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Has anyone heard anything adverse about the TB shot?

If you have, please let me know. This is very important.

 

Namaste,

Bethany

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On 5/5/07, Bethany <bjezik wrote:

 

Has anyone heard anything adverse about the TB shot?

If you have, please let me know. This is very important.

 

Namaste,

Bethany

NamasteIf you are talking about BCG, I have some inputs to give you.One

of my ex-colleague's son (barely two months old) got infected by TB

days after getting the BCG vaccination. I can provide you my

ex-colleagues email address if you wish (but he still does not believe

in Naturopathy)

I also know (from my connections) that most of the allopaths do not give BCG vaccination to there own kin.And then there is this report from Indian Express that you must go thru. I am also pasting the text.

http://www.expressindia.com/ie/daily/19991028/ige28025.html

 

 

After 50 years, ICMR finds BCG vaccine is just a scar on your arm

PALLAVA BAGLA

 

 

NEW DELHI, OCT 27: The only available vaccine

against tuberculosis (TB) does not work! An extensive 15-year trial

carried out by the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) has come

up with startling revelations for the Indian public health programme on

TB. The ICMR has found that the BCG vaccine ``offered no overall

protection in adults and a low level of overall protection in

children.''In

other words, for the last 50 years, the public health service in India

has been injecting crores of infants with painful doses of a seemingly

worthless TB vaccine called BCG as part of its `Expanded Programme of

Immunisation.' By its own admission now, ICMR has found that BCG

neither protects adults nor does it immunise children.Doubts

have always been there over the efficacy of the BCG vaccine but this is

the first definitive study. The Tuberculosis Research Centre in Chennai

followed up over two lakh people vaccinated with BCG for 15 years in

the Chingleput district. They concluded, ``BCG offers no

protectionagainst adult type of tuberculosis and consequently, it

cannot be expected to reduce the transmission due to tuberculosis.''Former

ICMR director general V Ramalingaswami calls it the ``Great Madras

failure'', since the BCG vaccination was initiated with great

expectations in Tamil Nadu five decades ago.Incidentally,

the United States stopped using BCG as a vaccine many years ago; this

happened when the first doubts were raised. US public health experts

found that no useful purpose was being achieved by giving its

population a false sense of security and decided that the money spent

on vaccinations was better spent on providing suitable drugs to TB

patients.In

light of the latest finding, the significant question is: Should BCG

now even find place in the national immunisation programme? Says

Ramalingaswami: ``We now need to seriously think on whether to continue

BCG as part of the national programme.'' He says the time has come to

``reopen the discussion on whether it is wise or not to give BCG

atall.''Medical

experts say fortunately, the BCG vaccine does no harm to the human body

but since it is an injectable vaccine, it could very well play a role

in the spread of serious needle-borne infections like Hepatitis B and

even HIV.The

new finding is being seen as a wake-up call to the Ministry of Health,

given there is no alternative vaccine for TB yet and the disease is

already assuming unmanageable proportions. The World Health

Organisation described it as the `biggest killer' among adults in

South-East Asia.Though

TB is curable with the judicious use of antibiotics, about two billion

people are estimated to be carriers of the disease. The WHO estimates

that every year, about eight million new cases are added to the global

burden of which 2-3 million succumb to TB.According

to recent WHO estimates, India carries 25 per cent of the global burden

of TB with 50-60 per cent of the population being carriers of the TB

bug. In 1995 alone, India reported 1.2 million cases of TB. To add to

themisery, the combination of AIDS and TB is lethal and India is now

the capital of both diseases.Copyright © 1999 Indian Express Newspapers (Bombay) Ltd.

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I had one in 1968 or 1978 and am still alive with no apparent untoward effects - though I was adult at the time - and Xray in 2004 post car accident showed "spots on the lung" to be followed up by GP please - GPs comment was "anyone who grew up in UK has TB don't worry about it." Not sure if all that helps or not!

 

Jane

 

 

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