On Date 2, Taxpayer had a physician advised double mastectomy to address medical conditions X and Y. On Date 3, Taxpayer gave birth to a healthy child. Due to her double mastectomy, Taxpayer was unable to breastfeed her c
According to a report out of Germany, German soldiers have been given an additive-free swine flu shot that doesn't contain mercury, squalene, or any of the other dangerous adjuvants associated with the vaccine, raising questions as to why this version of the shot has not been made available to the general population.
An article that when translated is entitled, German soldiers gets non poisonous vaccine, explains how 250,000 German troops have been given a "friendly" vac... (more)
...Speaking of ethics, Dr. Nancy Snyderman was implicated in an insider trading scam in 1999.
“ABC-TV’s medical correspondent is returning more than $50,000 to a health-care Web site after violating insider-trading rules by selling shares too soon after the site went public,” the New York Times reported on August 21, 1999. “Dr. Snyderman’s husband bought 1,650 shares of DrKoop.com, based in Austin, during a June 8 initial public offering for $9 a share and sold it one month later ... (more)
Everyone has to be responsible for their own decisions. If you are afraid of catching the H1N1 flu this year. You may be pondering whether to get a flu shot or using the
H1N1 FluMist. The FluMist is administered into your nostrils. Before making your final decision, you may want to ask some questions and think of some consequences to taking the H1N1 FluMist nasal spray.
The H1N1 FluMist is made with "live" virus. This means that the H1N1 flu will be a part of the nasal spra... (more)
OLYMPIA, Wash. - The state Health Department will allow more mercury than usual in some of the swine flu vaccine to make sure shots are available to pregnant women and children under age three.
The department says mercury-free swine flu vaccine may not always be in stock, so it wants to give people the choice of using vaccine with the mercury preservative called thimerosal, which is believed to be safe.
The Centers for Disease Control's Web site says the following a... (more)
A couple of weeks ago, ABC's Dr. Oz pulled a propaganda stunt by lauding the virtues of the H1N1 vaccine and apparently getting injected with it live on his show. However, when asked by a CNN anchor if he would be making his kids take it, the doc was less gung-ho. Perhaps he knows what's actually in the vaccine, namely mercury, squalene and a host of other nasties.
... (more)
It is so obvious, they are spreading the virus through these nasal sprays and turning these hospitals into incubation chambers, I can't believe they are going to get away with this scam and people are going to rush to be injected with live viruses and shots full of mercury and squalene. God help us. - Chris, IL
Doctors and hospitals are expressing concern that the FluMist vaccine could endanger people because it contains live H1N1 virus, unlike the injectable shot that contains antibodies. With no less than 60 per cent of the U.S. population immunodeficient in one way or another, could FluMist be a pandemic waiting to happen?
Hospitals in Colorado and elsewhere are shunning the FluMist H1N1 vaccine, a nasal spray that contains live swine flu virus, because of fears it could infect ... (more)
This blatantly obvious fact is of course not being reported anywhere.
Both Nassau and Suffolk's health departments and at least one Long Island hospital got their first shipments of the swine flu vaccine Monday - 1,000 doses each.
The counties are targeting high-risk groups determined by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention: healthy people between the ages of 2 and 24 and those up to age 49 who are caregivers of children under 6 months old.
The first shipments include only the live flu vaccine delivered in a nasal mist,... (more)
Do you see what they did here? They are openly going to give everyone the live virus under the guise of fighting the flu, this is going to turn these hospitals into incubation chambers. - Chris
Billions of tax dollars have been paid to giant pharmaceutical companies. Millions of doses of vaccine are on their way to huge warehouses across the country. Thousands of health workers are poised to start injecting into arms and squirting up noses.
The question is: When the swine flu vaccine finally arrives this week, will Americans line up to get it?
As the federal government launches the most ambitious inoculation campaign in U.S. history, several surveys indic... (more)
A survey conducted by a leading consumer watchdog group has found that the vast majority of parents in the U.S. say they will not vaccinate their children against H1N1 flu, citing concerns over the safety of the vaccine.
The results of the poll have been published by the independent, nonprofit organization Consumers Union in their magazine Consumer Reports, one of the top-ten-circulation magazines in the country.
A survey conducted by Harvard University has found that only one third of adults trust the safety of the imminently available H1N1 vaccine.
Just 40% of respondents said they would take the swine flu shot in the poll carried out by Harvard Opinion Research Program at Harvard School of Public Health.
The study, funded under a cooperative agreement with the ... (more)
A FORMER federal health minister has dismissed as "crackpots and conspiracy theorists" those who would actively discourage Australians from having their swine flu vaccine.
Michael Wooldridge says the anti-vaccination movement was leading a push against Australians taking up the offer of the free vaccine, but their opposition was putting more people at risk.
"We are of course dealing with the first pandemic of the internet age which poses its own problems," says Dr W... (more)
Canada is protecting the drugmaker of swine flu vaccine from lawsuits over potential side effects, Canada's top doctor has confirmed.
Dr. David Butler-Jones told a media teleconference Wednesday that Canada will shield GalxoSmithKline in the unlikely event there are problems with the vaccine, but it will not shield health practitioners who make mistakes in administering the shot.
"We're not obviously anticipating problems with it, but indemnification for a vaccine i... (more)
In preparation for the distinct possibility of a mandatory vaccination of the American public, a county in Minnesota will hold a mass vaccination drill today dubbed “Operation Big Shot.” County officials expect “300 volunteers to conduct the drill alongside about 200 health department staff members. They emphasized that staffers will not dispense actual vaccinations,” according to The Star Tribune.
A drive-thru vaccination in Massachusetts, 2008. Is Minnesota preparing for th... (more)
(CBS) - Health care workers are planning to take to the streets Tuesday at a rally in front of the Albany, N.Y. state capitol to protest mandatory vaccination.
The rally is intended to call for "freedom of choice in vaccination and health care" and to protest mandatory vaccination for influenza and the H1N1 swine flu. "This vaccine has not been clinically tested to the same degree as the regular flu vaccine," T... (more)
Despite a planned rally in Albany Tuesday to protest a state regulation requiring health care workers be vaccinated against influenza — both seasonal and swine flu — New York’s top public health official predicts dissenters will ultimately extinguish their anger and roll up their sleeves.
The regulation, which was approved in August, comes with a stinging addendum: Get vaccinated or get fired.
But some nurses and many other health care providers say the regulation ... (more)
B.C. might suspend the seasonal flu shots as early as today, in the wake of a Canadian study that suggests people who get the flu vaccine are twice as likely to contract the H1N1 virus.
Several news outlets reported the preliminary findings of the study, which is still under peer review. Researchers found that those who received the seasonal flu vaccine in the past were more likely to catch H1N1.
While the research was initially met with much skepticism from health ... (more)
The government plans to rush through measures allowing people with suspected mental health issues to be quickly detained because of fears over staff shortages in any forthcoming swine flu outbreak, it has been revealed.
The temporary changes to the Mental Health Act, as laid out in an unusually short consultation lasting just one month, would mean it would only take one doctor, rather than two, to have a person sectioned and put on medication without their consent.