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wondering again on when to be in contact with other vaccinated

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ok friend just got her son vaccinated how long should we stay away...it was his

18 months shots...we do not vaccinate anymore. The shots he got was prevnar and

hep B Which wonder if prevnar is just for mennigitis and also I do have a

concern on menningitis. I have two children that have had shots and

unfortunately feel that a lot of the seizure problems stem somehow from that,but

that is questionable still. They are 6 and 5 and still have not had anymore

vaccines from when they were under 1. My son that is also 18 months has not had

any. I do get panic at times on the situations of if we get in contact and

mainly cause we are up at children's a lot due to my one son having autism. Lots

of wonderment on menningitis mostly. I have a lot of not so much worry on

measles or mumps.

From: Vida Khan <vidakhan@...>

Subject: Re: Vaccine scare in Ukraine threatens health

Vaccinations

Date: Thursday, March 26, 2009, 8:00 AM

measles †" a leading cause of childhood

A quick search will show you that no children die from measles in Ukraine

(according to the WHO,) even though they claim the previous measles vaccine

campaigns were failures.

Why do countries still give TB vaccine even though they know it to be worthless.

Vida

>

> Http://www.msnbc. MSN.com/id/ 29875914/

> Vaccine scare in Ukraine threatens health

> Rumors of Western plot, death of teen cause families to reject shots

> A medical worker prepares to administer a vaccine to 16-month-old Yaroslav,

> being held by his mother Oksana Vasylenko, in an outpatient clinic in Kiev,

> Ukraine on March 20, 2009.

>

> Sergei Chuzavkov / AP

>

>

>

> Updated 12:23 p.m. ET March 25, 2009

> KIEV, Ukraine - A widespread scare about vaccine side effects in Ukraine has

> led to a sharp drop in immunizations that could result in disease outbreaks

> spreading beyond the former Soviet republic, international and local health

> officials say.

> Hundreds of thousands of fearful Ukrainians have refused vaccines for

> diseases such as diphtheria, mumps, polio, hepatitis B, tuberculosis,

> whooping cough and others this year, according to official estimates.

> Authorities have canceled a U.N.-backed measles and rubella vaccination

> campaign funded by U.S. Philanthropist Ted , and will have to collect

> and incinerate nearly 9 million unused doses in coming months.

> " I never thought I'd see the day where perfectly good vaccines are being

> destroyed, " said Bociurkiw, a spokesman for UNICEF.

> Around the world, health officials say they are struggling with the

> repercussions of vaccine fears they call unwarranted and dangerous.

> In 2003, imams in northern Nigeria fomented a boycott of polio vaccinations

> claiming they were a Western plot to make Muslims infertile or infect them

> with HIV. Authorities in Indonesia are discussing a plan to end childhood

> immunizations against a number of diseases out of fears that foreign drug

> companies are using the country as a testing ground. A budding movement of

> parents getting exemptions from pre-school vaccination laws is seen as

> partly responsible for a spike in U.S. Measles cases.

> Fear escalated with death of teen

> Experts blame the Ukrainian scare on government mismanagement and

> irresponsible media coverage of an anti-vaccination campaign launched after

> the May death of a 17-year-old boy who had received a combined shot for

> measles and rubella.

> Activists including members of the homeopathic and alternative healing

> industries blamed his death on the vaccination. Ukrainian authorities said

> they needed to investigate and halted the campaign to revaccinate 9 million

> Ukrainians aged 16-29 for measles †" a leading cause of childhood death

†" and

> rubella, which can cause serious birth defects.

> The Ukrainian Health Ministry and World Health Organization concluded that

> the boy died of septic shock from a bacterial infection unrelated to the

> vaccine. But the ministry decided last month to terminate the revaccination

> campaign, saying there was no longer enough time to administer the vaccines

> before they expire this summer and that people would refuse the shots.

> 10 percent drop in vaccination rate

> Over 4.5 million Ukrainians, mostly children, are vaccinated for a wide

> variety of diseases each year in the country of 46 million. Health

> authorities say spreading fears of immunization were largely responsible for

> an estimated 10 percent drop in the vaccination rate since May.

> " This threatens to lead to a spike in the number of infectious diseases, "

> said Lyudmyla Mukharskaya, the country's deputy chief public health official

> " There will be outbreaks, especially among children. "

> Ukraine has had two major outbreaks of measles in recent years. Ukrainians

> aged 16-29 have proven to be highly susceptible, apparently because of an

> ineffective vaccination campaign carried out in the 1990s, when the country

> was in economic crisis following the collapse of the Soviet Union.

> If Ukraine cannot revaccinate at least 95 percent of the estimated 9 million

> people who got deficient vaccines in the '90s, UNICEF says, the next

> outbreak could be even bigger.

> Measles could spread to other European countries

> " There are concerns that the measles disease could be exported to other

> European countries where Ukrainians travel, " Bociurkiw said.

> Independent health experts say government mistakes were a major factor in

> the vaccine scare. Prosecutors briefly detained the country's chief public

> health official after the teen's death and claimed that the vaccine, which

> was certified by WHO, was imported into the country without proper

> authorization.

> Dr. Fedir Lapiy, an expert in infectious diseases based in Kiev, said

> prosecutors appeared to have used the case to promote themselves and

> discredit political opponents.

> " It looked more like a PR campaign than a thorough probe, " Lapiy said.

> Ukraine has an educated population but rumors and misperceptions spread

> easily. Constant political turmoil and a devastating financial crisis †"

one

> of the worst in Europe †" has fueled mistrust of Ukraine's crumbling

health

> care system, and authorities in general.

> " It is sad to see the population of a country in the middle of Europe

> refusing to get immunized, " said Andrei Tulisov, an infectious disease and

> immunization specialist at WHO.

> Ukranian media spread rumor of plot by Ted

> Ukrainian media outlets are numerous and uncensored but do not widely follow

> Western standards of fairness and accuracy. Some print and online reports

> alleged after the boy's death that the Indian-made measles and rubella

> vaccine would sterilize men as part of a plot by Ted , whose

> Washington-based United Nations Foundation charity paid for the vaccines.

> " This kind of scare tactic coupled with the death of the boy struck the

> fear of God into a lot of young people and parents, " Bociurkiw said.

> Nina Zaichenko, a 25-year-old interior designer in Kiev, says she has

> decided not to immunize her 1-year-old daughter, Dasha, against any diseases

> until at least the age of 3. She fears the infant's body is still to weak to

> handle vaccinations and she does not trust the local health system to

> acquire and properly store high-quality vaccines.

> " The chances of a child getting sick from a vaccine and from the disease

> itself are equal, " Zaichenko said, an assertion experts say has no basis in

> the truth. " It's a hard choice for parents to make. "

> UNICEF says it believes only up to 30 percent of Ukrainians who need

> revaccination for measles and rubella would turn up if the campaign were

> restarted today. Only 400,000 people received vaccines before the campaign

> was stopped.

> The Health Ministry says it will work to promote the need for immunizations

> among the population, and look for ways to launch a new measles and rubella

> vaccination campaign.

> Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.

>

>

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