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WELCOME...
1/14/02
BLACK CLOUD HANGS
OVER MERCK'S VACCINES
IVAC's Demand for Chickenpox
Vaccine Mandate Vote Delay
IVAC asks the Illinois
Joint Committee on Administrative Rules (JCAR) to delay the chickenpox
vaccine mandate vote until the federal government clears Merck of plant
violations. Merck manufactures Varivax, the chickenpox vaccine.
On January 4, 2002, the
Food and Drug Administration released a 23-page extensive
investigation/observation report of improper procedures at Merck's
Pennsylvania plant. These serious violations-sterility, testing and
documentation-caused Merck plant closure for more than a month in the fall.
The other vaccines in question are haemophilus B/hepatitis B (Comvax),
hepatitis A (VAQTA), Hepatitis B (Recombivax), measles, mumps and rubella
(MMR) and pneumococcal (Pneumovax).
According to Barbara
Alexander Mullarkey, IVAC spokeswoman, "It's too risky to force
chickenpox vaccine on Illinois children when a black cloud hangs over
Merck's vaccines. In addition, Merck scientists have failed to produce
peer-reviewed, published safety studies on the chickenpox vaccine's
ingredients and long-term effects. Safety takes precedence over concern
about vaccine shortages. IVAC members value vaccine safety first."
To view 6 pages of
excerpts
from FDA/Merck report, click HERE.
IVAC's letter to JCAR
demanding chickenpox vaccine vote delay (click HERE)
ALERT ! ! !
LAST
CHANCE TO STOP
CHICKENPOX VACCINE MANDATE!
Click HERE
for Information
Effective
October 1, 2001
The Department
of Children and Family Services (DCFS) removes all references to
immunizations from the allagation of medical neglect.
Click HERE
to read DCFS's statement.
Back
to School Exemption Information
Click HERE
Conflict
of Interest is OK with Governor Ryan!?!
Click HERE for
details
Upcoming
Meetings
CANCELED
October
11, 2001
Illinois Immunization Advisory Committee Meeting
We have been advised by the Ilinois Department of Public Health that
"because of a lack of substantial issues for discussion, the October
11th Immunization Advisory Committee will not be held. The Department has
not made a decision when the next meeting will be held"
Vaccine
Adverse Reactions / Deaths Report
VAERS Reported
Statistics from 1/1/90 through 3/6/01
Click HERE
for Details
To Report a Vaccine Reaction, print out the PDF file on the VAERS Web
Site (www.vaers.org)... Click HERE to
proceed.
Vaccine
Facts Sheet
The Numbers Tell
the Story...
Click HERE
for Details
Letter
to the Editor of the Chicago SunTimes
Barbara
Mullarkey "Vaccines need shot of investigation"
Click HERE
to Read the Letter
In the
News
5
Drug Makers Use Material with Possible Mad Cow Link (February 8, 2001)
Doctors' Group Opposes Vaccine Mandates (November 2, 2000)
Parents Doubt Vaccine Safety (October 30, 2000)
Wyeth-Ayerst
Pays for Violations (October 3, 2000)
August 16, 2001
Pro-Family...
Vaccination Legislation Becomes Law in Illinois!
SB 1305 Victory! (Amends
the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 and Adoption Act)
Removes "not immunizing" as reason for investigation by
Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS)
Illinois Vaccine
Awareness Coalition's state-wide members appreciate Gov. George Ryan's
signature on SB 1305, a vaccine-related bill after passage in the Illinois
Senate and House without opposition. It is bipartisanship at its best.
SB 1305 removes
Department of Children and Family Services' regulation of medical neglect
for parents who choose to delay vaccination, fail or refuse to vaccinate
their children based on medical or religious exemptions. IVAC thanks DCFS'
Jim Kaufman who testified in favor of SB 1305.
As determined in the
House floor debate, SB 1305's legislative intent, also, includes families
who delay or refuse vaccination for their children's developmental
problems, e.g., Down Syndrome or minor illnesses.
With SB 1305, doctors
are free to advocate different vaccination schedules than recommended by
medical societies for developmental issues or minor illnesses without
writing a medical exemption.
According to Barbara
Alexander Mullarkey, IVAC spokeswoman, "SB 1305 relieves parents'
anxiety of DCFS' threat of medical neglect for failure to vaccinate."
IVAC appreciates the
following legislators who shepherded SB 1305 through the legislature:
SB 1305 Senate sponsor: Sen. Patrick O'Malley R Palos Park
SB 1305 House co-sponsors: Rep. Sara Feigenholtz (D) Chicago
Rep. Mary Lou Cowlishaw R Naperville
Rep. Monique Davis (D) Chicago
- Feb. 22: Sen. O'Malley
introduces; Rules Committee
- Feb. 28: Assigned to Senate
Judiciary Committee
- March 30: Passes Judiciary
Committee 11-0; DCFS testifies for bill
- April 4: Passes Senate
53-0-2 present
- April 4: Arrives in House
- April 5: House sponsor:
Rep. Feigenholtz; Rules Committee
- April 6: Assigned to Human
Services
- April 19: Rep. Monique
Davis added as a joint sponsor
- May 3: Passes 9-0 Human
Services Committee with amendment to delete
whether,
or whatever; DCFS testifies for bill
- May 10: Rep. Monigue Davis
added as a joint sponsor
- May 17: Passes 115-0 in
House, with bill intent clarification
- May 22: Sen. O'Malley and
Senate concur on amendment
- May 22: Passes both Houses
- Aug. 15: Governor Ryan
signs bill into law.
SB
1304 Vetoed by Gov. Ryan!!!
Immunization
Advisory Committee Conflict of Interest Bill
To override the Governor's veto it will have to pass both Houses by a
super majority vote in favor in the November 2001 veto session... after
already having passed the bill without opposition and sending it to the
Governor for approval in May.
SB 1304 removes
financial conflicts of interest for Immunization Advisory Committee members
that could influence their mandatory vaccination decisions. SB 1304
prohibits members' conflicts of interest with the vaccine industry,
including speaking engagements, stocks and other economic benefits.
- SB 1304 passed both
Illinois Senate and House without opposition. On August 15, Gov. Ryan
explained his veto in a letter to the Illinois Senate and the 92nd
General Assembly. Gov. Ryan stated: "Many physicians with
expertise in the field of immunizations and infectious disease have
contractual relationships with pharmaceutical companies with regards
to speaking engagements. Also, many medical schools and academic
centers employ infectious disease specialists that perform research
funded by the pharmaceutical industry."
According to Barbara
Alexander Mullarkey, IVAC spokeswoman, "Gov. Ryan's veto of SB 1304
continues the conflict of interest between the vaccine industry and the Immunization
Advisory Committee and verifies the severity of the problem. Is it any
wonder that parents lack confidence in the Advisory Committee's vaccination
investigations and votes? It's a sad state of affairs if Governor Ryan
is unable to find Illinois doctors with vaccination expertise without
vaccine industry financial links."
IVAC appreciates our
representatives who guided SB 1304 through the legislature without
opposition:
SB 1304 Senate sponsor: Sen. Patrick O'Malley -R- Palos Park
SB 1304 House co-sponsors: Rep. Rosemary Mulligan-R- Des Plaines
Rep.
Elizabeth Coulson-R- Glenview
- Feb. 22: Sen. O'Malley
introduces bill; Senate Rules Committee
- Feb. 28: Assigned to
Senate Public Health Committee
- March 27: Passes 10-0 in
Senate Public Health Committee
- April 3: Amendment adopted
9-0
- April 4: Passes Senate
53-0-1 present
- April 4: Arrives in House
- April 6: House Sponsor:
Rep Mulligan, Rep. Coulson added as Joint
sponsor;
Rules Committee
- April 18: Assigned to
Human Services Committee
- May 3: Passes Human
Services Committee
- May 23: Passes 114-0 in
House
- May 23: Passes both Houses
- Aug. 15: Governor Ryan
vetoes bill

Senate Bill 1305
Removing
"not immunizing" as reason for investigation by Department of
Children and Family Services (DCFS)
"A
child shall not be considered neglected or abused for the sole reason that
the child's parent or other person responsible for the child's welfare
failed to vaccinate, delayed vaccination, or refused vaccination for the
child whether due to a waiver on religious or medical grounds as permitted
by the law."
House amendment: limits the waiver to those permitted by law.
Senate Sponsor: Patrick O'Malley
House Sponsor: Sara Feigenholtz
Senate Bill 1304
Immunization
Advisory Committee Conflict of Interest
Amends the
Department of Public Health Act. Provides that a person is ineligible to
serve on the Immunization Advisory Committee if the person or his or her
spouse is an officer, employee, or agent of, or has any ownership or other
financial interest in, a pharmaceutical company that manufactures or
produces vaccines. Prohibits members or their spouses from soliciting or
accepting anything of value or any other economic benefit from a
pharmaceutical company that manufactures or produces vaccines unless it is
offered and available generally to licensed physicians or to the public.
Provides that the prohibitions do not apply to an officer, employee, or his
or her spouse of a governments or non-profit entity that solicits vaccines
for the governmental or nonprofit entity.
Senate Sponsor: Patrick O'Malley
House Sponsors: Rosemary Mulligan and Elizabeth Coulson
March
15, 2001
Chickenpox
vaccine mandate defeat upheld
The Illinois State
Board of Health met March 15, and held to its decision to advise the
Department of Public Health not to mandate the chicken pox vaccine
for school aged children. The mandate is not "dead" yet... IDPH
Director, John Lumpkin, has the authority to disregard the recommendation
of the board and mandate the Chicken Pox Vaccine. What will he do?
...He decided not to mandate it for the 2001 school year.
The members reviewed a
summary of the three Public Health Hearings on the chicken pox mandate
written up by the University of Illinois. (Click
here to view excerpts of the summary)
IVAC spokeswoman,
Barbara Alexander Mullarkey, says, "Opponents views are clearly and accurately
stated. Omitted subject is lack of peer-reviewed, published safety studies
on ingredients and long-term vaccine effects. IVAC is troubled by the
statement, 'Another key issue is whether parents who decline to have their
own children immunized have the right to put other children at potential
risk for illness in school and day care settings.'"
"Before parents
can debate this onerous issue, public health officials need to determine:
How many vaccinated children transmit the disease, for which they are
vaccinated, to unvaccinated children? How many vaccinated children get the
disease for which they are vaccinated? Why do vaccines fail to prevent
disease in vaccinated children?"
"From 1995 to
March 6, 2001, the federal government received reports of 12,635 adverse
reactions to the chickenpox vaccine, 31 deaths and 590 serious
complications. This is the tip of the iceberg since 99 percent of serious
drug reactions go unreported to the Food and Drug Administration."
Please send a note of thanks to the below listed board members that
voted to defeat the mandate.
December
7, 2000
Chickenpox
vaccine mandate defeated by 4-3 vote of the State Board of Health members
The following members voted to defeat the mandate:
Colin McCrae, B.S.
335 N. Seymour Ave.
Mundelein, IL 60060
Ernest Ott
1721 Nathan Lane
Libertyville, IL 60048
Karen Mason, R.N.
Kishwaukee Community Hospital
626 Bethany Road
DeKalb, IL 60115
Donald S. Ross, M.D.
Springfield Surgical Associates
501 N. First St.
Springfield, IL 62702
The following members voted to approve the mandate:
Chairman James McGee, MD
Medical Director of Radiation Oncology
St. Francis Medical Center
530 N.E. Glen Oak Ave.
Peoria, IL 60537
Joseph Orthefer, D.V.M., M.P.H.
5154 Crofton Drive
Rockford, IL 61114
Karen Phelan
1010 W. Polk Street
Chicago, IL 60607
These members were not present to vote:
Virendra S. Bisla, MD
Heart Care
Center of South Chicago
9011 S. Commercial
Chicago, IL 60617
Karen L. Scott, MD, M.P.H.
Director
Cook County Department of Health
1010 Lake St., Suite 300
Oak Park, IL 60301
Jane Ann Parker, President
Southgate
Health Care Center
900 E. Ninth St.
Metropolis, IL 62960
Welcome
The Illinois
Vaccine Awareness Coalition (IVAC) is a grassroots organization based in
Oak Park, Illinois, with members throughout our state and in other parts of
the US. As the name implies, our goal is to make people aware of any known
dangers and risks in vaccinations, along with supplying up-to-date
information on vaccines in general. To
Navigate through the site, select a Category Button at the top of the page.
IVAC supports Illinois legislation
allowing parents the freedom of choice when making vaccine decisions for
their children.
The information on this
Web Site is for educational purposes only and is not to be construed as
medical or legal advice. Readers are advised to supplement this information
with their own research. The Decision to Vaccinate is Yours and Yours
Alone.
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