Most infants under five months are
protected from measles by maternal antibodies, and standard measles vaccines
are ineffective in babies under nine months. Since measles death rates are
higher in Third World countries, authorities
decided to create a “high-titer” vaccine to target this 5-9 month age range.
Beginning in the 1980s, they tested the Edmonston-Zagreb (EZ-HT) strain on
Mexican and Gambian babies 4-6 months old.
The same high-titer vaccine
continued to be administered in Guinea-Bissau, Togo, Senegal, Bangladesh, Haiti, and impoverished minority communities in
Los Angeles, California.
The public was told that EZ-HT
“produces a better immunological response than standard vaccines,” but studies
had been conducted that concluded the vaccine was unsafe for infants, including
the following: Child mortality after high-titre
measles vaccines: prospective study in Senegal.
The study concluded, quite
unequivocally, that “The higher risk of death in the two high-titre vaccine
groups remained significant in multivariate analyses. These findings suggest a
need to reconsider the use of high-titre measles vaccines early in life in less
developed countries.”
From 1987 to 1989, scientists set
up a research center near 30 remote villages in central Senegal. Their stated
primary objective was to study the clinical efficacy of two high-titer measles
vaccines: Edmonston-Zagreb (EZ-HT) and Schwartz (SW-HT).
Researchers may have suspected the
vaccine was dangerous when the results of earlier studies began to filter in.
But they were probably reluctant to abandon their high-titer shot without
testing it at least one more time to be sure. Senegal must have seemed ideal;
the region was extremely remote, and less than 4% of the mothers who
“consented” to the study were literate.
When the results were tabulated
(using eight statistical procedures) it became clear that children who received
the high-titer measles vaccines had significantly higher mortality rates at 41
months than children in the standard low-titer measles vaccine group.
But they were not dying from
measles. Most of the deaths were from other common childhood diseases.
Apparently, the high-titer measles vaccines
lowered overall immunity making the
children fatally susceptible to diarrhea, dysentery, malaria, malnutrition,
acute respiratory ailments, and other infectious diseases.
Babies who received SW-HT died at a
rate that was 51% higher than those who received the standard
vaccine...nearly 50 excess deaths for every 1000 babies vaccinated. EZ-HT was
much more potent, contributing to a rate that was 80% higher,
contributing to 75 excess deaths for every 1000.
Strikingly, according to the
previously cited study published by Lancet in 1991, 1 in every 6
babies vaccinated with EZ-HT died within three years. Unfortunately, even
this didn't deter enthusiasts of the high-titer shot.
Vaccine researchers were unwilling
to abandon their deadly Edmonston-Zagreb high-titer measles vaccine. Instead,
they set up a study base in Los Angeles, California. In 1990, three years after
the Senegal study was initiated, the first american Black and Hispanic babies were injected with EZ-HT. [Awadu, KO. Outrage! How Babies Were Used as Guinea
Pigs in an L.A. County Vaccines Experiment. (Long Beach, CA: Conscious
Rasta Press, 1996)]
Even though the WHO and the CDC
knew about the high mortality rate already being associated with the vaccine,
they still considered the data
“preliminary.”
From 1989 to 1991, Kaiser
Permanente along with the L.A. County Department of Health and the CDC,
injected over 700 “mostly minority” babies with unlicensed experimental
vaccines with fraudulently-obtained consent from the parents. Until Los Angeles
county, this killer vaccine had only been used in the “Third World.”
Before the trials finished, nearly
1500 minority babies had been given the experimental vaccine, according to this 1996 LA
Times article:
”A mistake was made,” said Dr.
David Satcher, director of the Atlanta-based federal Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, one of the study sponsors. “It shocked me.” Satcher
said in an interview that the CDC plans to contact all the families involved.
He said he was very concerned that the events not fuel suspicion in the
minority community of government-sponsored medical research.
We now know that the CDC lied about
the study on numerous occasions.
1
The “informed consent” form
provided to parents violated internationally accepted ethical codes of conduct
regulating human experimentation. Parents were not informed that EZ-HT was
unlicensed in the US.
2
Parents were told that millions of
doses of EZ-HT had been used in Europe. But the LA babies were actually
receiving a vaccine that was up to 500 times more potent.
3
The CDC said the communities
targeted for the vaccine were those hit hardest by recent measles outbreaks.
According to data obtained from the Los Angeles County Department of Health,
these communities were not the hardest hit. Journalist Keidi Obi Awadu,
in his Outrage!, documented that “three three regions chosen to receive
the experimental shots were predominantly Black and Hispanic.” Furthermore,
“several mixed-race and White communities harder hit by the recent outbreak of
measles were not chosen to participate in the study.”
4
Although the CDC claimed no
children were adversely affected, one baby did die from a rare bacterial
disease. According to Awadu, several children “experienced what parents are
describing as long-term immune system impairment, seizures and other acute
conditions consistent with vaccine-induced injury.”
5
Stephen Hadler of the CDC claimed
the babies died in earlier studies because they didn't have access to adequate
health care. However, one of the more important findings of the Senegal study
was “the three vaccine groups were comparable as regards various social, family,
and health characteristics. Intensive medical care was provided during the
project.”
In 1990, WHO requested 250 million
doses of the deadly EZ-HT measles vaccine to be dispensed throughout the world.
However, data from Guinea-Bissau, Senegal, and Haiti continued to confirm that
EZ-HT doesn't save lives—it increases mortality. By June of 1992, the link was
irrefutable; WHO called for a moratorium on use of the disputed vaccine. By
some estimates, this may have prevented 18 million baby deaths. [Awadu]
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