Elderly To Be Experimented On
With Squalene & Mercury
The
National Vaccine Information Center | April 27 2006
BL Fisher Note:
The vaccine adjuvant, MF59, that NIH proposes to add to flu vaccine
given to the frail elderly, is not licensed in the U.S. as safe for
human use. MF59 contains squalene, which can cause autoimmunity. Some
ill Gulf War veterans, who were given anthrax vaccine and other experimental
vaccines, have tested positive for squalene antibodies even though the
U.S. Department of Defense denies putting the adjuvant MF59 in anthrax
and other vaccines given to soldiers.
The tragic consequences of experimenting on America's elderly population
by giving them annual flu vaccinations laced with MF59 will be that,
when they develop lupus, rheumatorid arthritis, asthma or die, it will
be written off as old age and unrelated to the squalene injected into
their bodies via flu vaccines. The elderly with as yet unidentified
genetic factors that make them exquisitely vulnerable to squalene-induced
autommunity or death will be the first to go down.
The suggestion that the notoriously ineffective flu vaccine be made
more toxic by adding squalene to a brew that already contains mercury
is nothing more than a callous disregard for human life. If Americans
do not understand what is being done to them in the name of disease
control and take action, they will be forced one day to be injected
with squalene containing flu vaccines whenever the Secretary of Health
declares an emergency. Go to http://www.nvic.org/ and click on "Liability
Shield Given to Pharma" and read NVIC's letter to Senate staffer
Col. Robert Kadlec.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/04/17/AR2006041700
892.html
The Washington Post
Experts Say Elderly Need Better Flu Shot
By Lauren Neergaard AP Medical Writer Mon Apr 17
WASHINGTON -- Put aside hypothetical worries about bird flu: Regular
flu already kills elderly Americans in droves every winter because the
vaccine simply doesn't work as well inside aging bodies as young ones.
The National Institutes of Health wants to strengthen flu shots destined
for the elderly, part of a push to get the nation to start treating
influenza's yearly attack as seriously as the threat of some super-flu
striking in the future.
The message: Why wait for a pandemic to benefit from better flu vaccines
and treatments?
"My great frustration (is) in trying to shake the cage and say,
'We have not, by any means, optimized how we approach seasonal flu,'"
Dr. Anthony Fauci, the NIH's infectious disease chief, told The Associated
Press.
Topping his do-better list: testing whether higher vaccine doses or
adding immune-boosting compounds to the shots some of the same compounds
already being studied to fight bird flu would improve the elderly's
protection against regular winter influenza.
In Europe, U.S. flu-shot supplier Chiron Corp. already sells a revved-up
version just for people over age 65. Studies mostly from Italy suggest
that adding a chemical called MF59 to Chiron's regular flu shot spurs
a modestly better immune response in older people, especially the frail.
Chiron wouldn't say if it plans to eventually bring that shot, called
Fluad, to the United States; it sells about 20 million doses abroad.
Instead, Chiron's U.S. focus has been on testing whether MF59 could
improve experimental vaccines against bird flu.
But Fluad is among the approaches catching Fauci's interest as he plans
new research into improved elder vaccines.
Also, at least one well-known vaccine research center, at St. Louis
University School of Medicine, is planning a study of higher flu vaccine
doses for the elderly this fall.
And NIH recently began recruiting 150 U.S. volunteers to study just
which parts of the immune system change as we age to make flu a more
serious threat, basic biological underpinnings that remain a mystery
despite influenza's unrelenting yearly toll.
Here's the sad irony: Influenza kills 36,000 Americans in an average
winter, many more during harsh flu seasons and people over age 65 make
up 90 percent of those deaths. Yet flu vaccine is less effective in
the people who need it most, protecting roughly 60 percent of elderly
recipients compared with 75 percent to 90 percent of young healthy people.
Just as the body's physical abilities typically slow with age, the immune
system can become sluggish. It's not impossible to rev it back up. Some
earlier research suggests that giving four to six times the normal dose
of a flu vaccine component could double the elderly's immune response,
says Dr. John Treanor, a University of Rochester vaccine specialist.
The question is whether pumped-up vaccines for the elderly would provide
enough extra protection to be worth it. Some previous attempts have
found only slight improvements, and souped-up vaccines cost more to
make.
"Until recently there was a lot of reluctance to do anything that
would make the vaccine more expensive," Treanor says, speculating
that cost might be a key reason that Chiron debuted its Fluad shot in
Europe.
A stronger vaccine might also come with more side effects, cautions
Dr. Donald J. Kennedy of St. Louis University.
Still, there are low-risk strategies to test. Aside from the simple
higher-dose study his university colleagues are planning, Kennedy wonders
if giving seniors a flu shot plus a second vaccine the FluMist nasal
spray made of live but weakened flu virus might activate different immune
pathways to improve protection.
Ultimately, what may protect the elderly the most is when flu's main
spreaders healthy young people, especially schoolchildren start getting
vaccinated in high-enough numbers to stem the virus' tide.
For the first time this fall, all children from age six months to 5
years will be recommended for a flu shot. Until now, the government
pushed childhood flu vaccine just for chronically ill youngsters and
healthy tots up to age 2.
Expect even more children to be on the vaccine list as early as 2007;
already under discussion is the 5- to 9-year-old crowd.
And with a record 120 million vaccine doses expected this year far more
than the most ever given, 83 million doses the government is preparing
to encourage inoculations for healthy 20-, 30- and 40-somethings this
fall, too.
Lauran Neergaard covers health and medical issues for The Associated
Press in Washington.
http://www.nvic.org
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