Ounce of Prevention, Pound of Misery?
By Aimee Howd
http://www.insightmag.com/archive/investiga/apec1.shtml
Thousands have claimed bad reactions to their hepatitis B inoculation.
So why
isn't the health bureaucracy's mass vaccination policy being investigated by
Congress?
When nurses gave her newborn son another injection, the room filled with the
sound of his healthy cry. Julienne Jack recalls wondering through the haze of
her postlabor exhaustion what that one was for. In fact, it was the hepatitis B
vaccine, which Ohio mandated for all its newborns -- a safe inoculation without
known side effects, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
or CDC, in Atlanta.
. . . . But as she took her tiny firstborn into her
arms again, coaxing him to nurse, Jack sensed something disturbing in the sound
of his cry, the strange restlessness of his movements, a sudden yellowing of his
skin. It was a relief when he seemed to slip into peaceful stillness in her
arms. Just 27 hours old, she remembers thinking. She daydreamed of the future
for their family of three until the night nurse came to return the baby to his
crib. Something in his appearance as the nurse lifted him from her arms,
however, tore a cry from her throat: "What's wrong with him?"
. . . . The nurse rushed Brandon out of the room
and down the hall in search of help. After an hour, bed-bound by the lingering
effects of an epidural, Jack faced the news alone: Little more than an hour
after receiving the hepatitis B vaccination, her baby was dead.
. . . . No explanation was offered. The mystified
coroner marked the cause of death unknown. Two years later a death certificate
still has not been issued.
. . . . In Jack's eyes, the chain of events that
day in the hospital implicates the vaccination. Brandon's doctors, though they
voluntarily waived the family's medical bills, deny any such connection. The
lawyer whose help the family enlisted to obtain copies of the medical records
sent a letter saying the Jacks had no case against any of the medical
professionals involved because he could find "no reports of any serious reaction
to the vaccination."
. . . . In fact, "no confirmed reactions" is the
standard line of federal officials in most cases, although since 1990 more than
24,000 reports of possible adverse reactions to the hepatitis B vaccine have
been registered with the Food and Drug Administration's Vaccine Adverse Event
Reporting System, or VAERS, including a significant number of severe injuries
and deaths.
. . . . Federal guidelines issued in 1991
recommending three doses of the vaccine for health professionals coming into
contact with blood, at-risk groups including intravenous drug users and people
with multiple sex partners -- and every child born after 1990 -- remain
unchanged. At least 35 states mandated the vaccine for entrance to kindergarten
by 1996, and in 1977 the Advisory Commission on Immunization Programs reported
vaccination of 84 percent of America's 19- to 35-month-olds.
. . . . In January 1999, the CDC further expanded
its goals, calling for universal immunization of children up to age 18.
Government agencies and pharmaceutical groups categorically deny that the VAERS
reports are cause for alarm, explaining that the purpose of the data collection
merely is to reveal unexpected patterns, that the adverse-reaction numbers may
be inflated due to double reporting and that no scientific data prove the
vaccine is the cause of the problems.
. . . . "Bad things happen to people all the time.
It's unfortunate that we don't know the causes of many of those," says Neal
Halsey, a leader in the American Academy of Pediatrics and director of the
vaccine safety center at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. But Barbara
Fisher, founder of the watchdog group National Vaccine Information Center, or
NVIC (on the World Wide Web at www.909shot.com), objects. "Why can no one
confirm or deny a causal relationship in these tens of thousands of adverse
reports?" she asks. "Because the kind of scientific studies that could reveal
the link have not been done." And, alas, they haven't.
. . . . "When vaccine coverage reaches high levels
like they do in the U.S., essentially anyone with a negative medical event will
have previously been vaccinated," Robert Chen of the CDC's National Immunization
Program tells Insight. His solution to the dilemma raises the eyebrows of
privacy advocates. "What is needed is a database with all vaccinations and all
medical events linked in a large cohort to see if those vaccinated recently are
more likely to develop the adverse event of interest," he says. "The CDC has
established such a cohort with 5 million members of four large staff-models
[health-maintenance organizations] on the West Coast in the Vaccine Safety Data
Link Study."
. . . . Other approaches also are being examined.
Bonnie Dunbar, a professor of cell biology at Baylor College of Medicine in
Texas, is a leader among the growing number of scientists who are joining
consumer advocates, parents'-rights groups and undiagnosed patients in searching
for answers about adverse reactions to the vaccine.
. . . . To Dunbar and her colleagues, preliminary
evidence indicates some people might be genetically disposed to an adverse
autoimmune or neurological response to the recombinant hepatitis B vaccine. In
an open letter last November, Dunbar wrote, "After carrying out extensive
literature research on this vaccine, it is apparent that the serious adverse
side effects of this vaccine ... may be much more significant than generally
known (or admitted)."
. . . . Halsey tells Insight he doubts the
credibility of people questioning the vaccine. But Dunbar's 25 years as a
research scientist and medical-school professor and her National Institutes of
Health honors for pioneering work in contraceptive vaccines are sturdy
credentials.
. . . . Today's recombinant hepatitis B vaccine
derives from a surface protein of the virus molecule. Dunbar suggests that
similarities between the antigen and proteins in human nerves and tissues could
trick the autoimmune systems of the genetically susceptible into attacking
themselves. In Science magazine last summer, Halsey scoffed at that theory,
asking how a fragment of virus protein used in a vaccine could cause symptoms
not even caused by the virus.
. . . . Dunbar explains that any part of a virus
molecule introduced into the human body can be met by a unique immune response.
"The same rigorous testing [is required] every time you change the vaccine. The
companies don't want to hear that because it is going to cost them a lot of
money."
. . . . William Hildebrand, an immunogeneticist at
the University of Oklahoma, plans to take a close look at the five or six genes
that are responsible for controlling the immune response. Three observations
lead him to conjecture that an individual's HLA genotype may mediate how he or
she responds to the vaccine: Almost all negative responses occur in Caucasians,
the number of genes determining autoimmune responses varies from race to race
and the reported adverse responses are consistently autoimmune in nature. "It
justifies asking what are the reactions and how frequent are they," Hildebrand
says, "and that's all I would argue needs to be done at this time. If you
understand which genes are involved in the adverse response, you can begin to
understand the adverse response."
. . . . Until the research is done, however,
Hildebrand remains skeptical of both sides of the debate. "One side is saying
you can't prove [a cause-and-effect relationship]. The other side is saying,'You
know something is going on here.' I say let's find out. If you say that the
world is flat and you don't do research, maybe the world will stay flat."
. . . . Denied government grants, funding for this
research is being supplied by private donations, often from patients and
surviving families. The initiatives of the inquiring scientists are important to
bewildered survivors such as the Jacks, who have moved to Pennsylvania where
they have been assured they can obtain a medical exemption for a second child
they are expecting this summer. For two years they believed they were alone in
their suspicions about the vaccine. Then a friend told them about an
investigation and televised report by the TV newsmagazine 20/20.
. . . . While searching for the Internet version of
the TV report, Jack found contact information for a father who had appeared on
the show. That man is Michael Belkin, a New York financial adviser whose search
for answers after his 5-week-old daughter died hours after her vaccination led
him to apply his statistical training from the University of California at
Berkeley to the tangled web of epidemiological studies at the core of the
hepatitis B vaccination controversy.
. . . . Does the risk/reward ratio for
administering the hepatitis B vaccine to the typical American baby justify the
national vaccine mandate? Even questions about the incidence of the disease are
difficult to answer. For example, 1996 and 1997 issues of the CDC's Morbidity
and Mortality Weekly Reports, or MMWR, show only about 10,000 cases of hepatitis
B reported in the United States. Yet the CDC estimates the total annual
incidence of the disease at 150,000 to 300,000. The CDC believes the vast
majority of cases go unreported because the hosts are asymptomatic or mistake
the reaction for the flu.
. . . . Undoubtedly, asymptomatic chronic infection
by the disease (which studies show is more likely to occur the earlier the virus
is contracted) can lead to devastating cancers or cirrhosis late in life.
Marketing materials for the vaccine produced by the International Task Force on
Hepatitis B Immunization and the Program for Appropriate Technology in Health
begin by warning doctors that three-quarters of the world's population lives in
high- or midrange risk areas for hepatitis B and that the virus causes up to 80
percent of the world's liver-cancer deaths.
. . . . The materials claim a need for mass
vaccination in the United States despite low endemicity in most of the nation:
Certain narrow populations, such as Alaska natives, Southeast Asian immigrants,
gay men and others experience moderate to high levels of infection.
. . . . But according to the CDC's figures, among
infants, only those born to mothers infected with the virus are at any
measurable risk for the disease. Belkin estimates that his daughter, like other
infants of the average American family, had a .001 percent chance of contracting
the disease. Of the 279 total reported cases of hepatitis B infection in
American children under the age of 14 (as documented in a 1996 issue of MMWR),
only 54 of those cases occurred in the newborn to 1-year-old age group in a
total of 3.9 million babies born in the United States that year.
. . . . The need for American children born to
families without the disease to receive the vaccine hinges, in most cases, upon
their likelihood of engaging in promiscuous sexual behavior or sharing drug
needles later in life. But even if this is satisfactory justification, Belkin
notes, no conclusive evidence exists to indicate that immunity lasts beyond 10
years. Therefore, the inoculation would appear to protect only the sexually
promiscuous and heroin-addicted under age 10.
. . . . Despite the unified rhetoric of government
and industry officials, the roar of the victim mice is being picked up by
mainstream media. Reports on the possible dangers of hepatitis B vaccinations
have appeared not only on 20/20 but in the Washington Post, the Chicago Tribune,
Gannet News Service and Science, among others.
. . . . Infants are not the only ones in whom
adverse events or reactions have been reported. Dunbar began to look into
adverse reactions when her adult brother and her lab assistant each experienced
autoimmune or neurological dysfunction after they were injected with the vaccine
as professional precautions. Dunbar tells Insight that she personally hears each
day from an average of four people who believe they were injured as a result of
the hepatitis B vaccine.
. . . . One of them was Eric Jeffries, a former
Fulbright scholar at Cambridge and a young father on his way to the top in the
banking industry. He tells Insight that he was vaccinated prior to a tropical
vacation but four days later began experiencing severe autoimmune dysfunctions
ranging from fever, headaches and extreme pain to rashes and gastrointestinal
troubles. He immediately thought of the vaccine, but a phone call to his doctor
assured him the vaccine is not associated with adverse reactions. As his
condition deteriorated, he was tested for everything from rheumatoid arthritis
to fibromyalgia and AIDS. Finally, a doctor seconded his suspicion that,
whatever the disorder, it had been triggered by the vaccine. Today, no longer
able to work or even to walk, Jeffries still is looking for answers.
. . . . Betty Fluck was told that she needed to
have the hepatitis B vaccine when she returned to her work as a registered nurse
after taking a few years off to raise her three boys. Just hours before the
vaccine was administered, she was helping to run her three school-age sons'
soccer games with her husband, a coach, and was working on her yellow belt in
karate. On Dec. 2, 1997, she received the vaccine. Twelve hours later she
suffered severe pain, a high fever, swollen joints and respiratory problems.
Until her fever broke, Fluck lost the use of her legs. "At the time," she says,
"the damage was already done or started. I didn't know at that point what the
whole disease process was."
. . . . As did so many other victims, Fluck went
from doctor to doctor until one finally told her that the symptoms might
indicate a reaction to the hepatitis B vaccine. But vaccine manufacturers
repeatedly told her that they never had seen problems like this. As months
passed, Fluck needed a walker, and by September 1998 she required full leg
braces and elbow crutches to get around. Now she receives weekly intravenous
gamma-globulin treatments for severe demyelination (a progressive condition in
which the sheath surrounding and protecting human nerves deteriorates).
. . . . Since Fluck's brief appearance on the 20/20
episode, she says, "Every day I hear people with stories that are just like mine
and doctors telling them it can't be the vaccine. Essentially, we're write-offs.
Just the casualties of war [on disease]."
. . . . This month Fluck testified before an
Indiana state Senate hearing considering whether to set a July 1999 mandate for
all children to receive the vaccine before they enter kindergarten. As a result
of the hearings, the committee tabled the bill and voted unanimously to
recommend that the vaccine be administered only at the parents' request.
. . . . For now, the federal health bureaucracy
devotes its resources primarily to expanding and enforcing its mass vaccination
policies rather than to evaluating adverse reports. Samuel Katz of the Vaccine
Initiative of the Infectious Disease Society of America called Insight from the
Atlanta airport enroute from the February 1999 ACIP conference where his
colleague, Chen, of the CDC's National Immunization Program, presented an update
on hepatitis B recommendations. Katz said the committee "reaffirmed the value of
the vaccine" and of "moving ahead with the program to vaccinate children,
teenagers and adults at risk."
. . . . But the French and Canadian governments
already are funding research on hepatitis B adverse-event reports, says Dunbar.
"There are many of us who are not going to go away." And Congress should take
notice.
http://www.insightmag.com/archive/investiga/apec1.shtml
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