Guest guest Posted June 20, 2003 Report Share Posted June 20, 2003 So can anyone tell me what else causes tetnus? Just curious. Sally > " Tetanus Continues to Pop up in U.S. " > Scripps News Service (www.shns.com) (06/19/03); Bowman, Lee > > Of note, the CDC found that just half of all tetanus > infections in the three-year period under consideration were caused by > puncture wounds--the cause most commonly associated with the disease. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 20, 2003 Report Share Posted June 20, 2003 Scratches, severe lacerations, infected umbilical cords in newborns can all be sources of tetanus infections. Randall Neustaedter OMD, LAc Classical Medicine Center 1779 Woodside Rd #201C Redwood City, CA 94061 650 299-9170 Subscribe to my free email newsletter by clicking on this link www.cure-guide.com Author of The Vaccine Guide, North Atlantic Books Re: IMMUNIZATION NEWS > So can anyone tell me what else causes tetnus? Just curious. > > Sally > > > " Tetanus Continues to Pop up in U.S. " > > Scripps News Service (www.shns.com) (06/19/03); Bowman, Lee > > > > Of note, the CDC found that just half of all tetanus > > infections in the three-year period under consideration were caused by > > puncture wounds--the cause most commonly associated with the disease. > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 30, 2003 Report Share Posted July 30, 2003 U.S. IMMUNIZATION NEWS " Anthrax vs. the Flu " Boston Globe (www.boston.com/globe) (07/29/03) P. C1; , While state governments are cutting health programs across the board in order to balance budgets during an extended declining market, state health workers are not necessarily losing out, as federal money has been coming in for states to begin running emergency preparedness programs, many of which deal directly in health-related fields because of the threat of bioterrorist attacks. Health officials, even those being switched from one role to another, are voicing their concern that many leading diseases like heart disease, cancer, and even influenza are dropping out of the spotlight. Massachusetts, for example, has cut its adult immunization programs against pneumonia, hepatitis A, and hepatitis B, helping the state to drop its public health budget by 30 percent in just two years; yet it has gained $21 million in federal funds to expand response networks for possible bioterrorist attacks with substances like anthrax and smallpox, two diseases that have not been present in Massachusetts for a half century. As a result, state public health divisions are no longer as prepared for diagnosing outbreaks of more common diseases, such as tuberculosis or influenza, and they are more ready to deal with the unexpected, such as the threat of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) and, in recent summers, of West Nile virus. " Vaccines Cycling to Teens: Adolescence Is the Time for Routine Prevention " USA Today (www.usatoday.com) (07/29/03) P. 7D; Manning, Anita The potential availability of four new vaccines for teenagers by 2010 could make the vaccine sector a bigger part of medical practice, according to Aventis Pasteur vice president of medical affairs Decker. The diphtheria-tetanus vaccine might be joined by a whooping cough booster, a better meningococcal vaccine, a herpes inoculation, and a human papillomavirus vaccine. A subcommittee on adolescent immunization has been created by the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices to consider the development of such products and their eventual use. Two obstacles to greater teenager vaccine use are cost and parents' wariness about inoculating their children against sexually transmitted diseases. " Adults Can't Be Poky About Getting Their Vaccinations " Detroit Free Press (www.freep.com) (07/29/03); Gerencher, Medical experts recommend that adults keep their vaccinations current. According to Janis Hootman, president of the National Association of School Nurses, many adults have the false impression that vaccinations are exclusively for young children when, in fact, adults are just as susceptible to preventable diseases such as tetanus and diphtheria. The Centers for Disease Control reports that 70 percent of U.S. tetanus and diphtheria cases in the last two decades were among people 40 or older. Indeed, U.S. adults over age 60 run a higher risk of suffering from tetanus because they did not receive regular boosters either as an adult or a child. Hootman says adults need to recognize their vulnerability to these diseases. In addition to tetanus, experts recommend that adults that have not yet had or been vaccinated against chickenpox be immunized. " Whooping Cough at 87 Cases " ton Post and Courier (SC) (www.charleston.net) (07/29/03) P. 1A; ez, Ray; Langley, Lynne The total number of confirmed or probable cases of whooping cough in South Carolina is now at 87, according to South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control epidemiologist Ball. town Pediatric Center Dr. Hletko notes that the outbreak is weak and has caused no hospitalizations; children diagnosed with the illness spend five days at home before returning to school to prevent further spread. Prevention measures include covering mouth and nose when coughing and sneezing, avoiding people with symptoms, and finishing prescribed antibiotics. People at greatest risk of acquiring the illness are children under the age of six months, because they have not been fully vaccinated. " VaxGen Aims to Make It " San Francisco Business Times (www.sanfrancisco.bcentral.com) (06/27/03); Levine, S. An $11 million manufacturing facility, based in South San Francisco, Calif., will produce VaxGen's anthrax vaccine as well as its AIDS vaccine, which failed in clinical trials earlier this year but still has potential for the company. The facility can also produce VaxGen's other products. The plant serves another purpose for VaxGen--as a training facility for workers intended to transfer to its new manufacturing facility in South Korea, part of a joint venture called Celltrion. VaxGen purposely designed the facility for easy reconfiguration as its manufacturing needs change, and the facility has a large amount of expansion space available. VaxGen currently has a $16 million National Institutes of Health contract to develop a safer anthrax vaccine, and the company plans to compete for two additional biodefense contracts. A successful outcome could lead the company into profitability next year. INTERNATIONAL IMMUNIZATION NEWS " Health Agency Aims to Wipe out Polio by 2005 " Atlanta Journal-Constitution (www.accessatlanta.com/ajc) (07/30/03) P. 3A; Shoichet, E. In its bid to rid the world of polio by 2005, the World Health Organization (WHO) intends to vaccinate some 175 million children against the disease in 2003 alone, starting with campaigns in Egypt, India, Nigeria, and Pakistan. The endeavor will be led by Dr. Heymann, the man credited with quickly organizing the global response to severe acute respiratory syndrome and containing that ailment. The agency states that all but 2 percent of the 235 reported polio cases in 2003 have been located in Nigeria, India, and Pakistan, while a few cases have been reported in Egypt, Afghanistan, Niger, and Somalia. When the WHO began its eradication campaign in 1988, there were 350,000 cases of polio in 125 countries, so the current low levels are a testament to the agency's effectiveness in some of the most difficult regions of the world, both in terms of geography and politics. " Angola: Polio Vaccination Campaign Reached the Whole Country " Africa News Service (www.allafrica.com) (07/28/03) All of Angola received the poliomyelitis vaccine during a recent national vaccination campaign. Previous vaccination efforts in the country have been less successful due to widespread fighting. The last polio case was reported in Angola in 2001, but the country will continue polio vaccination campaigns in hopes of completely eliminating the disease by 2005. The vaccine campaign targets displaced people within Angola as well as populations from neighboring countries who have entered Angola. " S. African AIDS Vaccine Research Body Calls for Doubling of Budget " BBC Worldwide Monitoring (www.monitor.bbc.co.uk) (07/30/03) Dr. Tim Tucker, director of the South African AIDS Vaccine Initiative (SAAVI) says that it would cost 3 billion to 4 billion rand to create a mass production facility in South Africa for an AIDS vaccine. SAAVI is investigating several vaccine technologies, including a DNA candidate-vaccine in animal toxicity and an MVA candidate now in manufacturing. Tucker believes that a successful vaccine will be ready in seven to 10 years, though SAAVI might not be its developer. Sites must be prepared for phase three clinical trials, and business plans for SAAVI products and a national plan for a vaccine program rollout must be developed. SAAVI gets money from the national departments of health and of science and technology, as well as Eskom, the European Union, the U.S. National Institutes of Health, and international organizations. " Winning War on Cervical Cancer " Montreal Gazette (www.canada.com/montreal) (07/29/03) P. A10; Laucius, Joanne Franco, director of the cancer epidemiology unit at McGill University, believes that a viable vaccine could be in the works that prevents human papillomavirus (HPV), a common sexually transmitted disease (STD) that often leads to cervical cancer in women. Franco is leading a study of 12,000 women in Montreal and Newfoundland, Canada, that aims to prove a new screening method is a better predictor of HPV than the annual Pap smears that are the current standard. At the same time, researchers are moving ahead with a vaccine against HPV that could reach the market in just five years and could be administered to children between the ages of nine years and 12 years to ward off the illness. " East Africa: Region's Health Ministers Sign Protocol to Prevent Epidemics " Africa News Service (www.allafrica.com) (07/28/03) Health ministry representatives from six nations in Africa's Great Lakes region have signed a protocol to cooperate in preventing and controlling epidemics in the area, through epidemiological surveillance, laboratories, and communication systems, as well as the monitoring of drug resistance, vaccination, sanitation, social mobilization, and safe water supply. World Health Organization (WHO) regional director Dr. G. Sambo, speaking at the signing of the protocol, said that the WHO will strengthen its inter-country team to give greater support to the protocol's activities, and noted that the signatory nations should concentrate on malaria, HIV/AIDS, and tuberculosis. Sambo urged constant information exchange among the nations, and Uganda third deputy Prime Minister Henry Kajura called for the creation of better information technology systems, reliable surveillance guidelines, and strengthened laboratory capacity. The protocol was first signed in 1997, and has now been reviewed and updated. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.