H1N1 Vaccine: What Are We Really Preventing?
October 11th, 2009Swine Flu and the H1N1 Vaccine has created quite a stir and the volume of information and mis-information is simply astounding! If you are considering getting the vaccine for yourself or a loved one, there are some facts you absolutely need to know:
Read Your Prescriptions!
Prescribing errors are common and almost always dangerous. An error in prescribing oral-suspension oseltamivir (Tamiflu) to a 6-year old child suffering H1N1 influenza was recently reported in an article in the New England Journal of Medicine. Literature claims that the dosage instructions for the patient did not match the dosage on the dispenser; luckily, the error was detected before administration. Efforts to prevent such errors recommended by the FDA include: write the dosage in milligrams if the dosage dispenser is marked in milligrams, provide a new oral syringe calibrated dispenser if the dosage is in milliliters, and avoid using ‘teaspoon’ prescriptions for oral-suspension oseltamivir.
Big $$$ for the Drug Makers
H1N1 vaccine–a big pharmacy propaganda? Swine flu, to some, is believed to not only be a threatening epidemic but also an objective of profitability and population-reduction. Renowned public health specialist and physician Dr. Leonard Horowitz claims that pharmaceutical industrialists profit on risky and valueless vaccines. Trading scandals involving pandemic savvy will continue to neglect earlier data substantiating similar man-made plagues and reproduce mass-media misrepresentations. Eventually, genetic studies and microbiological treatments will continue to breed more mutant flu viruses, likely to outbreak.
Dealing with Side Effects
The vaccine causes immune-system over-reactions that can lead to a “cyto-storm” or a problem in which the immune system releases too many cytokines to deal with the invading virus. “Side effects are severe” claim Dr. Blaylock, a certified neurosurgeon. Recommendations to fight the negative aspects of H1N1 vaccine are immediate placement of cold compress to injection site soon after administration, avoiding high mercury containing seafood, and taking omega-3 oils, vitamin C (1000mg 4 times per day, between meals), 3,000 units of Vitamin D per day, and vitamin E for anti-oxidant protection for the nervous system.
References:
Bowen, J. “Dosing Liquid Tamiflu Can Be a Prescription for Trouble”. CMP Medica. September 2009. http://www.consultantlive.com/display/article/10162/1460888. Accessed from the World Wide Web on October 8, 2009.
Horowitz, L. M.D., M.A., M.P.H. “Avian Flu/Swine Flu: Vaccination Fraud Debunked”. Educate-Yourself. April 2009. http://educate-yourself.org/cn/horowitzavianfluscamapr09.shtml Accessed from the World Wide Web on October 8, 2009.