Apparently there have been thirty deaths in the USA and two in Europe of women and girls who had recently been vaccinated with Gardasil. Ten of those deaths have already been proved to have been caused by something else. Over 40 million doses have been distributed world-wide. Compare that to the death rate from cervical cancer. Over a quarter of a million every year worldwide. Further research on my part has revealed rumours that Gardasil can cause blood clots – but I could not find any published research to back this up. If there is any, I’m sure one of the cleverer people around will be able to find it!
In the UK, a 14 year-old girl died within two hours of her vaccination with Cervarix (the UK doesn’t use Gardasil). Natalie Morton had been ‘poorly’ for some time and was under investigation by her GP for a ‘mysterious illness’, according to her step-father. It turned out she was killed by a malignant tumour in her chest. The tumour had invaded her heart and lungs. Poor girl.
Pharmaceutical companies are in the business of saving lives, as are the government departments charged with overseeing and licensing their products. When it is occasionally shown that their medications are not as safe in the wider population as they seemed in clinical trials, they are withdrawn. It simply cannot be predicted that a particular treatment will be safe and/or effective in everybody as we are all individuals. I myself have had horrible side-effects from medications prescribed for me that were intended to help. But, of course, at the time my underlying problems were undiagnosed and therefore could not have been taken into account. Now I am no longer allowed to take certain classes of medications because of the risk of death or severe injury and have to take others to avoid those risks.
Back in the mid-eighties, at the height of the then current ‘vaccines cause disorders’ controversy, there was a Whooping Cough epidemic, due to the low take-up of vaccines. My eldest son did not have full immunity (presumably his immune system is like mine – I don’t have full immunity either, and we have both been fully vaccinated and had the disease several times). My second eldest boy had started having obvious ‘petit mal’ seizures after he had been vaccinated, which worsened in frequency after the second. He wasn’t given the third (final) shot. Knowing what the disease was like, even in a mild form, I was sure that the effects were worse than anything a vaccine could do. I was unable to persuade my GP to vaccinate my daughter against it. She caught it. I was terrified she would die. Her brother and I had a comparatively mild case, but she had no protection whatever and was seriously sick. I defy any mother to nurse her baby through an illness that has her burning with fever, coughing violently and then struggling for breath, and come to the conclusion that vaccines are dreadful. Luckily, she survived. Other babies weren’t so lucky that year. By the time my twins were born, the medical concensus was that my view was right, and that there was no reputable study that proved any link whatever between vaccines and the disorders they were rumoured to cause. Both were fully vaccinated.
Modern parents in First World countries are lucky. They have grown up in an era of high vaccination rates and effective anti-biotics. They have simply no idea what it is like to watch child after child die horribly from preventable diseases like their great-great-grandmothers did. But if they think that gives them the luxury of deciding not to vaccinate, they are mistaken. Apart from smallpox, the diseases haven’t been extinguished. They are all around, constantly attacking us and being repelled by our primed immune systems. Any of us could be carrying any one of them at the moment and not know it, until we come into contact with an unvaccinated person who will contract it and possibly die. My grandmother died of TB. My father nearly died and was only saved by massive doses of a then brand-new antibiotic. I was vaccinated against TB as a baby. I like vaccines. They save lives in the best possible way – by largely preventing the disease in the first place. There will, hopefully, be even more vaccines against other diseases in the future. Who knows, there might one day be one against all cancers and I might be the last female in my family to have to have a total hysterectomy to avoid dying from it. My great aunts and my aunt all died before it was detected in them.
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