Thursday, December 3, 2009

On The "Gardasil Girls" Article, In The Cape Cod Times


While a overall suit of thousands (perhaps over 3,000) of potentially Gardasil-related inauspicious events, compared to a total of 26 million doses delivered expected still reflects a tolerable risk-to-benefit ratio, it is my growing perspective which a Gardasil vaccine should not be as involuntary a preference for differently abstinent, full of illness immature girls in a United States as some might suggest. This preference certainly deserves clever consideration, as well as a prolonged as well as contemplative discussion with one's illness care providers, we think.

Do go review a entire, longish essay published online this morning, as well as cruise this snippet, from a Cape Cod Times:
. . . .A growing series of immature women have been joining a ranks of "Gardasil Girls," immature women who hold they have been harmed by a Merck vaccine which was approved in 2006 as well as has been heavily marketed as a surety for cervical cancer.

On Oct. 15, a Cape Cod Times ran a story about 3 teens, all of whom developed a rash as well as other symptoms in a single case, partial paralysis after their vaccinations.

One of O'Brien's neighbors, meaningful she was frustrated about Annie's rash as well as Brianna's lingering illness issues, showed her a article, O'Brien says.

Barbara Loe Fisher of a nonprofit National Vaccine Information Center says there have been sufficient inauspicious reactions to a Gardasil vaccine to aver a sovereign investigation.

Fisher, who is a owner of a vaccine watchdog group, has asked Congress as well as sovereign illness agencies to look in to VAERS reports which more than 3,000 immature women have been harmed by a vaccine as well as 48 have died.

So far, a Centers for Disease Control as well as Prevention as well as a FDA say a vaccine since in 3 separate shots is safe as well as effective, with side goods including pain at a injection site, risk of fainting as well as blood clots.

A CDC vaccine report, final updated Nov. 5, says 26 million doses of Gardasil were distributed in a United States as of Sept. 1. The agency says that, formed on the stating systems, it continues to suggest Gardasil vaccination. . . .
Food for thought, no doubt.

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