►December
26, 2003 - Therapy
in bloom - Program sheds light on healing
plants - The Topeka Capital-Journal
►December
24, 2003 - Mad
cow in US brings hope to organic producers - The outbreak of the
first mad cow case in the United States could force a rise of beef prices in
the international market benefiting organic producing countries such as Uruguay
and Argentina. - Merco
Press via www.falkland-malvinas.com
►Art
of the M.I.N.D.: The Art Collection of the UC Davis M.I.N.D. Institute (book
for sale) - "The UC Davis M.I.N.D. Institute has assembled a significant
collection of artwork created by children and adults with autism and other
neurodevelopmental disorders. The pieces of art featured in this book pencil
drawings, watercolors and oil paintings are on permanent display throughout
the institute's building."
►December 26, 2003 -
Scientist is winning converts on Alzheimer's - AP/Wall Street Journal via
USA Today - "Ashley Bush, a 44-year-old researcher at Harvard Medical
School, was pilloried after he put forth a radical theory of Alzheimer's disease
in 1994...Bush's theory is that the real culprit in Alzheimer's is a copper and
zinc buildup in the brain an idea few scientists have looked at...Now
scientists are giving Bush more credence. He has a five-year grant from the NIH
and this year won an American Academy of Neurology prize for Alzheimer's disease
research."
►December 28, 2003 -
Anthrax drill shows
weaknesses, officials say - CNN - "A drill testing U.S. agencies' ability to
distribute and administer antibiotics in the event of an anthrax attack found
the federal government unable to respond quickly enough to prevent large numbers
of deaths, officials said Sunday."
►December 28, 2003 -
GIs in Iraq have mixed reactions on halt to anthrax shots - Stars & Stripes
- "But one thing the military
assured them they would have some protection against was the specter of anthrax:
Before deploying here, each and every U.S. soldier had to take an anti-anthrax
vaccine...But after U.S. District Judge Emmet G. Sullivan issued a ruling Dec.
22 that ordered the military to stop requiring soldiers take the vaccine, the
word in the desert is mixed."
►Overview
of Vaccine Manufacturing - Bovine Spongiform
Encephalopathy (BSE) - FDA - "The nutrient media that are used to support the
growth of bacteria and the cell cultures in which viruses are grown often
contain animal-derived components and, commonly, bovine-derived (from cows)
components. As examples, the cells that are used to propagate viruses generally
require calf serum for their maintenance and growth and the nutrient broths that
are commonly used to grow bacteria contain beef extracts (e.g., a beef broth)."
►December 28, 2003 -
Your donation can help medics
fight Africa's measles epidemic - A charity battling against diseases in Africa
will be helped by our appeal, which has raised £221,721 so far. Rory Carroll
reports from Congo - The Guardian, UK - "Measles is a viral disease spread by
infected droplets during sneezing and coughing, and by touching contaminated
objects. It causes fever and rash, and can lead to convulsions, pneumonia,
bronchitis, mental retardation and death...In the rich world, it is
seldom fatal because infected children eat well and have proper medical care,
and because immunisation has restricted epidemics over the past 30 years...But
in poor countries it kills 800,000 children every year. More than half of them
are in sub-Saharan Africa, and about 50,000 in Congo, according to Lieven
Desomer, a vaccine specialist with Unicef, the United Nation's children's
agency."
►December 28, 2003 -
SARS
patient to soon be released from hospital - eTaiwanNews.com - "The
more significant development is that antibodies have appeared in his system,
showing that the amount of viral infection is slowly being reduced, Huang said."
►December 28, 2003 -
Flu is expected to reach its peak early in January - Fond Du Lac Reporter -
"Whooping cough, flu shots and now measles, are all on the mind of Fond du Lac
County Health Officer Diane Cappozzo...Fond du Lac became a communicable disease
statistic with its whooping cough outbreak, which Tuesday peaked at 210
confirmed cases out of 430 cases of pertussis reported in Wisconsin so far this
year."
►December 28, 2003 -
Testing starts for West Nile vaccine -
Trials now taking place on 60 volunteers in Kansas City area - AP via The
Lawrence Journal World
►December 27, 2003 -
Anthrax protester
wants the Marines to apologize -
www.signonsandiego.com - "Anthony Fusco would
like the Marine Corps to say it's sorry and then some...The Camp Pendleton
Marine was demoted from corporal to lance corporal this year for initially
refusing to be vaccinated for anthrax...Now a federal judge has ruled that the
Pentagon's mandatory vaccination program is illegal, and the program was
temporarily halted this week...Fusco, 23, feels he's been vindicated, and he's
upset about the reduction in rank and loss of pay."
►December 29, 2003 -
Call to stop deadly viruses getting into wrong hands -
www.smh.com - "Ian Ramshaw...was critical of US
researchers who have genetically modified cowpox virus, which can infect humans,
in a way that is likely to make it extremely deadly...The team at the University
of St Louis has said the research is necessary to understand what terrorists
might achieve. "But I cannot see any scientific justification for it," Professor
Ramshaw said...Sufficient knowledge could be obtained by restricting studies to
mousepox virus, which is similar to cowpox but cannot infect humans, he said."
►December 28, 2003 -
Inquiry
after error over baby MMR - An investigation has been launched after a baby
was accidentally given the controversial MMR injection. - BBC - "The
three-month-old girl was supposed to have received a meningitis jab. It is
understood the mistake was made at Gorbals Health Centre in Glasgow...Guidelines
state babies should be at least 13 months old before they get the measles, mumps
and rubella vaccine...Public health experts said the incident should not cause
any long-term problems for the child...Politicians described the mistake as
appalling."
►December 29, 2003 -
Brain
damage link to flu in pregnancy -
www.theage.com.au - "According to the guidelines, the benefits of
immunisation in preventing flu in pregnant women during the second or third
trimester outweigh the risks, which can include miscarriage."
Comment: Even if there is a "brain damage link to flu in pregnancy", in
order to make an informed decision about whether or not to use the flu vaccine
during pregnancy, the risks of flu need to be compared to the risks of getting
the vaccine. Given how poorly studied vaccine risks are, a reasonably
informed decision is difficult, if not impossible to make. (For a description of
how poorly studied the Institute of Medicine found vaccines to be, click
here.)
►December 28, 2003 -
Millions
paid out to kids hurt by shots -
Congress created fund to ensure companies keep making
vaccines. - News-Leader - "The program is 'fair and generous,' Balbier
says. 'It serves the needs of families who do have a very, very rare instance of
adverse reaction.'"
►December
26, 2003 - Grant
funds childhood vaccinations - Three agencies try to
ensure that students receive necessary shots to stay in class. -
Statesman Journal
►December 28, 2003 -
Scientists, consumer groups debate individual disasters, general good -
Such considerations as mercury's problems and the
risks of autism and allergies come to fore. - News-Leader - "Consumer
groups raising concerns about the risks say they are not anti-vaccine. But they
want federal health officials to use what they know to make vaccines safer. Many
scientists, doctors and parents believe that states' overzealous vaccination
policies have contributed to dramatic increases in asthma, allergies, learning
disabilities, autism, attention-deficit disorder, diabetes and other chronic
neuroimmune illnesses."
►December 28, 2003 -
Teen
disabled by vaccine prepares for life on own - A
rare reaction to an immunization crippled J.J. Coffelt's muscles, but not her
spirit. - News-Leader - "J.J. is a statistical anomaly, one of 638 kids
nationwide who, since 1988, have been compensated by the federal government for
crippling disabilities suffered after getting immunized against childhood
diseases."
►December 28, 2003 -
Despite Mad-Cow Warnings, Industry Resisted Safeguards (requires
registration or subscription) - The New York Times - "During a House debate last
summer over a possible ban on using sick and injured cows for meat,
Representative Gary L. Ackerman, a Democrat from New York, held up a photo of a
crippled cow and cautioned that such "downer animals" carried the highest risk
for mad cow disease."
Comment: "Penny-wise but pound-foolish" just about
sums up the arguments against prohibiting "downer animals" from being sold.
Breaking News Archives
- from December 1, 2003
(check here for breaking news you might have missed and breaking news that
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DISCLAIMER: All
information, data, and material contained, presented, or provided here is for
general information purposes only and is not to be construed as reflecting the
knowledge or opinions of the publisher, and is not to be construed or intended
as providing medical or legal advice. The decision whether or not to vaccinate
is an important and complex issue and should be made by you, and you alone, in
consultation with your health care provider.
"A foolish faith in authority is the worst enemy of truth."
-- Albert Einstein, letter to a friend, 1901
"I know of no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society but the people themselves, and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from them, but to inform their discretion by education."
-- Thomas Jefferson, letter to William C. Jarvis, September 28, 1820
"What's the point of vaccination if it doesn't protect you from the unvaccinated?"
-- Sandy Gottstein
"Who gets to decide what the greater good is and how many will be sacrificed to it?"