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Family Forum / Parenting / Children's Health / July 2008



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Rotavirus  vaccine working

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Jeff - 26 Jun 2008 02:20 GMT
During the last rotavirus season, the rotavirus season was delayed by 2
to 4 months and magnitude by about 1/2.

Another example of how vaccines are saving lives and reducing the impact
of vaccine-preventable illness.

http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm57e625a1.htm?s_cid=mm57e625a1_e

Jeff
JOHN - 26 Jun 2008 06:20 GMT
> During the last rotavirus season, the rotavirus season was delayed by 2 to
> 4 months and magnitude by about 1/2.
[quoted text clipped - 5 lines]
>
> Jeff

http://whale.to/vaccines/rotavirus_h.html
Jeff - 27 Jun 2008 01:22 GMT
>> During the last rotavirus season, the rotavirus season was delayed by 2 to
>> 4 months and magnitude by about 1/2.
[quoted text clipped - 7 lines]
>
> http://whale.to/vaccines/rotavirus_h.html 

The rotavirus vaccine used today is a safe and effective. Preliminary
data indicate that it greatly reduced the number of kids who had the
disease and delayed the rotavirus season by over a month. And, it
appears that it decreased the number of kids who were hospitalized this
year as well.

Thanks for the laugh site, John.

Jeff
JOHN - 27 Jun 2008 06:15 GMT
> The rotavirus vaccine used today is a safe and effective.

LOL http://whale.to/vaccines/safer.html http://whale.to/a/lie_effective.html

Thanks for the laugh, Jeff.

"The greatest lie ever told is that vaccines are safe and effective" ---Dr.
Len Horowitz
Jeff - 27 Jun 2008 12:39 GMT
>> The rotavirus vaccine used today is a safe and effective.
>
[quoted text clipped - 4 lines]
> "The greatest lie ever told is that vaccines are safe and effective" ---Dr.
> Len Horowitz

Well, according to the experts who know more than you and I show that
the onset of the rotavirus season has been delayed about 1 or 2 months,
the number of positive tests for rotavirus has gone down by about half.
In addition, some hospitals are reporting that the number of admissions
for rotavirus disease has also gone down as well.

So, you're wrong. The vaccine *is* safe and effective. And that is good
news for babies and parents.

Jeff
JOHN - 27 Jun 2008 14:52 GMT
> Well, according to the experts who know more than you and I show

LOL http://whale.to/a/experts.html

> So, you're wrong. The vaccine *is* safe and effective. And that is good
> news for babies and parents.

do stop lying Jeff,

http://whale.to/vaccines/rotavirus.html
http://whale.to/vaccines/rotateq_h.html
Jeff - 27 Jun 2008 15:10 GMT
>> Well, according to the experts who know more than you and I show
>
[quoted text clipped - 7 lines]
> http://whale.to/vaccines/rotavirus.html 
> http://whale.to/vaccines/rotateq_h.html

The report of serious bowel problems said that it was to encourage
reporting of them should they occur. Obviously, there was not an
increase of these problems. So, these pages are either out of date or
show that the vaccine is safe.

Jeff
JOHN - 27 Jun 2008 15:24 GMT
> The report of serious bowel problems said that it was to encourage
> reporting of them should they occur. Obviously, there was not an increase
> of these problems. So, these pages are either out of date or show that the
> vaccine is safe.
>
> Jeff

I know you can't read, but we can

Food and Drug Administration said it was notifying health-care providers and
consumers about reports of some 28 cases of infants suffering a serious
bowel condition after receiving Merck & Co's new vaccine against the
rotavirus. The FDA said it was not immediately clear how many of the 28
reported cases were caused by the vaccine.
Jeff - 05 Jul 2008 17:02 GMT
>> The report of serious bowel problems said that it was to encourage
>> reporting of them should they occur. Obviously, there was not an increase
[quoted text clipped - 4 lines]
>
> I know you can't read, but we can

Nice personal insult.

> Food and Drug Administration said it was notifying health-care providers and
> consumers about reports of some 28 cases of infants suffering a serious
> bowel condition after receiving Merck & Co's new vaccine against the
> rotavirus. The FDA said it was not immediately clear how many of the 28
> reported cases were caused by the vaccine.

Exactly. And the complete report mentioned that the 28 cases was within
the expected number of cases and that the report was just to be sure
that all cases were reported, so that the FDA and CDC can spot a problem
*if* one existed. There wasn't one found.

Jeff
Mark Probert - 27 Jun 2008 17:40 GMT
> > Well, according to the experts who know more than you and I show
>
[quoted text clipped - 6 lines]
>
> http://whale.to/vaccines/rotavirus.

NOT the same vaccine. Do stop lying.

htmlhttp://whale.to/vaccines/rotateq_h.html

"The FDA said it was not immediately clear how many of the 28 reported
cases were caused by the vaccine. It said the condition, known as
intussusception, can occur in the absence of vaccination.

Some 3.5 million doses of Merck's RotaTeq have been distributed in the
United States since its approval in February 2006, the FDA said.

The agency said the 28 reported cases do not exceed the number that
might be expected, but it issued the warning to encourage reports of
any additional cases."

IOW, the number of cases for those who were vaccinated were the same
as the number of cases that would normally occur in an UNvaccinated
population.

John, do get a clue.
JOHN - 27 Jun 2008 17:10 GMT
> So, you're wrong. The vaccine *is* safe and effective. And that is good
> news for babies and parents.
>
> Jeff

PS  $1 Billion paid out to victims of vaccines under NVICP busts the lie
they are safe
Jeff - 05 Jul 2008 17:03 GMT
>> So, you're wrong. The vaccine *is* safe and effective. And that is good
>> news for babies and parents.
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
> PS  $1 Billion paid out to victims of vaccines under NVICP busts the lie
> they are safe

How much of that $1 billion was paid to families of patients supposedly
harmed by the Rotavirus vaccine that is available now?

Answer: None.

The vaccine is both safe and effective at preventing deaths and sickness.

Jeff
JOHN - 07 Jul 2008 17:28 GMT
> How much of that $1 billion was paid to families of patients supposedly
> harmed by the Rotavirus vaccine that is available now?
[quoted text clipped - 4 lines]
>
> Jeff

LOL!
JOHN - 07 Jul 2008 17:30 GMT
>>> So, you're wrong. The vaccine *is* safe and effective. And that is good
>>> news for babies and parents.
[quoted text clipped - 12 lines]
>
> Jeff

http://www.medalerts.org/vaersdb/stats.html
 
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