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Hi,

I am brand new to this listserv and on my quest to educate before vaccinating.

My question is about pneumoniacoccal vaccine. What does the vaccination

supposedly guard against? How dangerous is this sickness? How can a child catch

it? My daughter is 16 months-old and not vaccinated against it although I have

read in books that this one is one I might consider going for (vaccination, that

is) because of its particular danger. Any info/insight would be appreciated.

Thanks,

Philadelphia, PA

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Here is the text from my book The Vaccine Guide about this vaccine.

Randall Neustaedter OMD

Pneumococcal Vaccine

Streptococcus pneumonia (Pneumococcus) is a bacterium associated with many

cases of meningitis, bacteremia (systemic infection in the bloodstream),

pneumonia, and ear infections. At least 10 to 25 percent of all pneumonias

culture S pneumonia ( et al., 1988) and approximately one-quarter of

all ear infections in children are associated with S pneumonia growth

(Bluestone and Klein, 1988). It is estimated that the Pneumococcus causes

approximately 17,000 cases of invasive disease each year among children

under the age of five years (Poland, 2001). The overall case fatality rate

for bacteremia is 15-20 percent. Up to 40 percent of the 6,000 children with

pneumococcal meningitis suffer death or disability each year (Baraff et al.,

1993).

The rate of invasive disease is highest among children under two and adults

over 65 years of age. Black adults have a threefold to fivefold higher

overall incidence of pneumococcal bacteremia than whites, and the risk rises

at an earlier age (CDC, 1997). Cigarette smoking is the single most

important risk factor for the development of invasive disease (Nuorti et

al., 2000).

At least 90 serotypes of pneumococcal bacterium are known, and up to one

third of all US types demonstrate moderate to high-level resistance to

antibiotics (Breiman et al., 1994). Several pneumococcal vaccines exist,

incorporating various combinations of serotypes. In 1977, a pneumococcal

vaccine was licensed that contained 14 types of S pneumonia. This was

replaced by a vaccine of 23 types in 1980. These early polysaccharide

vaccines met with limited success. A conjugate vaccine that contains the

seven serotypes responsible for 80 percent of invasive disease in children

was licensed in 2000 for use in infants and children, and is now recommended

for use in all infants (CDC, 2000b).

Those recommended for vaccination by the CDC include people over 65 years

old and people with chronic illness (such as diabetes, heart disease,

emphysema, alcoholism, HIV, chronic liver disease, and immune deficiency

diseases). All children under two years of age and children aged two through

five years old with an increased risk of pneumococcal infection are also

advised to receive a series of pneumococcal vaccine (CDC, 2000b).

Vaccine Efficacy

The pneumococcal vaccine is notoriously ineffective. Many studies have

demonstrated a lack of effectiveness in adults (Austrian, 1981; Simberkoff

et al., 1986), including studies that failed to demonstrate efficacy in

preventing pneumonia in the targeted elderly population (Forrester et al.,

1987, Ortqvisdt et al., 1998). Other studies show an effectiveness ranging

from 40 to 100 percent. A review of randomized trials revealed that the

vaccine has a modest effect in preventing pneumonia among low-risk subjects,

and no effect in high-risk subjects (Fine et al., 1994).

A large study of conjugate pneumococcal vaccine involving 38,000 children

was conducted at a California HMO. The vaccine, which consists of only seven

serotypes, was approximately 95 percent effective in preventing invasive

disease, and 33 percent effective in preventing pneumonia (Rennels et al.,

1998). However, the vaccine reduced the incidence of ear infections by only

six percent. Another study of 1,700 children showed that ear infections

caused by one of the pneumococcal serotypes present in the vaccine were

reduced by 57 percent, but the vaccine group had 33 percent more ear

infections caused by nonvaccine serotypes compared to the control group

(Kilpi, 2000). Previous studies with the polysaccharide vaccine also showed

fewer episodes of ear infections associated with the types of S pneumonia

present in the vaccine, but children in the vaccine and control groups had

the same total number of ear infections (Karma et al., 1980; Makela et al.,

1980, 1981; Sloyer et al., 1981; Teele et al., 1981). The use of this

pneumococcal vaccine has merely caused a shift in the bacterial types

associated with childhood ear infections, as well as a shift in bacterial

serotypes that colonize the nose. Researchers have concluded that " since

non-vaccine serotypes are already present in the community as the etiology

of acute purulent OM [ear infection], it is predictable that these

non-vaccine serotypes will become more common especially in children less

than two years of age " (Pelton, 2000).

Vaccine Reactions

Early studies of the polysaccharide pneumococcal vaccine reported a higher

than expected frequency and severity of both systemic and local adverse

reactions in those receiving a second dose (Borgono et al., 1978; Lawrence

et al., 1983). One study noted that adverse reactions were more prevalent in

those recipients with higher prevaccination antibody levels (Sankilampi et

al., 1997). During the HMO trial of the children's conjugate vaccine, the

vaccinated group had twice as many seizures within three days of the vaccine

compared to the control group. The vaccinated group also had significantly

more asthma and gastritis than the control group (Black, 2000).

Pneumococcal Vaccine Facts

· Streptococcus pneumonia is associated with a large percentage of ear

infections, meningitis, pneumonia, and bacteremia in children, and invasive

disease in elderly adults.

· The vaccine is relatively ineffective in adults (it does not prevent

pneumonia), but is effective in preventing pneumonia and other invasive

disease in children.

· The vaccine does not prevent ear infections.

A Personal Strategy

Like all newly licensed vaccines, the conjugate pneumococcal vaccine for

children will only reveal its safety record and adverse reactions once large

numbers of children become part of the vaccination campaign. In the

meantime, parents cannot be well informed about the risks associated with

the vaccine. The widespread use of vaccine may cause shifts in disease

pathogens to serotypes not contained in the currently licensed vaccine, thus

leaving the overall incidence of problems caused by the bacterial group

relatively unchanged.

Elderly patients are not served well by this vaccine because of its

ineffectiveness in that age group.

Randall Neustaedter OMD, LAc

Classical Medicine Center

1779 Woodside Rd., Suite 201C

Redwood City, CA 94061

650 299-9170

Author of The Vaccine Guide, North Atlantic Books, 2002

Subscribe to my free email newsletter

at www.cure-guide.com

pnemoniacoccal(sp?)

> Hi,

> I am brand new to this listserv and on my quest to educate before

vaccinating. My question is about pneumoniacoccal vaccine. What does the

vaccination supposedly guard against? How dangerous is this sickness? How

can a child catch it? My daughter is 16 months-old and not vaccinated

against it although I have read in books that this one is one I might

consider going for (vaccination, that is) because of its particular danger.

Any info/insight would be appreciated.

> Thanks,

>

> Philadelphia, PA

>

>

>

>

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At 11:53 PM 01/15/2004 -0500, you wrote:

>Hi,

>I am brand new to this listserv and on my quest to educate before

vaccinating. My question is about pneumoniacoccal vaccine. What does the

vaccination supposedly guard against? How dangerous is this sickness? How

can a child catch it? My daughter is 16 months-old and not vaccinated

against it although I have read in books that this one is one I might

consider going for (vaccination, that is) because of its particular danger.

Any info/insight would be appreciated.

>Thanks,

>

>Philadelphia, PA

>

Are you talking about Prevnar?

REad up on my webpages and s

http://www.nccn.net/~wwithin/prevnar.htm

and

http://www.whale.to/vaccines.html

All vaccines are dangerous and it is not true that vaccines work

Sheri

--------------------------------------------------------

Sheri Nakken, R.N., MA, Classical Homeopath

Vaccination Information & Choice Network, Nevada City CA & Wales UK

$$ Donations to help in the work - accepted by Paypal account

vaccineinfo@... voicemail US 530-740-0561

(go to http://www.paypal.com) or by mail

Vaccines - http://www.nccn.net/~wwithin/vaccine.htm

Homeopathy On-Line course - http://www.nccn.net/~wwithin/homeo.htm

ANY INFO OBTAINED HERE NOT TO BE CONSTRUED AS MEDICAL

OR LEGAL ADVICE. THE

DECISION TO VACCINATE IS YOURS AND YOURS ALONE.

******

" Just look at us. Everything is backwards; everything is upside down.

Doctors destroy health, lawyers destroy justice, universities destroy

knowledge, governments destroy freedom, the major media destroy information

and religions destroy spirituality " .... Ellner

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Dr Neustaedter's article, and Sheri's URL's are great for the

information you need on Prevnar. I have put a lot of time into

researching this particular vaccine, because it has affected me

personally. That vaccine may have saved my son's life. It was the

only vaccine he received that day, so I know without a doubt it was

Prevnar. From the injection site, all the way up his back into his

shoulders, and around the sides of his stomach was a bright red rash.

Couldn't feel it, it was underneath his skin. He was very fussy, and

I couldn't put him down. Do any of you think this was a local

reaction? That is what the ped marked in his chart. The reason I say

it saved his life is because the next vaccine could have killed him.

I'll try to locate an article I just read that stated the Prevnar

vaccine has the most adverse events reported, and that a lot were

errors in the way the vaccine is given.

> Hi,

> I am brand new to this listserv and on my quest to educate before

vaccinating. My question is about pneumoniacoccal vaccine. What does

the vaccination supposedly guard against? How dangerous is this

sickness? How can a child catch it? My daughter is 16 months-old and

not vaccinated against it although I have read in books that this one

is one I might consider going for (vaccination, that is) because of

its particular danger. Any info/insight would be appreciated.

> Thanks,

>

> Philadelphia, PA

>

>

>

>

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>The reason I say

it saved his life is because the next vaccine could have killed him.<

I assume you mean that because of the reaction you didn't allow him to have any

more vaccines?

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