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Hepatitis B Vaccine: More Dangerous than the Disease?
Issue: May, 1999
The National Vaccine Information Center (NVIC) released figures
earlier this year showing that the number of hepatitis B vaccine-associated
adverse events and deaths reported in US children under the age
of 14 is exceptionally high, significantly outnumbering the reported
cases of hepatitis B disease in that same age group.
Independent analysis of raw computer data generated by the government-
operated Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS) confirms
that in 1996, there were 827 serious, adverse events reported to
VAERS in children under 14 who had been injected with the hepatitis
B vaccine. In contrast, during that same period there were only
279 reported cases of hepatitis B disease in children under 14.
Hepatitis B is primarily a blood-borne adult disease. At highest
risk are IV drug users and people with multiple sex partners. In
1991, the CDC recommended that all infants receive the first dose
of hepatitis B vaccine before discharge from the hospital, even
though the only newborns at risk for hepatitis B are those born
to infected mothers.
Ironically, only 15 states require mandatory hepatitis B screening
of all pregnant women, while 35 require children to have three
full doses of hepatitis B vaccine for admittance to daycare or
school.
In October 1998, France became the first country to end hepatitis
B vaccination requirements for schoolchildren, after reports that
many children were developing chronic arthritis and symptoms resembling
multiple sclerosis following the administration of the vaccine.
In the US, some experts are worried about the effects of the still-
mandatory injections here. Bonnie Dunbar, PhD, a Texas cell biologist
and vaccine researcher, says, "It takes weeks and sometimes months
for autoimmune disorders such as rheumatoid arthritis to develop
following vaccination. No basic scientific research or controlled
long-term studies into the side effects of this vaccine have been
conducted on American babies, children, or adults."
To learn more, contact the National Vaccine Information Center,
512 W. Maple Avenue, Suite 206, Vienna, VA 22180, 703-938-0342,
800-909-SHOT, www.909shot.com; and the Vaccine Adverse Events Reporting
System, Department of Health and Human Services, PO Box 1100, Rockville,
MD 20849-11, 800-822-7267, www.fda.gov/cber/vaers.htm
COPYRIGHT 1999 Mothering Magazine |
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