Don't Give This to Your Daughter Despite What Your Doctor
Says
by
Joseph Mercola
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by Joseph Mercola: The
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It's been
four years since Gardasil debuted as a blockbuster vaccine with
sales that rocketed to over $1.1 billion in its first nine months.
Touted as a
wonder vaccine that would end cervical cancer, it was supposed to
be the savior of both mankind and Merck's Vioxx-damaged bottom line.
But now, according
to CNN Money, it's a dud.
It just posted
$219 million in sales. But in the pharma world, that's a paltry
pittance, nothing short of an in-flight explosion that's caused
Merck stock to drop 3 percent, with analysts and investors scrambling
to figure out what went wrong.
So what happened?
How did a vaccine
that was supposed to be Merck's beacon for higher profits in the
21st Century go from flagship to flop?
The Science
Speaks for Itself
CNN Money calls
Gardasil's crash a "design flaw" and faults the economy, puritanical
parents, bad press, and Merck itself for contributing to the fallout.
The article
ends with the hypothesis: "Or, maybe people just aren't ready
for a cancer vaccine when it's for a sexually transmitted disease."
I think they're
way off the mark.
The real reason
Gardasil is a flop is that people have become educated about this
vaccine.
They've looked
at the science and weighed the risks vs. the supposed benefits,
and have made a choice not to get it for themselves or their children.
The word is
out: despite what the CDC would have you believe, Gardasil's safety
record is in serious question. As of September 28, 2010, the Vaccine
Adverse Events Reporting System (VAERS) has more than 18,000
Gardasil-related adverse events listed in it, including
at least 65 deaths.
As a vaccine
used in the developed world, the science speaks for itself: Gardasil
can't and never will replace Pap smears, which are the
reason that the incidence of cervical cancer is so low in the United
States after decades of including pap smears in routine medical
care for women.
Today, cervical
cancer is not even in the top 10 cancers that kill American women
every year.
As a vaccine
for children, it doesn't make sense to vaccinate to try to prevent
an infection that is cleared from your body without any negative
effects within two years in most healthy persons, and is not transmitted
in a school setting like other airborne diseases that are easily
transmitted in crowded conditions.
Gardasil is
designed to prevent only two of at least 15 strains of HPV that
can lead to cervical cancer in those who do not clear the virus
from their body within two years and become chronically infected.
There is also
some evidence that Gardasil-induced immunity may wane after about
five years. Pre-licensure clinical trials did not follow young girls
or women for decades to find out if the vaccine does, in fact, prevent
cervical cancer.
What went wrong
with Gardasil is that this may be a vaccine that set many more health
care consumers on a course of self-education that helped them make
an informed decision about whether or not to take it and there
are several good reasons why many are deciding NOT to take it.
Science vs.
Politics
First, the
science: Peer-reviewed journal articles widely available on the
Internet show that Gardasil is not what it was made out to be in
the "one-less" TV commercials that jumped into people's living rooms
a few years ago.
Consumers now
know that:
- Gardasil
is NOT a cancer vaccine. It is simply a vaccine for two strains
of human papillomaviruses (HPVs) that in some instances can lead
to cancer in some women (Gardasil's other two HPV strains are
for genital warts, which don't cause cancer).
- Since there
are at least 15 HPV strains that can lead to cancer, Gardasil-vaccinated
girls can still get cervical cancer from other 13 HPV strains
not contained in the vaccine.
- The vaccine
doesn't work if you've already been infected with the HPV strains
in the vaccine.
But the politics
of this information is that you won't hear it or read it in the
mainstream press. Instead, what you get is a repetition of the politically
charged mantra that parents don't want their young daughters or
sons to get a vaccine associated with sexual behaviors, and complaints
about the vaccine's high cost.
However, the
real truth is that Gardasil's downfall has nothing to do with sex
or money.
The Truth
about HPV and Cancer
It is important
to distinguish between HPV and cancer: Just because you currently
have HPV, or may have had the infection in the past, does NOT mean
you have cancer or will get cancer.
HPV is NOT
cancer. It is a viral infection that can lead to cancer in some
people if the virus does not naturally clear from your body, as
it does for most people within two years.
Some high risk
factors for developing chronic HPV infection are:
- Smoking
- Co-infection
with herpes, Chlamydia or HIV
- Long term
birth control use
- Multiple
births
In
the US, infection with HPV is very common, and it is estimated
that about 20 million Americans have an HPV infection at any given
time. In fact, HPV is so common that most sexually active people
will get it at some time in their lives.
The important
thing to know about HPV is that in almost all cases, it clears up
on its own without any adverse health effects within two years in
most healthy people.
Genital
HPV infection that is persistent, and more likely to lead to
cancer, is most common in men and women who have had
multiple sex partners. According
to the CDC, other contributing risk factors to HPV infection
that leads to cervical cancer includes smoking, having herpes, Chlamydia
or HIV (the virus associated with AIDS), or another health problem
that makes it hard for your body to deal with infections.
Using birth
control pills for a long time (five or more years) or having given
birth to three or more children is also a risk factor.
Also, certain
populations in the US are more prone to getting cervical cancer.
According to CervicalCancerCampaign.org:
"Cervical
cancer occurs most often in certain groups of women in the United
States including African-American women, Hispanic women, white (non-Hispanic)
women living in rural New York State and northern New England, American
Indian women, and Vietnamese-American women.
- Hispanic
women have twice the rate of cervical cancer compared to non-Hispanic
white women. African-American women develop this cancer about
50 percent more than non-Hispanic white women".
These disparities
are due, in part, from poor access to health care. The women who
are most at risk for the disease are women who do not have regular
check-ups that include pap tests.
Official reports
from the CDC and WHO estimate that between 11,000 and 12,000 women
in the US are diagnosed with cervical cancer each year, and 3,800
to 4,100 die from it.
About half
of these women had never had a pap smear before
they discovered they had cervical cancer. The majority of the others
had not had a pap smear within the previous five years.
According
to the CDC's report on HPV to Congress in 2004:
"Cervical
cancer is an uncommon consequence of HPV infection in women,
especially if they are screened for cancer regularly with pap tests
and have appropriate follow-up of abnormalities.
The purpose
of screening with the pap test is to detect cervical abnormalities
that can be treated, thereby preventing progression to invasive
cervical cancer, and also to detect invasive cervical cancer at
a very early stage. If detected early and managed promptly, survival
rates for cervical cancer are over 90 percent."
A study published
in 2000 in the Archives
of Family Medicine also showed that in the US, women who are
elderly, unmarried, and uninsured are more likely to be diagnosed
at a late stage of cervical cancer.
The Truth
About Gardasil
According to
a 2006
report to the international group Program for Appropriate Technology
in Health (PATH), Gardasil and Cervarix (GlaxoSmithKline's two-strain
HPV vaccine) are only effective in young women and men (boys are
now approved to receive HPV vaccine) who have never
been infected with HPV.
According to
Merck's package insert on Gardasil, the end-point in its clinical
trials for the vaccine's efficacy, or effectiveness, was NOT cancer,
but instead was the presence, or non-presence, of vaccine-relevant
pre-cancerous lesions (CIN 2/3).
There is absolutely
no proof, and no clinical trials that show Gardasil protects
against cancer in the long-term.
In fact, in
clinical trials, Gardasil's protection against cell dysplasia leveled
off at four years, and clinical
trial participants were given a fourth dose to boost
the number of antibodies measured in the blood (immunogenicity)
of those who got the vaccine. This is the efficacy being reported
by Merck, even though the vaccine series is marketed as three shots,
not four.
And, according
to Dr. Diane Harper, a lead researcher for Gardasil, its efficacy
against genital warts is only two years.
Additionally,
according to the manufacturer's
package insert:
- Gardasil
does not eliminate the necessity for pap screening
- It does
not treat active infections, lesions or cancers
- And it may
not result in protection for all vaccinees
An outstanding
question is whether the mass use of Gardasil (and Cervarix) by all
girls and boys will put pressure on other HPV strains not
contained in the vaccines to become more dominant and perhaps more
virulent in causing cervical cancer.
The "replacement"
effect has happened with other infectious organisms that have developed
resistance to vaccines used on a mass basis, such as pertussis (whooping
cough) and pneumococcal vaccines.
The Truth
about Gardasil's Clinical Trials
Only
27 percent of girls who have received the Gardasil vaccine have
gotten all three shots in the vaccine's series. Merck blames it
on forgetfulness, and has launched a "reminder" program that contacts
vaccinees, and urges them to complete the series.
CNN
Money suggests that it has to do with the vaccine's high cost
just under $400 for a three-shot series, although some
private doctors charge up to $875 for a three-shot series.
But neither
has considered the third possibility that the reported reactions
girls are suffering after getting one or two shots of Gardasil are
so severe that they decide not to go back for more.
In any drug
trial, whether it's for a vaccine or not, safety should be the top
priority and Gardasil's safety should have been thoroughly investigated
before it was licensed and put on the market and recommended by
public health doctors for ALL young girls to use.
But Merck used
bad methodology in its pre-licensure safety studies that did NOT
contain a true placebo. In reporting systemic adverse reactions
to the vaccine, instead of using a true placebo that is not reactive
on its own, Merck used a vaccine component (aluminum) in what they
called the "placebo."
Aluminum can
cause inflammation in the body and can make your blood brain barrier
more permeable, allowing toxins to pass into your brain and cause
damage. It is definitely not appropriate to use an aluminum-containing
"placebo" to measure the reactivity of an experimental
vaccine like Gardasil that will be given to children.
Researchers
did use a saline placebo in one clinical trial, but only reported
it in reference to injection site reactions. In those comparisons,
the saline placebo had significantly fewer reactions than either
the vaccine or the aluminum-containing placebo.
When it
came to reporting the actual adverse, systemic events with the vaccine,
Merck combined the aluminum and saline placebos, thus making the
"placebo" results nearly the same as the vaccine's and impossible
to objectively judge true safety comparisons.
This encouraged
the perception that the vaccine is "safe" because the adverse events
associated with it were nearly the same as the aluminum containing
" placebo."
Another important
outcome of the clinical trials that was not properly investigated
before licensure was the potential association between the deaths
that occurred in the clinical trials and the Gardasil vaccine.
A number of
the girls who died during the trials were killed in car crashes.
Yet, Merck did not report whether the girls were the drivers or
passengers at the time of the accidents.
This
could be critical information in determining the vaccine's true
safety, since one of the most common post-marketing adverse events
is syncope (sudden fainting) as well as dizziness, seizures, and
neurological events that could have contributed to a car accident
if the person had just received a Gardasil shot and was driving
at the time of the accident.
The Truth
about Gardasil and its Thousands of Injuries and Deaths
The federal
Vaccine Adverse Events Reporting System (VAERS) has been in place
since 1986, but many experts believe that only 1 to 10 percent of
all serious health problems that occur after vaccination, including
hospitalizations, injuries and deaths, ever make it into the VAERS
database.
Most doctors
and other vaccine providers do not report vaccine-related adverse
events to VAERS even though it is a requirement under federal law
since 1986 with the passage of the National
Childhood Vaccine Injury Act.
Gardasil was
a "fast tracked" vaccine and with so little active reporting of
Gardasil-related health problems to VAERS, this means that Gardasil
should be on the red-alert list for agencies like the CDC, the FDA,
and the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP).
Yet these three
federal health agencies and medical organizations urging doctors
to give Gardasil to children and young women have joined Merck in
insisting that Gardasil is safe, despite mounting evidence to the
contrary.
Gardasil victims
and their parents have been posting
their heart breaking stories on websites.
These
tragic entries posted by Gardasil casualties is stark testify to
the fact that something isn't right with this vaccine and what
isn't right is that the list of Gardasil victims just keeps growing.
The unfortunate
fact is Merck only studied the vaccine in fewer than 1200 girls
under age 16, and most of the serious health problems and deaths
in the pre-licensure clinical trials were written off as a "coincidence."
And now, since
those adverse reactions aren't listed as possible warning signs
that the vaccine can cause harm, health officials are still ignoring
them, even while girls die and others suffer ongoing, and often
permanent, injuries and disabilities from it.
For example,
a rough
comparison of Gardasil and Menactra (a vaccine against meningitis)
adverse event reports to VAERS through November 30, 2008 revealed
that:
- Compared
to Menactra,
receipt of Gardasil is associated with at least twice
as many emergency room visit reports; 4 times
more death reports; 5 times more "did not recover"
reports; and 7 times more
"disabled" reports.
- Compared
to Menactra, receipt of Gardasil is associated with all
of the reports of blood clots. All
23 reports of blood clots following Gardasil occurred
when Gardasil was given alone without any other vaccines.
- Compared
to Menactra, receipt of Gardasil is associated with at least 4
times as many cardiac arrest reports. All 9 reports
of cardiac arrest following Gardasil occurred when Gardasil
was given alone without any other vaccines.
- Compared
to Menactra, receipt of Gardasil is associated with at least
6 times as many fainting reports
and at least 3 times as many syncope reports.
- Compared
to Menactra, receipt of Gardasil is associated with at least
4 times as many lupus reports. 27 reports
of lupus following Gardasil occurred when Gardasil was
given alone.
- Compared
to Menactra, receipt of Gardasil is associated with at least
15 times as many stroke reports. 16
reports of stroke following Gardasil occurred when Gardasil
was given alone.
- Compared
to Menactra, receipt of Gardasil is associated with at least
3 times as many syncope reports.
- Compared
to Menactra, receipt of Gardasil is associated with at least
33 times as many thrombosis reports. 34
reports of thrombosis following Gardasil occurred when
Gardasil was given alone.
- Compared
to Menactra, receipt of Gardasil is associated with at least
5 times as many sasculitis reports. 11
reports of vasculitis following Gardasil occurred when
Gardasiil was given alone.
- Compared
to Menactra, receipt of Gardasil is associated with at least
30 times as many rechallenge reports, which
involve a worsening of symptoms experienced after previous receipt
of Gardasil.
What's disturbing
about this is that these reports in all likelihood are just the
tip of the iceberg because most physicians are making their reports
to Merck, rather than to VAERS, and Merck is forwarding such poor
quality information to VAERS that the CDC and FDA can't follow up
on the majority of reports that Merck makes.
As reported
in the Journal
of the American Medical Association in August 2009, Merck made
68 percent of the reports to VAERS and 89 percent of them had information
that was too insufficient to review!
Is This a
Vaccine that You Would Want?
An editorial
in the August 19, 2009 issue of the Journal of the American Medical
Association (JAMA) commented specifically on the risks and benefits
of vaccinating with Gardasil, Merck's marketing of it, and the safety
issues that are so obvious with this drug:
"When weighing
evidence about risks and benefits, it is also appropriate
to ask who takes the risk, and who gets the benefit," the JAMA
author said.
"Patients
and the public logically expect that only medical and scientific
evidence is put on the balance. If other matters weigh
in, such as profit for a company or financial or professional
gains for physicians or groups of physicians, the balance
is easily skewed.
"The balance
will also tilt if the adverse events are not calculated
correctly."
The commentary
is so poignant that it's a wonder that the mainstream media still
hasn't' picked up on the impact of what this author is trying to
say that maybe, just maybe, people shouldn't be so quick to jump
on the Gardasil bandwagon.
The JAMA commentary
goes on to say that one of the core questions of all medical decisions
should be: When is the available information about harmful adverse
effects sufficient to conclude that the risks outweigh the
potential benefits?
It's apparent
that that question is in the minds of anyone who has really taken
the time to study this vaccine.
What happened
to Gardasil is that consumers looked at the science and lots of
them made a choice to not use this vaccine.
And that, CNN
Money, is why Gardasil is a flop.
What You Can
Do to Make a Difference
Don't sit this
one out! We need to take action NOW.
Tell your friends
and your family. Tell everyone. With a little bit of effort, we
can make big strides toward preserving our freedom to make voluntary
health decisions affecting our future, especially our children's
future.
One of the
top goals for NVIC is preserving your freedom of choice about when
to use vaccines. This non-profit charity has been fighting for your
right to make informed VOLUNTARY vaccine choices since 1982.
Mercola.com
and NVIC are dedicating Nov. 1-6, 2010 Vaccine Awareness Week in
a joint effort to raise public awareness about important vaccine
issues.
Vaccine Awareness
Week will feature a series of articles and interviews on vaccine
topics of interest to Mercola.com
newsletter subscribers and NVIC Vacine E-newsletter readers.
During this
Vaccine Awareness Week, NVIC is also launching the online NVIC
Advocacy Portal that will give you the tools you need to take
action to protect legal medical, religious and conscientious belief
exemptions to vaccination in YOUR state.
Please register
for the NVIC Advocacy Portal at www.NVICadvocacy.org
TODAY!
And while you
are at it, please
make a donation to NVIC so they can continue fighting on behalf
of all Americans to make sure we don't lose our informed consent
rights when it comes to vaccination.
Your Donations
to the NVIC help fund efforts that raise vaccine awareness, including
the following excellent vaccine resources:
For information
about legally avoiding immunizations in Canada, please see the Canadian
Vaccination Liberation website.
September
17, 2011
Copyright ©
2011 Dr. Joseph Mercola
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