Pakistan Provocation polio Polio Vaccine Failures Sabin OPV vaccines
by DANIEL ERIC KSON (NATURAL NEWS)
http://www.naturalnews.com/032587_polio_vaccines_Pakistan.html
(June 2, 2011) In the last year, as Pakistan has lost favor with the US and
UNICEF, polio virus has paralyzed increasing numbers of Pakistani youth, casting
doubt on the good intentions of those who fight polio.
To make matters worse, most of the new cases have occurred in children already
vaccinated.
Is the US attempting to fight Pakistan by tainting inoculation doses?
The medical data suggests that the vaccine has changed in its efficacy against
the disease. Last year, there were 136 cases of infected youth, and 107 of these
had been administered multiple polio vaccinations.
These figures are the largest the Polio Global Eradication Initiative has seen
since 2006, despite heavy treatment in the most affected areas, South Punjab and
the Federally Administered Tribal Area (FATA).
Even the more peaceful provinces have suffered. As reported by the Pakistan
Daily times, there were 10 cases of polio in Sindh province in the first four
months of the year.
The article morbidly notes each of the cases, citing the children's names and
the number of vaccinations they had received before the onset of polio virus:
"Mohammad Asif, aged 40 months with all his limbs affected... was administered
oral anti polio vaccine (OPV) four times... The three and a half years old
Ameera... had one of her arms and legs paralyzed... Ameera was first of the
confirmed cases of polio during the current year."
As one might imagine, Pakistani citizens are beginning to suspect foul play. Dr.
Mazhar Khamisani, a manager of the health department in Sindh has noted that he
has seen Pakistani parents begin to refuse treatment and do so on repeated
occasions. And how could we, when confronted with the facts, ask them to do
otherwise?
The type of polio vaccine administered may be a significant cause of the
problem. There are two main types of polio vaccine, Inactivated Polio Vaccine (IPV)
and Oral Polio Vaccine (OPV). The first of these uses dead cells of
poliomyelitis.
IPV was developed by Jonas Salk before being disseminated throughout the US in
the 1950s, to quell the outbreak that was then infecting roughly 22,000 American
children each year. Within 20 years, polio was all but forgotten in America.
However, The Polio Global Eradication Initiative chooses to use the second type,
Oral Polio Vaccine. OPV was developed by Albert Sabin and runs the virus through
a number of animals in order to weaken the strain rather than kill it.
The weakened strain is then injected into children, whose immune systems are
strong enough to defeat the infection. It is easy to see how treatment could
backfire, in cases when the strain has not been weakened enough for human
contact.
Despite the fact that it was not widely disseminated in the US, possibly because
of the dangers associated with its use, OPV is the vaccine of choice in
countries like Pakistan because, soon after vaccination, weakened virus can be
found in children's fecal matter. Immunity can then spread to communal water
sources and increase immunity for greater portions of the population. So even if
parents refuse OPV treatment, their children may still receive it indirectly
through the drinking water.
Historically, there have been cases of outbreak when a weakened strain becomes
strong enough to infect rather than immunize. In these cases, OPV is typically
replaced by IPV because it is no longer considered safe. But OPV is still the
vaccine of choice in Pakistan, even as it continues to prove its potency to the
Polio Global Eradication Initiative. Why?
One explanation is that researchers have not collected enough data yet to say
with certainty whether the vaccine is causing the outbreak. But how much longer
will this go on?
It is equally plausible that the vaccine is not being handled properly. If the
requisite temperature is not maintained, the vaccine can be rendered completely
ineffectual.
In remote areas, where power can be disrupted for hours and even days, the OPV
treatments may have exceeded their temperature requirements and consequently
lost their usefulness from temperature fluctuations.
But surely, medical practitioners would know if their vaccine had potentially
been compromised.
Unfortunately, both of these possibilities point to some kind of negligence.
Either the doctors administering treatment are aware that their vaccine may not
have the capacity to immunize their patients, or the people in charge are
disseminating harmful vaccinations, then playing the victim to the
'inconclusiveness of the data' when it is clear that something has gone awry.
The Polio Global Eradication Initiative receives the majority of its funding
through UNICEF and the US, both of which are beginning to look at Pakistan as an
enemy, rather than a friend. Are political relations trickling down to the
medical practitioners who are supposedly fighting a disease, not a country?