March 06, 2019
Failure to Vaccinate or Vaccine Failure: What Is Driving Disease Outbreaks?
In late February, in testimony on measles for the House Committee on Energy and Commerce, Dr. Anthony Fauci—director of the National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)—admitted with a chuckle that he and most of the Committee members sitting before him had
uneventfully experienced measles as children and had recovered completely. These national leaders reaped many benefits by getting measles in childhood—accruing lifelong immunity and protection against cardiovascular disease, among other benefits—but that has not stopped them from fomenting public panic about measles or pushing for more vaccine mandates. This week, the Senate followed up with its own similar hearing. The Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee said that the hearing’s purpose was to consider “what is driving preventable disease outbreaks,” but rather than examine this question fully or fairly, the event featured a hand-picked line-up of speakers who are—one and all—promoters of a “no ifs, ands or buts” vaccine party line.
Many studies illustrate both types of vaccine
failure [primary and secondary] as well as the concerning potential for
vaccinated individuals to transmit disease to others.
Congressional hearings on vaccine safety in the early 2000s were more
balanced, at least allowing multiple viewpoints to be aired (if not
acted upon). Why are current legislators exhibiting so little curiosity
and ignoring long-published evidence that infectious diseases “routinely break out in highly vaccinated communities”? Logically, flares of illness in vaccinated groups should prompt some serious questions about vaccine failure,
rather than hostile condemnation of the very small proportion of
families who, for medical, religious or philosophical reasons, do not
comply with one hundred percent of the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention’s (CDC’s) childhood vaccine schedule (currently almost six
dozen doses of sixteen vaccines by age 18—and counting). In their fixation to scapegoat
and corral unvaccinated individuals, the CDC, the Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) and Fauci’s own NIAID are displaying a dangerous
indifference to vaccination’s unintended consequences.Increased susceptibility…due to vaccination
Vaccines are supposed to “exploit the immune system’s ability to ‘memorize’ encounters with previously unknown microbes.” As published studies describe, however, this goal often fails or even backfires. In “primary” vaccine failure (estimated to affect at least 2% to 10% of healthy individuals), a vaccinated individual never produces any meaningful antibodies after initial (or booster) vaccination; in the case of “secondary” vaccine failure, protection wanes “after initial effectiveness.”Many studies illustrate both types of vaccine failure as well as the concerning potential for vaccinated individuals to transmit disease to others. In a 2017 measles outbreak in vaccinated individuals in Israel—reported on by the CDC—all but one patient had laboratory evidence of a “previous immune response” (secondary vaccine failure), and the one patient who did not display such evidence reported nonetheless having received two doses of vaccine (primary vaccine failure). In addition, the index patient—the one who launched the chain of transmission—had received three doses of measles-containing vaccine.
Other recent studies highlight an even more
troubling ramification of vaccine failure, which has become more
apparent with each successive vaccinated generation: vaccination is
increasing the number of susceptible individuals in the population over
time.
In a 2011 measles outbreak in New York City, “all cases
had prior evidence of measles immunity,” and a twice-vaccinated
individual—whose “clinical presentation” was just like natural
measles—was shown to have transmitted measles to others.Other recent studies highlight an even more troubling ramification of vaccine failure, which has become more apparent with each successive vaccinated generation: vaccination is increasing the number of susceptible individuals in the population over time. In 2017, Korean researchers warned that measles susceptibility is increasing in that country because:
- “Measles-specific antibodies wane in the absence of boosting by the wild-type virus.”
- “The number of potential measles-susceptible individuals progressively accumulates.”
- “Vaccine-induced immunity is less effective than naturally acquired immunity.”
Other notoriously ineffective vaccines
These phenomena do not apply just to measles vaccination but to many other types of vaccines as well. As described by Children’s Health Defense previously, flu shots, which are notoriously ineffective, are even less useful in individuals who dutifully get their shots every year. This is because repeat vaccination “blunts” the protection while actually increasing susceptibility to other strains of influenza. Flu shots also have been shown to make people more susceptible to other severe respiratory viruses.Vaccine failure problems are also well documented with regard to pertussis vaccination. In fact, the Journal of the Pediatric Infectious Diseases Society just published an article outlining pertussis vaccination “mistakes” and their serious consequences. The author, a high-level UCLA researcher who has made a career out of studying pertussis vaccines, describes:
- The regular occurrence of “major pertussis epidemics” in vaccinated populations;
- A vaccine that is known to be inefficacious and to have a “shorter duration of protection”; and
- Vaccinated children who will actually be “more susceptible to pertussis throughout their lifetimes.”
School officials have emphasized that the outbreak cannot be attributed to the unvaccinated students.
The UCLA researcher’s observations are not “new” news either. Back in 2012, researchers wrote in The New England Journal of Medicine about a pertussis outbreak in vaccinated children in Oregon. A public health official in that state commented,
“The [pertussis] vaccine is not going to eradicate pertussis. It isn’t
good enough to wipe out the disease, and it’s going to be around
indefinitely.” As if in further illustration of these remarks, The Hill, the LA Times
and other news outlets just reported on a 2019 pertussis outbreak at an
elite, 1,600-student private school in Los Angeles (virtually in UCLA’s
backyard). Notwithstanding a “really high vaccination rate,” 30 (almost
2%) of students—all vaccinated—developed pertussis, again demonstrating
that “people who have had the vaccine can still get sick.”
Meanwhile, none of the handful of unvaccinated students at the school
(18 students with medical exemptions) have contracted pertussis. School
officials have emphasized that the outbreak cannot be attributed to the unvaccinated students.A CDC representative made the same point during a 2012 pertussis outbreak in Washington State. Describing pertussis as “a bacterium that’s cyclical in nature,” the CDC spokesman asserted that pertussis outbreaks simply occur “from time to time” and “are probably not the result of the increase in the number of parents choosing not to vaccinate their children.” Ironically, while acknowledging that “even people who are vaccinated may be susceptible to the disease,” the official then fell back on the CDC’s tired mantra: “get vaccinated.”
In MMR-related lawsuits against Merck, former
Merck scientists avow that Merck “fraudulently misled the government and
omitted, concealed, and adulterated material information regarding the
efficacy of its mumps vaccine in violation of the FCA [False Claims
Act].”
Our legislators’ failures
The topic of vaccine failure is not new, having been discussed since the earliest days of smallpox vaccination—and modern-day descriptions of vaccine failure continue to multiply. There is also growing evidence that vaccine manufacturers have made false claims about their products’ effectiveness. In MMR-related lawsuits against Merck, former Merck scientists avow that Merck “fraudulently misled the government and omitted, concealed, and adulterated material information regarding the efficacy of its mumps vaccine in violation of the FCA [False Claims Act].” According to a report by Huffpost, the company’s “far-ranging” fraudulent activities were designed to help Merck monopolize the mumps vaccine market, even though Merck “expected outbreaks to occur” as a result of its shoddy vaccine. Merck has also been accused of fraud and negligence related to other vaccines.A recent article in U.S. News says that many families’ desire for vaccine choice stems from “accumulated distrust of organized medicine, federal regulators and pharmaceutical companies.” Although U.S. News does not say so, this “accumulated distrust” is well deserved!
Rather than tarring and feathering individuals who, for a variety of well-founded reasons, do not vaccinate—or worse, forcing them to inject their children with vaccines that are not only ineffective but harmful—our legislators should be investigating the powerful entities that are trying to hide vaccines’ inability to deliver what they promise.
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