- This topic has 380 replies, 21 voices, and was last updated 14 years, 5 months ago by Scarlett.
-
AuthorPosts
-
November 3, 2009 at 9:57 PM #477970November 3, 2009 at 10:12 PM #477150AecetiaParticipant
Information from September 10, 2009 re adjuvant.
There is some concern around the use of adjuvants as they can have pretty strong or delayed side effects. Flu vaccines containing adjuvants have not been approved for use in the US, so we will probably need two doses of whichever H1N1 vaccine is available here, according to Thomas Frieden, director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
http://infectiousdiseases.about.com/b/2009/09/10/h1n1-term-of-the-week-adjuvant.htm
November 3, 2009 at 10:12 PM #477319AecetiaParticipantInformation from September 10, 2009 re adjuvant.
There is some concern around the use of adjuvants as they can have pretty strong or delayed side effects. Flu vaccines containing adjuvants have not been approved for use in the US, so we will probably need two doses of whichever H1N1 vaccine is available here, according to Thomas Frieden, director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
http://infectiousdiseases.about.com/b/2009/09/10/h1n1-term-of-the-week-adjuvant.htm
November 3, 2009 at 10:12 PM #477685AecetiaParticipantInformation from September 10, 2009 re adjuvant.
There is some concern around the use of adjuvants as they can have pretty strong or delayed side effects. Flu vaccines containing adjuvants have not been approved for use in the US, so we will probably need two doses of whichever H1N1 vaccine is available here, according to Thomas Frieden, director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
http://infectiousdiseases.about.com/b/2009/09/10/h1n1-term-of-the-week-adjuvant.htm
November 3, 2009 at 10:12 PM #477766AecetiaParticipantInformation from September 10, 2009 re adjuvant.
There is some concern around the use of adjuvants as they can have pretty strong or delayed side effects. Flu vaccines containing adjuvants have not been approved for use in the US, so we will probably need two doses of whichever H1N1 vaccine is available here, according to Thomas Frieden, director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
http://infectiousdiseases.about.com/b/2009/09/10/h1n1-term-of-the-week-adjuvant.htm
November 3, 2009 at 10:12 PM #477985AecetiaParticipantInformation from September 10, 2009 re adjuvant.
There is some concern around the use of adjuvants as they can have pretty strong or delayed side effects. Flu vaccines containing adjuvants have not been approved for use in the US, so we will probably need two doses of whichever H1N1 vaccine is available here, according to Thomas Frieden, director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
http://infectiousdiseases.about.com/b/2009/09/10/h1n1-term-of-the-week-adjuvant.htm
November 3, 2009 at 10:18 PM #477155TemekuTParticipantDoes anyone have access to vaccination schedules by year or decade such that the increase in total given is apparent? It would be beneficial to correlate that data with incidence of autism.
My concern is not with vaccination per se. It is with the frequency and quantity.
In 2004 I underwent Hep A and Hep B Vaccination series and also tetanus booster in preparation for a trip to India. The first round was one shot of each mentioned, for 3 vaccines. I was o.k. until the last shot, which was the Hep A injection, and then I had an immediate reaction – nausea and shaking, just a generalized ill feeling. The second round was the Hep A and Hep B. Again, I was fine with the Hep B but definitely had a reaction to the Hep A. The third round was Hep B only and I had no problem. Since then, I have wondered about vaccination reactions.
November 3, 2009 at 10:18 PM #477323TemekuTParticipantDoes anyone have access to vaccination schedules by year or decade such that the increase in total given is apparent? It would be beneficial to correlate that data with incidence of autism.
My concern is not with vaccination per se. It is with the frequency and quantity.
In 2004 I underwent Hep A and Hep B Vaccination series and also tetanus booster in preparation for a trip to India. The first round was one shot of each mentioned, for 3 vaccines. I was o.k. until the last shot, which was the Hep A injection, and then I had an immediate reaction – nausea and shaking, just a generalized ill feeling. The second round was the Hep A and Hep B. Again, I was fine with the Hep B but definitely had a reaction to the Hep A. The third round was Hep B only and I had no problem. Since then, I have wondered about vaccination reactions.
November 3, 2009 at 10:18 PM #477690TemekuTParticipantDoes anyone have access to vaccination schedules by year or decade such that the increase in total given is apparent? It would be beneficial to correlate that data with incidence of autism.
My concern is not with vaccination per se. It is with the frequency and quantity.
In 2004 I underwent Hep A and Hep B Vaccination series and also tetanus booster in preparation for a trip to India. The first round was one shot of each mentioned, for 3 vaccines. I was o.k. until the last shot, which was the Hep A injection, and then I had an immediate reaction – nausea and shaking, just a generalized ill feeling. The second round was the Hep A and Hep B. Again, I was fine with the Hep B but definitely had a reaction to the Hep A. The third round was Hep B only and I had no problem. Since then, I have wondered about vaccination reactions.
November 3, 2009 at 10:18 PM #477771TemekuTParticipantDoes anyone have access to vaccination schedules by year or decade such that the increase in total given is apparent? It would be beneficial to correlate that data with incidence of autism.
My concern is not with vaccination per se. It is with the frequency and quantity.
In 2004 I underwent Hep A and Hep B Vaccination series and also tetanus booster in preparation for a trip to India. The first round was one shot of each mentioned, for 3 vaccines. I was o.k. until the last shot, which was the Hep A injection, and then I had an immediate reaction – nausea and shaking, just a generalized ill feeling. The second round was the Hep A and Hep B. Again, I was fine with the Hep B but definitely had a reaction to the Hep A. The third round was Hep B only and I had no problem. Since then, I have wondered about vaccination reactions.
November 3, 2009 at 10:18 PM #477990TemekuTParticipantDoes anyone have access to vaccination schedules by year or decade such that the increase in total given is apparent? It would be beneficial to correlate that data with incidence of autism.
My concern is not with vaccination per se. It is with the frequency and quantity.
In 2004 I underwent Hep A and Hep B Vaccination series and also tetanus booster in preparation for a trip to India. The first round was one shot of each mentioned, for 3 vaccines. I was o.k. until the last shot, which was the Hep A injection, and then I had an immediate reaction – nausea and shaking, just a generalized ill feeling. The second round was the Hep A and Hep B. Again, I was fine with the Hep B but definitely had a reaction to the Hep A. The third round was Hep B only and I had no problem. Since then, I have wondered about vaccination reactions.
November 3, 2009 at 10:37 PM #477170CBadParticipant[quote=Arraya]It appears there has been a possible mutation in the Ukraine. The government closed down several regions of the country to try and contain it. News has been sparse and contradictory so far. Though, it sounds as if it could be more deadly than the bug we have here as well as having some very nasty side effects. It is something to watch.
http://www.recombinomics.com/News/11030902/Ukraine_Hemor.html
The more severe manifestation of ARI cases are clearly hemorrhagic disease that fills lungs with blood and produces bleeding at all orifices, which are stark reminders of 1918 pandemic cases which were also linked to a swine H1N1.[/quote]Some experts believe that many of the 1918 flu deaths that presented with these symptoms were with people with undiagnosed TB. Ukraine still has a high TB case rate.
November 3, 2009 at 10:37 PM #477338CBadParticipant[quote=Arraya]It appears there has been a possible mutation in the Ukraine. The government closed down several regions of the country to try and contain it. News has been sparse and contradictory so far. Though, it sounds as if it could be more deadly than the bug we have here as well as having some very nasty side effects. It is something to watch.
http://www.recombinomics.com/News/11030902/Ukraine_Hemor.html
The more severe manifestation of ARI cases are clearly hemorrhagic disease that fills lungs with blood and produces bleeding at all orifices, which are stark reminders of 1918 pandemic cases which were also linked to a swine H1N1.[/quote]Some experts believe that many of the 1918 flu deaths that presented with these symptoms were with people with undiagnosed TB. Ukraine still has a high TB case rate.
November 3, 2009 at 10:37 PM #477705CBadParticipant[quote=Arraya]It appears there has been a possible mutation in the Ukraine. The government closed down several regions of the country to try and contain it. News has been sparse and contradictory so far. Though, it sounds as if it could be more deadly than the bug we have here as well as having some very nasty side effects. It is something to watch.
http://www.recombinomics.com/News/11030902/Ukraine_Hemor.html
The more severe manifestation of ARI cases are clearly hemorrhagic disease that fills lungs with blood and produces bleeding at all orifices, which are stark reminders of 1918 pandemic cases which were also linked to a swine H1N1.[/quote]Some experts believe that many of the 1918 flu deaths that presented with these symptoms were with people with undiagnosed TB. Ukraine still has a high TB case rate.
November 3, 2009 at 10:37 PM #477786CBadParticipant[quote=Arraya]It appears there has been a possible mutation in the Ukraine. The government closed down several regions of the country to try and contain it. News has been sparse and contradictory so far. Though, it sounds as if it could be more deadly than the bug we have here as well as having some very nasty side effects. It is something to watch.
http://www.recombinomics.com/News/11030902/Ukraine_Hemor.html
The more severe manifestation of ARI cases are clearly hemorrhagic disease that fills lungs with blood and produces bleeding at all orifices, which are stark reminders of 1918 pandemic cases which were also linked to a swine H1N1.[/quote]Some experts believe that many of the 1918 flu deaths that presented with these symptoms were with people with undiagnosed TB. Ukraine still has a high TB case rate.
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.