Swine Flu Vaccination: An Injured Subject Speaks Out as Researchers Deny Link
By Nina Bautz
Adventures in Autism - 2009-08-21
A participant in the German H1N1 vaccine trials reports serious adverse
reactions, including coughing up blood, but the lead researcher blows it off.
Yet another story of problems in vaccine safety studies that is being ignored.
Why test a vaccine exactly, if you already have decided what the outcomes can or
cannot be? Apparently the [German] doctor [Herr Doktor] will only accept
'redness and swelling at the injection site' as a side effect.
The article does not say which version of the vaccine he got.
Munich – A harmless prick – and thereby possibly save thousands of people. This
is what several hundreds of volunteers thought, who each collected a payment of
250 Euro for their participation in the study of the swine flu vaccine trial at
the Ludwig-Maximilians-University.
One of them has now quit the trial: The Diploma-businessman Axel Sch. (40). He
claims : "The vaccination has made me ill! – the test is irresponsible.” He says
that within a few hours after the vaccination, on August 10, he had sweat on his
forehead. "I felt totally beat. On the third day, my kidneys and head were
aching and I got a fever. I then had a coughing fit - and the wash basin was
suddenly red - it was blood!“
LMU-medical researcher Frank von Sonnenburg, who is in charge of the
country-wide study, doesn’t consider these accounts credible. He says that such
side-effects cannot be related to the vaccine. He does not deny that, as with
other flu-vaccinations, flu-like symptoms may occur as a reaction to the
vaccination. "Additionally, there may be light pain, redness or swelling at the
injection site."
"Obviously many of the test subjects would have side-effects. We do such a study
precisely because we want to find out any possible side-effects. If flu cases
were to become more severe and we had not done any tests, – there would be a big
outcry by everyone."
Was the vaccine admitted too quickly to the study? The fact is that in this
composition, the vaccine has not yet been applied to humans. The Federal Health
Minister Ulla Schmidt explained on Wednesday that she had felt put under
pressure by the pharmaceutical industry from the beginning. Criticism is being
voiced with increasing frequency. The Paul-Ehrlich-Institute points out that
side-effects to this vaccine are to be more expected than in connection with a
normal flu-vaccine. The Paediatric Association points to a possibly increased
number of unknown side-effects.
British researchers even warn about a neurological disorder known as the
Guillain-Barré-Syndrome. They point to a vaccination campaign with a similar
swine flu vaccine carried out in the USA in 1976, which resulted in the deaths
of 25 people.
Probably because of this, the USA only test vaccines without so-called
adjuvants. These lead to greater side-effects, explains study leader Frank von
Sonnenburg. "The adjuvants produce more anti-bodies, which is why the body’s
defensive reaction is also greater." Kidney pains and bloody cough of the kind
Axel Sch. Experienced were however not to be expected, even with this adjuvant.
"We conduct a clean study."
Axel Sch. however insists that his complaints were a result of the vaccination.
"Surely it is no coincidence that they occurred directly after the vaccination."
He criticizes the university, saying that he was not properly informed prior to
the study. He said that for three days he was flat on his back during this heat.
"When I phoned the LMU, they simply asked me the question needed to fill in
their form and told me to see my doctor." He now wants the medical costs and
loss of earnings compensated by the medical insurance covering the trial.
Axel Sch. has participated in medical trials even when he was a student. He had
also had good experiences with an LMU flu-vaccine study. "This is the reason why
I immediately consented when they asked me if I would test the new vaccine."
Now his trust in research is gone, he is quitting the vaccine trial. In October
he will fly to Latin America for professional reasons. He had looked forward to
traveling unconcerned – by then he would have received the second of three
vaccinations. "I’m not fearful just the same – I don’t belong to an at risk
group. Also, the swine flu can’t possibly be as bad as the side-effects of the
vaccine."
Translation into English by Erwin Alber
Original article in German