Are Vaccines Right for Your Child? Debunking the Myths of the DTaP Vaccine#Pregnancy#Vaccines#iBelieve

by Christina England

Families with new babies who query vaccinations in Arizona are being given a wad of paperwork assuring them that vaccinations are safe and effective. Reading through this information, I was shocked to see exactly what these vulnerable parents are being told, because, as usual, they are only being told half the story.

Part one of the paperwork, titled Infections Are the Enemy, Not Vaccines, was written by Karen Lewis, MD, the Medical Director of the Arizona Immunization Program Office for the Arizona Department of Health Services and published by the magazine Immunications. She wrote…

Read Entire Article Here

Researcher who dispelled vaccine-autism link: “Most-wanted fugitive”#Vaccines#ASD#iBelieve

A former Centers for Disease Control (CDC) researcher, best known for his frequently-cited studies dispelling a link between vaccines and autism, is still considered on the lam after allegedly using CDC grants of tax dollars to buy a house and cars for himself.

Poul Thorsen, listed as a most-wanted fugitive by the Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General, was discredited in April 2011 when he was indicted on 13 counts of wire fraud and nine counts of money laundering. Some have argued that his alleged fraudulent behavior calls into question the validity of his studies. There is no indication the studies have been retracted to date.According to the HHS Inspector General…
 
Read the Entire Article Here
 

Before You Vaccinate Your Pet, Be Aware of Granulomatous Meningoencephalitis (GME)#Pets#Vaccines#iBelieve

 The traditional veterinary community considers GME to be idiopathic, which means we don’t know why it happens. However, there is also suspicion that the disease may be caused by an abnormal immune response to an infectious agent. While most conventional vets don’t acknowledge a link between autoimmune diseases and vaccines – especially Lyme, rabies, and leptospirosis vaccines – holistic vets have long voiced concern about what certainly seems to be a cause-and-effect relationship between certain vaccines and the subsequent development of autoimmune disorders in pets.

 Read the Full Article Here

Titer Test: Safer for Your Pet Than Routine Vaccines, and at an Affordable Cost#Vaccines#Pets#Health


 By Dr. Becker

Recently, I ran across an ABC News article titled “Dog Owners Wade Into Vaccine Debate,” which caught my interest, especially since August has been designated “National Immunization Awareness Month” by the American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA).

I’m all for immunization awareness, but I’m not sure what the AVMA has in mind. I suspect it might have to do with reminding pet guardians to comply with the latest re-vaccination guidelines, thereby insuring that dogs and cats are repeatedly and in most cases unnecessarily subjected to the viruses, chemicals, adjuvants, and other potential toxins contained in vaccines.

But anyway… back to the ABC News article. The reporter who wrote the piece interviewed a man with three dogs, and starts off by saying the owner “refuses” to vaccinate them, which isn’t accurate. Reading a little further, it’s clear the owner doesn’t refuse to vaccinate – he refuses to RE-vaccinate for anything other than rabies, a vaccine that, as we all know, is required by law.

The man being interviewed, Rodney Habib, feels that repeated immunizations do more harm than good, and since he provides his dogs with puppy shots – core vaccines against distemper, parvovirus, and adenovirus (infectious hepatitis) – he believes they will remain immune for years, if not for life…

Read The Full Article Here

healthypets.mercola.com

These Tricks Are Played to Get You to Vaccinate Your Child#Vaccines#Whooping Cough#iBelieve

By TLB Contributor: Christina England.  

Countries around the world are coming up with more and more elaborate tricks to pressure parents into fully vaccinating their children. Recently we have seen them telling barefaced lies, denying unvaccinated children access to daycare facilities and excluding students from attending their graduation ceremony over a chicken pox scare. To learn more, please continue reading.

Scare Tactics Used in Australia

Over the last few weeks, newspapers in Australia have reported that due to the changes being made to the Public Health Act, parents will be forced to produce an up-to-date vaccine certificate, or a conscientious exemption form countersigned by their doctor, if they want to use day care facilities for their children. Any day care facility failing to comply with these new regulations is likely to incur a fine.

According to The Sydney Morning Herald, the President of the NSW branch of the Australian Medical Association, Brian Owler, has declared this “a sensible move.” He believes that making parents supply mandatory documentation about their children’s vaccination status will boost vaccination rates. [1]

Continue to the Article Here

Dr. Andrew Wakefield: “Massive Proportion” Question Vaccine Safety – Responds to “Why Not Every Child?”#Vaccines#iBelieve#ASD

Dr. Wakefield’s presentation was informative, eye-opening – and his words need to be shared. The entire video presentation can be viewed below.

His response to the question, “Why not every child?” is compelling – and his conclusion as to why there is no universal outcome is thought-provoking. Timing of vaccination is as crucial to neuro-development as the timing of Thalidomide was to limb development. And in both cases, the timing led to a certain percentage of children developing autism. There is still so much to learn – to understand about the bio-chemical natures of our bodies that will ultimately affect the health outcomes of our children.

It is impossible as Dr. Wakefield stated, for parents to know the risk – the down side – the health outcome of their child prior to vaccination. It’s a game of Russian roulette. Neither parent nor child should be subjected to that type of crap shoot. Based on what Dr. Wakefield shared at AutismOne – there is no such thing as informed consent for vaccination

Continue to the Article Here

www.ashotoftruth.org

 

What’s the scoop on the shingles vaccine?#Vaccines#iBelieve#Shingles

 Recently we’ve received many questions about whether to get the shingles (herpes zoster) vaccine. As always, the issue is not as black and white as some would have us believe, so here we discuss what you may not read in the mainstream about the shingles vaccine. 

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommends that anyone over the age of 60 receive the shingles vaccine manufactured by vaccine giant Merck. CDC also says that the shingles vaccine is only 51% effective in all those over 60 years of age but this effectiveness, or efficacy, falls to 38% in those over 70.1

So what are the facts around the shingles vaccine?

1) The shingles vaccine is essentially a souped up chicken pox vaccine…

 Continue to the Article Here

Excluding Unvaccinated Children from School During Outbreaks: Standard Policy, But is it Legal?#Vaccines#Health#iBelieve

A New York federal court recently dismissed a case brought by parents whose unvaccinated children were excluded from school during local outbreaks. The parents, whose children were exempt from vaccines on religious grounds, claimed that the exclusion policy violated their Constitutional and state law rights.[1] The court’s written opinion suggests possible problems with both the parents’ attorney’s approach and the court’s response.

Regarding the latter, the court accurately states that there is no Constitutional right to a vaccine religious exemption, which means that the Constitution does not require states to offer a religious exemption. But the court failed to explain that once a state does offer a religious exemption, the state is lawfully obligated to protect that right with the full force and effect of the U.S. Constitution. So, the parents in this case had a valid Constitutional right to refuse vaccines on religious grounds. Therefore, the real issue in the case concerned the boundary of those rights; specifically, whether or not the parents’ Constitutional rights prohibit the state from requiring children with religious exemptions to stay out of school during a local outbreak.

Allowing that the court may have ruled properly based on the evidence and legal arguments presented in this particular New York case, is this nation-wide policy otherwise really Constitutional? Is the policy sound, medically and scientifically? I say “no” on both counts, for the reasons explained below, with reasoning that remains fully without the bounds of standard legal principles and mainstream medicine.[2]

First, an “outbreak” is typically defined as any number of documented disease cases greater than “normal.” A few decades ago, that might have been 10, 20 or even more cases. Nowadays, though, “normal” is generally considered zero cases. This enables a single case of chicken pox, for example, to be labeled an “outbreak,” requiring all unvaccinated kids in a classroom or school to be excluded for 21 days, the upper end of the 10 to 21 day incubation period for this particular disease.

While I applaud the presumed underlying intent of the exclusion policy (to prevent the spread of disease), this policy is fundamentally flawed. It is based on a false medical pretense. To explain:

First, according to the CDC website:

1. Routine immunizations are 85 – 95% effective.[3] That is, 5-15% of vaccinated children do not develop immunity from their vaccines. While the medical literature cites much higher figures for some vaccines, and lawsuits have been filed over the use of fraudulent research to fake efficacy rates in this range, I’ll give the benefit of the doubt and use these flawed-in-favor-of-vaccines figures anyway;

2. Nationally, an average of 1.8% of kindergartners had vaccine exemptions in the 2012-2013 school year;[4] and

3. Non-vaccinated children can develop natural immunity, without even developing symptoms.[5]

From these three CDC “facts,” we can clearly deduce that:

1. A child’s vaccination status does not tell us that child’s immune status. To determine a child’s immune status, a titer test must be performed, regardless of whether or not the child has been vaccinated;

2. There are, on average, more than 5 times the number of non-immune, vaccinated children as there are unvaccinated exempt children (the latter of which may have natural immunity whether or not they’ve even been sick);

3. Therefore, the exclusion policy is fundamentally flawed, medically and scientifically, because it assumes that excluding a small number of potentially immune exempt children will have a significant protective effect, while inadvertently presuming that the much greater number of non-immune vaccinated children left in school will have no impact on the spread of disease.

Exclusion policies, then, unfairly punishes unvaccinated children and their families, who must contend with having a healthy child kept at home for up to three weeks or more. This reality provides the basis for sound legal reasoning as to why the policy is also unconstitutional.

Religious Exemptions

State and federal religious exemptions come with federal Constitutional First Amendment “free exercise” of religion rights. When government treats people differently because of religious beliefs, it must have a compelling reason for doing so, or it is violating those people’s First Amendment rights. If non-vaccinated children were necessarily lacking immunity and vaccinated children were necessarily protected, excluding children with religious exemptions might very well be Constitutional. But given the lack of any definitive relationship between vaccination status and immune status as to any given child, and the far greater number of non-immune vaccinated children than exempt children, we can clearly conclude that the exclusion policy in question is not supported by a compelling government interest (or at best by a misguided one). The goal of curtailing the spread of infectious disease is not adequately addressed if 1.8% of children are kept home during an outbreak (despite the fact that they may be immune) while 10% of the students who remain in school are lacking immunity. This amounts to an arbitrary exclusion of children based on their parents’ religious beliefs, and that is discriminatory behavior in violation of those parents’ First Amendment Constitutional rights.

Philosophical Exemptions

There are rights that apply both to parents exercising religious exemptions and philosophical exemptions. In both instances, parents are exercising a state law exemption right, but also a higher, federal Constitutional right, the right to parent their children. This right comes from the 14th Amendment’s “due process” clause, as interpreted and applied to parental authority by the Supreme Court in a series of cases extending back over the past 100 years or so. Parents’ right to the “care, custody and control” of their children includes the right to make medical decisions, and the state may only intervene in a narrow range of situations such as medical emergencies or when parents are abusing or neglecting their children. An additional Constitutional right called into question here is the 14th Amendment’s “equal protection” clause, which requires each state to provide “the equal protection of the laws” to all persons in the state. Since the exclusion policy in question has a clearly arbitrary aspect to it–the exclusion from school of exempt children who may or may not be lacking immunity, while retaining a greater number of vaccinated children who lack immunity–the exclusion policy should not hold up to proper legal scrutiny under either the due process clause or the equal protection clause. Such policies do not constitute a rational intervention even if an outbreak of chicken pox is properly considered to be an “emergency,” and they clearly do not apply a proper standard fairly and equally to all of the parents and children involved.

State Constitutional Right to a Public Education

Finally, many if not all state constitutions guarantee the right of children to a public education to their citizens. This right may also be violated in any event, since the children are excluded despite all concerned being in compliance with the law.

Is There a Better Solution?

If we assume that titers are an accurate way of measuring a child’s protection from disease (an assumption contradicted by the medical literature[6]), the ideal solution might be to do titer tests on all students once or twice each year, or immediately upon confirmation of an infectious disease in a fellow student. But it would probably not be feasible for schools or parents to perform regular titer tests on all students. However, the following proposal would constitute a policy with integrity that is both scientifically and legally valid. It grants parents final decision-making authority based on complete information, and allows parents to make their decision in consultation with the healthcare professional of their choice. If we don’t return parental decision-making authority to parents in such matters, we doom ourselves to the ongoing and further abuse of parents and children by the same special interests that managed to implement this flawed policy in the first place.

A Rational School Infectious Disease Policy for Common Childhood Diseases

Once an infectious disease case has been confirmed in a school, the schools should be required to immediately notify all parents about:

1. The fact of the outbreak, including the number of cases, the specific disease, and the location in the school;

2. The statistical percentage of vaccinated children whose vaccines don’t work, and the average rates of immunity decline over time, based on the latest independently verified medical literature to date;

3. The fact that non-vaccinated children may have natural immunity, whether or not they have ever developed symptoms, and the statistical likelihood of this in any given child;

4. The fact of the existence of the National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program (NVICP), with current statistics for cumulative payouts from the NVICP and average annual payout to date (at the time of this article, $2.86 billion cumulative to date, over $115 million/year average);[7]

5. The fact that the CDC, FDA and other reputable entities estimate that only 1 to 10% of serious vaccine adverse events are reported;[8] and

6. The parents’ right and obligation to determine what steps are necessary and appropriate for their children, in consultation with the healthcare professional of their choice, which may include:
a) Having their children tested to determine their level of immunity,
b) Having their children vaccinated or revaccinated,
c) Doing nothing at all (favoring exposure and the life-long immunity that may ensue), and/or
d) Keeping their child home for the incubation period of the disease, whether or not their child is vaccinated

Days missed for children kept home during an infectious disease outbreak as a precautionary measure exercised in the discretion of a parent should be “excused” absences.

In the event that the state should insist on classifying benign childhood infectious diseases as an “emergency” requiring intervention (which makes no more sense than classifying a car ride as an emergency based on the 10’s of thousands of automobile deaths each year in the U.S.), the state should provide a temporary alternative location for the uninterrupted education of all excluded children, and provide any needed transportation. If you’re going to impose a hardship on people to soothe your own misguided conscience (or worse, in deceptive support of a private business agenda), you should be fully responsible for the decision and its impact on others.

In Conclusion

Modern vaccine policy and law has been driven by fear-based propaganda designed to further private pharmaceutical interests, and possibly other non-monetary goals as well. It’s time to correct this problem. We need to bring transparency and honesty to the political process and healthcare policy. Introducing legislation to end the unnecessary discrimination imposed on innocent students and parents every time some vaccinated kid gets the chicken pox would be a big step toward this end.

I work with clients, attorneys, and vaccine legislative activists throughout the U.S. If you’d like my help, please feel free to contact me.

Alan Phillips, Attorney at Law
attorney@vaccinerights.com
www.vaccinerights.com

[1] http://law.justia.com

[2] Current policy throughout the U.S. requires unvaccinated children to be excluded from school, during a local outbreak, for the incubation period of the disease. This has caused some unfortunate problems. For example, one North Carolina parent reported her non-vaccinated child was excluded three times in one year, each time for 21 days, due to a single case of the chicken pox. An Alabama parent reported her unvaccinated child’s excluded absences were all marked “unexcused.” Let’s look at the medical and legal problems with this policy.

[3] Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Vaccines and Immunizations, Misconception #2. The majority of people who get disease have been vaccinated, http://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/vac-gen/6mishome.htm

[4] “Vaccination Coverage Among Children in Kindergarten – United States 2012-2013 School Year,” Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR), CDC, http://www.cdc.gov

[5] Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Vaccines and Immunizations, Glossary, “Asymptomatic infection: The presence of an infection without symptoms. Also known as inapparent or subclinical infection.” http://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/about/terms/glossary.htm

[6] See “Dispelling Vaccination Myths,” Myth 4, www.vaccinerights.com/articles.html

[7] http://www.hrsa.gov/vaccinecompensation/statisticsreports.html

[8] See Note 6, Myth 1.

About the author:
Alan Phillips, Vaccine Rights Attorney
attorney@vaccinerights.com, 1-828-575-2622
Vaccine Rights (www.vaccinerights.com)