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Overuse
of Vaccines, Anti-Flu Drugs May Result in Human Calamity
by
Bill Sardi
Recently
by Bill Sardi: Obstructing
and Manipulating
Disease researchers
have begun modeling how a future H1N1-09 swine-flu outbreak would
spread throughout the world and have come up with some troubling
scenarios. Infectious disease experts are beginning to describe
modern efforts to quell seasonal and epidemic influenza with vaccines
and anti-viral drugs using wording like "potentially dangerous,"
"worrisome," and "may do more harm than good."
This is striking
in light of the multi-billion dollar worldwide effort to rapidly
manufacture huge stocks of vaccines, up to an unprecedented 2 billion
doses, against the 200809 late-flu season H1N1 swine flu epidemic.
Public health officials are fearful this unusual strain of H1N1
influenza virus may mutate into a more lethal form in the fall as
did the deadly Spanish flu pandemic of 1918.
Researchers
at Shizuoka University in Japan, writing in a recent March 2009
issue of the Public Library of Science (PLoS One), are among the
first to sound the alarm that the most relied upon weaponry against
the flu, vaccines, may actually apply "immunological pressure
on circulating strains of the flu which might engender the emergence
of genetic variants with enhanced potential for pathogenicity in
humans." Translation: mass vaccination, unless well monitored,
may actually induce the dreaded gene mutation that could result
in more cases, increased hospitalizations and a larger death toll.
Public health
officials are just beginning to piece together how treatment-resistant
forms of flu viruses develop. The paradox is that if the virulence
of a vaccine-resistant flu strain is less than that of the vaccine-vulnerable
strain, the epidemic might increase in proportion to the percentage
of the population that elects to undergo vaccination. Researchers
conclude that "a vaccination that is expected to prevent the
spread of the disease can instead foster the spread of the disease."
Examples
of the paradoxical effect
As an example,
researchers point to a compulsory vaccination campaign for all poultry
in China in 2005 involving the H5N1 influenza virus. Genetic analysis
revealed that the H5N1 variant flu strain (Fujian-like influenza)
emerged and subsequently became the prevalent variant in each of
the 12 provinces of China, replacing previously established viruses.
In another
example, H5N2 vaccines used in Mexico since 1995 appear to have
promoted the emergence of various sub-strains of the flu after introduction
of vaccines.
Type-A influenza
viruses, which are the most common, are characterized by rapid mutation,
that is, they learn to rapidly skirt around anti-viral agents. Efforts
to quell flu outbreaks through vaccination in poultry may actually
generate "a new pandemic virus that is dangerous for humans
through a bird-human link," say researchers. All those animal
influenza vaccination programs may actually increase the risk for
a day when a highly virulent strain of bird flu wipes out large
portions of the world’s human population.
The Skizuoka
University researchers in Japan say they "remain skeptical
that a vaccination program can reduce the number of total infectious
individuals even if the vaccination protects against transmission
of a vaccine-sensitive strain." [PLoS One 4(3):e4915, March
18, 2009]
Wagering
one threat against another
While the H1N1-09
swine flu in circulation has spread rapidly, illnesses have been
extremely mild and mortality rates low. But what lies ahead is unknown.
One the one
hand, the H1N1-09 flu could mutate into a more virulent and deadly
form and the vaccines would avert another 1918 Spanish-flu-like
pandemic. But on the other hand, the vaccines currently in production
against this unknown mutant variety may not confer immunity against
the new variant flu virus and actually induce the very mutation
that could kill millions of vulnerable humans, especially those
who have little or no natural immunity or have compromised immunity
due to age (very young, very old), existing disease or immune suppression.
Humanity is
taking a big gamble. The impetus by public health officials and
politicians to prepare human populations for mass vaccination may
result in an avoidable calamity of unprecedented proportion.
2nd-Tier
Anti-Viral Drugs May Induce The Same Problems
There is similar
concern that over-use of anti-viral drugs, particularly early in
the course of a flu outbreak, may worsen the spread and severity
of a flu epidemic.
The second
tier of defense against influenza is primarily comprised of anti-viral
drugs known as enzyme (neuraminidase) inhibitors: oral Tamiflu tablets
(oseltamivir) or nasally administered Relenza (zanamivir). Another
class of anti-viral agents known as M2 ion channel inhibitors: amantidine
and ramantadine, are lesser disregarded because they are ineffective
against influenza-B viruses and rapidly induce drug resistance in
influenza-A viruses.
Unexpectedly,
resistance to Tamiflu by H1N1 flu viruses appears more common in
countries with less use of the drug. Widespread under-dosing of
Tamiflu can result in more drug resistant flu varieties. Of greater
concern, young children appear to have greater resistance to treatment
with Tamiflu than adults.
One drug
not enough
In a similar
manner to the newly expressed concerns over vaccines generating
mutations that could worsen a flu epidemic, researchers at the Mayo
Clinic now declare there is "worrisome evidence" of rapidly
evolving resistance to anti-viral drugs. They now suggest the use
of two different classes of anti-viral drugs at the same time so
as to "prevent the development of new viral species that induce
drug resistance."
The Mayo Clinic
researchers say that the sequential use of one drug, such as Tamiflu
initially, followed by amantidine when Tamiflu resistance occurs,
is inherently flawed. The researchers say "the use of single-drug
anti-viral drug therapy against influenza is unwise and dangerous."
These strong comments, published in the May 2009 issue of Communicable
Infectious Diseases, have drawn little or no attention from public
news sources.
The cost of
availability of two anti-viral drugs would further limit the number
of communities that could adequately mount a defense against a deadly
flu virus.
Will anti-viral
drugs block or spawn a flu epidemic?
European researchers
write in a report published in the October 30, 2008 issue of the
Virology Journal that while the emergence of a drug resistant strain
of flu virus may not necessarily be dangerous given that most prior
treatment-resistant flu strains have been unlikely to spread, early
surveillance data from the 200708 flu season in the northern hemisphere
suggest the development of a type-A H1N1 Tamiflu-resistant flu virus
that circulates in Europe and the US. The proportion of resistant
infections ranges from 4 to 67 percent. Drug resistance occurs even
without widespread use of Tamiflu. [Virology Journal 5: 13339,
October 2008]
In real numbers,
not a simulation, the prevalence of Tamiflu-resistant H1N1 flu cases
across Europe increased gradually over time, from near 0 in week
40 of 2007 to a startling 56% in week 19 of 2008! [Emerging Infectious
Diseases 15: 55260, April 2009] This means more than half of flu
patients treated with anti-virals could face the end of their treatment
options. Doctors will end up fighting the symptoms rather than the
replicating virus.
Simulation
of a drug-resistant flu epidemic
Flu researchers
simulate a flu epidemic in a community of 100,000 people where there
is no drug resistance and the flu outbreak causes 19,500 to seek
doctors’ care and 258 hospitalizations.
If drug resistance
develops naturally within subjects who receive the medicine, then
an estimated 20,700 would seek doctors’ care and 312 would be hospitalized.
But if resistant
forms of the flu are imported into the population within 21 days
after onset of the epidemic, for example by people who travel by
airplane from distant lands, then the infectious cases rise to 22,700
and the hospitalizations to 420.
If the drug-resistant
flu strain is imported prior to the drug-sensitive strain, then
the numbers rise to 25,100 who will seek treatment and 601 who require
hospitalization.
This last scenario
is quite troubling as it more than doubles the demand for in-hospital
care. It is unlikely there are enough extra hospital beds, respirators
and medicines in a community of 100,000 to treat such a flu outbreak.
Extrapolating
this data into a metropolis of 8+ million people, like Los Angeles
or New York City, and you have need for nearly 50,000 extra hospital
beds. [Virology Journal 5: 13339, 2008] In a country like the United
States with a population of 300 million, nearly 2 million extra
hospital beds would be required. God only knows what the demand
for hospital beds, respirators and antibiotics would be worldwide.
Efforts by
public health officials to calm public fears by claiming there are
adequate stockpiles of medicines and respirators appear meager next
to these horrific scenarios now being published by disease investigators.
Other researchers
point to a scenario where even without any early preventive use
of anti-viral drugs to prevent spread of the flu in a community,
about 13.7% all drug-treated patients would be treated in vain due
to resistant flu strains, and if 1020% of the population actually
do use anti-viral drugs to prevent infection, drug-resistant cases
increase by 43 to 74 percent.
H1N1-09
flu virus has high transmissibility
The ability
of these simulations to become reality is controlled by the capability
of a drug-resistant strain to be transmitted from person to person.
What has researchers concerned is that the current H1N1-09 flu is
readily encircling the globe and therefore has high transmissibility.
Researchers caution that the uncontrolled use of anti-viral drugs
like Tamiflu could do more harm than good. Tamiflu should be restricted
to treatment of active cases rather than used for prevention, say
researchers. [BMC Infectious Diseases 9: 412, January 2009]
A problem is
that many people have already acquired Tamiflu throughout the world
and have stockpiled it in their home medicine chest for future use.
They may elect to use it to prevent flu infection should an outbreak
of the flu occur in their community. This uncontrolled use is what
worries communicable disease experts.
Researchers
at the University of Manitoba are concerned about an over-response
to a flu outbreak where stockpiles of anti-viral drugs are depleted
so rapidly early in the course of a developing epidemic that treatment
cannot be completed which results in widespread drug-resistant flu
strains. If drug treatment is employed too early during a flu outbreak
a second wave of more severe infections can potentially occur. Controlled
use of anti-viral drugs is required to prevent an epidemic of greater
magnitude. [BMC Infectious Diseases 9: 8, January 22, 2009]
Current
situation
What if the
H1N1-09 flu virus now in circulation doesn’t mutate into a more
virulent form that human populations have no immunity towards? Billions
of dollars of vaccines and anti-viral drugs would only pose the
potential of producing unwanted side effects and no health benefits.
Currently the
H1N1-09 flu virus is running its course. Its symptoms are somewhat
mild and mortality rates are low. This virus needs to mutate on
time, right when H1N1-09 flu vaccines become available. The H1N1-09
vaccines won’t become available till after school starts in 2009.
Fortunately,
we don’t currently have any available vaccines to induce viral mutations,
but infected subjects are taking anti-viral drugs like Tamiflu which
could induce resistant mutated flu strains.
There are billions
of dollars of unused vaccines and anti-viral drugs ordered and stockpiled
by governments and they need to unload these flu weapons onto the
public, who will purchase them individually at flu clinics or through
health plans.
All this has
raised suspicion that vaccine makers could intentionally produce
a mutated species and introduce it directly into the population,
and what a better way than via vaccination.
The long dreaded
H5N1 flu virus, with a 60% death rate, fizzled when it was found
it is not transmitted very well from human to human. But suddenly
a contaminated vaccine which combined the deadly H5N1 with more
transmissible seasonal flu strains was found by Biotest, a vaccine
distributor in the Czech Republic, when it was tested in ferrets
and it killed all of them. [The Canadian Press February 27, 2009]
The maker of
that H5N1/H1N1 contaminated flu vaccine, Baxter, had filed a patent
a year prior describing a method to produce vaccines in multiple
species using several different antigens (US patent: US
2009/0060950 A1). Safeguards should have prevented this contamination,
which suggests the contamination was intentional.
It is just
too coincidental that French President Nicolas Sarkozy visited Mexico
and announced a new $126 million facility by French drug manufacturer
Sanofi-Aventis at the same time the H1N1-09 swine flu outbreak broke
onto the scene. President Barack Obama visited Mexico the week prior
to the flu outbreak there.
There is a
cozy relationship here where the World Health Organization prematurely
declares a pandemic which coerces more than 80 governments to purchase
flu vaccines and then public health authorities invoke mandatory
flu vaccination programs for school children and become the free
sales agents for the vaccine makers. The vaccine makers then funnel
profits back to the politicians in the form of political contributions
which are veiled kickbacks.
What if vaccines
and anti-viral drugs don’t work?
Should vaccines
and anti-viral drugs be rendered useless by a treatment-resistant
flu strain, the only backup plan is to limit the spread of the infection
by quarantine and limitation of social contacts. A scenario where
world commercial aircraft are grounded and schools and workplaces
closed, would throw the world into economic turmoil. The masses
would be grasping for any imagined flu remedy.
Researchers
have begun to search for alternate treatments. Researchers in Germany
write that "the increasing frequency of viral resistance to
the four US Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved anti-influenza
virus drugs underlines the urgent need for novel anti-virals to
be prepared for future influenza epidemics or pandemics."
Modern medicine
casts a blind eye towards strategies to boost human immunity. There
are many over-the-counter products with proven ability to boost
the immune response including vitamin D, Echinacea, beta glucan,
vitamin C, nucleotides (RNA), selenium and zinc.
Among other
non-drug agents now being explored are NF-Kappa-B inhibitors which
limit viral production and resultant inflammation as well as viral
resistance itself. [Journal Antimicrobial Chemotherapy 2009 July;
64(1):14]
Available natural
NF-Kappa-B inhibitors are found in pomegranate, wine (resveratrol,
quercetin), ginseng, turmeric (curcumin), ginger and vitamin D.
[Mini Review Medicinal Chemistry 2006 Aug; 6(8):94551]
July
29, 2009
Bill
Sardi [send
him mail] is a frequent writer on health and political
topics. His health writings can be found at www.naturalhealthlibrarian.com.
He is the author of You
Don’t Have To Be Afraid Of Cancer Anymore.
Copyright
© 2009 Bill Sardi Word of Knowledge Agency, San Dimas, California.
This article has been written exclusively for www.LewRockwell.com
and other parties who wish to refer to it should link rather than
post at other URLs.
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