MMR vaccines associated with febrile seizures and autoimmune conditions may be divided into individual shots – NaturalNews.com
MMR vaccines, which are associated with febrile seizures and autoimmune conditions, can be divided into individual shots
The practice of combining multiple viral antigens in a single shot — a policy created as a convenience to vaccine makers — overburdens young immune systems, increasing febrile seizures and triggering autoimmune reactions in some people. The MMR (measles, mumps, and rubella) and MMRV (measles, mumps, rubella, and varicella) vaccines introduce too many viral antigens to underdeveloped immune systems, their safety standards are so poor, and their effectiveness is difficult to prove.
After years of ignoring parents’ concerns, federal health officials are now considering splitting up the three and four viral antigens and separating those doses into individual vaccines. Vaccine makers are concerned that this move will lead to decreased absorption compliance with their products. However, the move aims to expand parental choice and improve the vaccination’s safety record, although absolute safety and effectiveness cannot be guaranteed with these outdated products, adjuvants and toxic preservatives.
Key points:
- Federal health officials are reviewing a plan to separate the combined MMR vaccine into individual shots.
- This reconsideration comes on the heels of the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) discontinuing the MMRV vaccine for young children due to a higher risk of febrile seizures.
- Research suggests that combination vaccines result in a higher rate of adverse events.
- Vaccines, through mechanisms such as molecular mimicry, are suspected to play a role in the development of autoimmune diseases.
- Separating antigens could expand parental choice and potentially reduce risk, but the medical establishment has long resisted this option.
- Separation does not guarantee absolute safety, as more individual injections will need to be put into both arms to get the same level of viral antigens in children.
Overloaded injection: a recipe for immune system chaos
For many years, the driving force behind combination vaccines such as MMR (measles, mumps, and rubella) and MMRV (which add varicella or chickenpox) has been compliance.
It’s much easier for a pediatrician to do one prick rather than three or four at a time, and it’s easier for the CDC to make sure a child is fully vaccinated on his or her strict schedule. However, this convenience comes at a potential cost. The latest research confirms what many parents have long feared: Bombarding a young child’s developing immune system with several live viruses and helper chemicals at once can lead to a higher rate of adverse events.
The immune system, in its frantic effort to mount a defense against this multifaceted attack, can become disorganized. It is like sending a young, untrained soldier into a complex battle on three different fronts simultaneously; Confusion can lead to tragic cases of friendly fire, where the body begins to attack its own healthy tissues. If the vaccination theory were followed correctly, each antigen would need to be injected separately, to allow the immune cells to respond properly.
Autoimmune connection: When the body turns on itself
Vaccines that were intended to protect children from disease can backfire against the child’s immune system. Science points to two basic mechanisms. The first is Imitation of the epitome. Imagine that the antigen in the vaccine has a molecular structure that closely resembles a protein found naturally in a child’s brain or the sheaths of nerves or joints. When the immune system creates antibodies to fight the vaccine virus, those same antibodies can mistakenly recognize a similar protein in the body as a foreign invader and launch a sustained attack. This is not just a theory. The scientific literature documents severe adverse events following immunization (AEFI) that have been reported after vaccination against MMR and varicella, including encephalitis, Guillain-Barré syndrome, transverse myelitis, and vasculitis.
Second mechanism Activate passers-byinvolves non-specific activation of dormant self-reactive T cells, which then continue to damage healthy cells. The pathogenic mechanisms are not yet fully understood, which is precisely why a more careful approach is necessary. Why inject millions of healthy children with a biological product when the long-term consequences for their complex immune systems are still a mystery, admittedly, by science?
A system rigged for profit, not protection
Resistance to single-antigen vaccines is rooted not in medical necessity, but in a system corrupted by profit and power. Merck, the main producer of the MMR vaccine, has consistently opposed separation of the combination, arguing that multi-dose regimens improve compliance. But what good is compliance if it puts the child’s health at risk? This is the same company that is currently being sued in federal court by its top scientists, Joan Wolkowski and Steve Krahling, who gamely claim that Merck defrauded regulators about the effectiveness of their MMR vaccine.
Consider here the clampdown on advertising as well. 17 out of 22 ads in a typical newscast come from pharmaceutical companies. Is it any wonder that news of vaccine infections and ineffectiveness is suppressed? The recent move to reconsider vaccine separation looks less like a proactive measure for child safety and more like a hesitant and belated reaction to overwhelming evidence that can no longer be ignored. When will the health of our children be prioritized over bureaucrats’ compliance metrics and pharmaceutical company profit margins? The safety of our children’s future depends on the answer.
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