent of genital warts, said Dr. Stanley Gall of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists.
Stay tuned: The government is considering whether even more women should get the vaccine — those up to age 45 who aren't yet infected, Gall said. And studies are under way to see if it works in men.
Price may play a role in these low vaccination rates. The shingles shot costs around $150, and the three-shot HPV vaccine about $300, and insurance coverage varies. There's no national program to guarantee access for adults who can't afford vaccines as there is for child vaccines.
But adults aren't taking full advantage of some cheap old standby vaccines, either. Among people 65 or older, a high-risk age, CDC found only 69 percent get an annual flu shot; just 66 percent have had a one-time pneumonia vaccine; and 44 percent had received a tetanus shot in the past 10 years.
It's not too late for a flu shot this year — and Oxman urged getting some of the other adult shots in the same doctor visit.
###
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080124/...adult_vaccines
Last edited by Islander; 01-25-08 at 10:12 PM.
-
Administrator
Re: CDC: Too few adults get their vaccines
Exerpt from The Bush Tragedy by Jacob Weisberg:
"Donald Henderson [was] the heroic epidemiologist who led the WHO smallpox eradication program and later became Bush 41's science advisor. After the anthrax attacks, HHS brought Henderson in as a consultant to help develop emergency plans."
Cheney and Scooter Libby wanted to plan for a biological terrorist attack, possibly using the smallpox virus. They flew Henderson to the CDC in Atlanta in July of 2002 . During the trip, Henderson spent the time "explaining to the vice president and his chief of staff why he and other epidemiologists thought a massive vaccination program would be a terrible idea. Even medical professionals were horrified when they saw the range of normal reactions to a vaccination: grotesque scabs, lesions and pustules. Henderson showed me a pamphlet that HHS distributed to hospitals to document the abnormal reactions: blackened limbs, uncontrolled swelling, and a reaction called progressive vaccinia, in which sores cover the body from head to toe."
"...According to Henderson, adverse reactions to the vaccine were estimated to kill between one and two out of every million people inoculated. The question of legal liability would be a nightmare."
Cheney and Libby were prepared to pursue mandatory smallpox vaccination. But by the time the vaccine was ready, we knew Saddam did not have a smallpox weapon. Bush himself was vaccinated; Cheney chose not to. The plan was dropped.
-
Veteran Member
Re: CDC: Too few adults get their vaccines
I remember getting the small pox vaccine when I was a kid. I developed a HUGE infected sore on my arm and wasn't allowed out of the house without it wrapped for months. It was summer, I wasn't allowed at the pool. I imagine if school had been in session, I wouldn't have been allowed in school either. The scar is still visible today about 45 years later.
I don't understand the shingles vaccine at all. Almost everyone who has ever had chicken-pox has the virus in their system. It never goes away, it hibernates at nerve roots, harmless, until a weakened immune system allows it to strike again. Your body has already produced the anti-bodies which are supposed to protect you from recurrent infections. If your immune system is down and out, you get shingles. I don't believe that the vaccine could possibly work as well as those claims. If your immune system is weak, the vaccine is going to likely CAUSE shingles. How do they know it's preventing shingles? Those people may never have gotten it to start with. The 50% who get "milder" cases...they probably got it BECAUSE of the vaccine. My science may not be explained very well, but it does not seem right to me...how do you protect against a virus you already have? You don't!
-
Re: CDC: Too few adults get their vaccines
Last edited by PPARGammaGirl; 04-17-08 at 07:11 PM.
Thread Information
Users Browsing this Thread
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)
Similar Threads
-
By Islander in forum Vaccines
Replies: 0
Last Post: 09-10-09, 04:34 PM
-
By DizzyIzzy in forum Vaccines
Replies: 6
Last Post: 11-25-08, 09:01 PM
-
By Islander in forum Autism
Replies: 4
Last Post: 01-11-08, 07:11 PM
-
By mellowsong in forum Healthy Diet & Lifestyle Suggestions
Replies: 7
Last Post: 12-30-07, 06:14 PM
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
Forum Rules