Shared Joy
Jedi Council Member
Hi,
I learned about several cases of child gastroenteritis coming out of the blue, but never occurred to me that those kids could have been infected from vaccinated kids.
Maybe this article is also worth reading:
http://www.greenmedinfo.com/blog/how-vaccinated-kids-infect-non-vaccinated
quote:
Offit's Rotateq, which consists of 5 reassorted human-bovine retroviruses (yes, that means GMO), was believed to be a safer alternative when it was approved by the FDA in 2006, but newly published research reveals his vaccine suffers from the same exact deadly problems.
Published this month in Vaccine and titled, "Intussusception risk after RotaTeq vaccination: Evaluation from worldwide spontaneous reporting data using a self-controlled case series approach", the study evaluated worldwide reports to the manufacturer of Rotateq up to May 2014, adjusting for the phenomenon of under-reporting. The study found that the relative risk of intussception associated with the administration of Rotateq vaccine increases "3-7 days following vaccination, mainly after the first dose and marginally after the second and third doses." The increase in relative risk reached 3.45 fold in the period 3-to-7 days after the first dose, relative to the 15-30-day period control period.
FWIW
I learned about several cases of child gastroenteritis coming out of the blue, but never occurred to me that those kids could have been infected from vaccinated kids.
Maybe this article is also worth reading:
http://www.greenmedinfo.com/blog/how-vaccinated-kids-infect-non-vaccinated
quote:
Offit's Rotateq, which consists of 5 reassorted human-bovine retroviruses (yes, that means GMO), was believed to be a safer alternative when it was approved by the FDA in 2006, but newly published research reveals his vaccine suffers from the same exact deadly problems.
Published this month in Vaccine and titled, "Intussusception risk after RotaTeq vaccination: Evaluation from worldwide spontaneous reporting data using a self-controlled case series approach", the study evaluated worldwide reports to the manufacturer of Rotateq up to May 2014, adjusting for the phenomenon of under-reporting. The study found that the relative risk of intussception associated with the administration of Rotateq vaccine increases "3-7 days following vaccination, mainly after the first dose and marginally after the second and third doses." The increase in relative risk reached 3.45 fold in the period 3-to-7 days after the first dose, relative to the 15-30-day period control period.
FWIW