Kids get your shots-Swine fraud propaganda

Started by maz, September 29, 2009, 03:28:31 PM

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maz

By Steve Sternberg, USA TODAY

Sean and Ryan Moise played "rock-paper-scissors" to see who would get their flu shot first. Faith bravely stepped up after her older brothers.
Unlikely pioneers though they may seem, Sean, who turns 13 today, Ryan, 11, and Faith, 4 "and a half," are among just 600 children in the USA in government-sponsored pediatric trials of the vaccine for H1N1, or swine flu.

The children are more motivated than most to fight flu. They know how serious it can be. In 2003, their brother Ian, a robust 6-month-old, died of seasonal flu. He lived less than 30 hours after symptoms set in.

"That's why, when I heard the vaccine trial was coming to Kansas City, I was so eager to get my children into it," says Julie Moise, 42. "I'm more afraid of the flu than the vaccine."

Sean fretted on Facebook that he was signing up to be a pincushion. He decided to go ahead with the trial, anyway. "The first time I was a little, kind of, freaked out because I didn't know what to expect," he says. "After a while, it's not really all that bad. And it's good to know I should be resistant to H1N1 if it comes around."

Flu can kill

An early peek at the trial's results appear to justify the family's confidence. The findings released Sept. 21 show that H1N1 vaccine appears to protect most kids 10 to 17 years old, who are among those hit hardest by the new influenza.

As in seasonal flu, younger children are likely to need two doses. "The response in young children is less robust, but this is not unexpected," Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, the study's sponsor, said when the results were released.

In 2003, Julie Moise made sure all three children had had their flu shots. Just 10 days after Ian had the first of two vaccine doses he would need for full protection, he came down with the flu. Soon he was feverish and short of breath. A pediatrician confirmed the diagnosis and recommended treating his symptoms.

"That night he didn't want to lay flat in his crib," Moise says. "I held him in the recliner all night."

By morning, Moise developed flu symptoms, too. Her husband, Glenn, agreed to get Sean and Ryan off to school. Ian took a turn for the better, or so the family thought. His fever dropped from 104 to 100 degrees. His panting had turned into a sigh, Moise says. Still, she worried. And later that day, she called her husband at work. "I said, 'I don't like how Ian looks. Can you come home?' "

He found Ian sitting in his bouncy seat and picked him up. "At that moment," Julie Moise says, "he stopped breathing."

A postmortem showed his airway was plugged by mucus, which caused respiratory failure and cardiac arrest. Two things still nag at Julie Moise: First, how often doctors and nurses said "it's just the flu." More troubling is the guilt Moise feels because she and her husband weren't vaccinated. "You have to wonder," says Moise, a flight attendant, "did I bring it home?"

Ian's death turned the family into activists. They joined a group of other parents who've lost children, called Families Fighting Flu, to call attention to the risks of neglecting vaccination. They launched Ian's Rainbow Flu Foundation, which sponsors flu walks and vaccination clinics. And when the chance popped up to enroll their children in the vaccine trial, the Moises grabbed it. So did Laura Jaworski, Julie Moise's best friend, who enrolled her sons Zach, 3, and Nick, 6.

Children help out

Christopher Harrison, the lead investigator at Children's Mercy Hospital, says the Moise and Jaworski children were among 121 children from the Kansas City area in the trial. A parent's consent is sufficient to enroll a youngster, but all children sit in on the conversation with doctors as they explain the nature of the trial and ask parents to sign the consent form.

Children who've reached "the age of reason," Harrison says, sign a consent form, too. "It felt kinda cool," Sean says, "like I was taking responsibility for what I was about to do."

Harrison says most people enrolled their children in the trial to protect them from swine flu, especially with school approaching, but many also took into account the good that can come from the research. Most know that the vaccine is similar to standard flu vaccines, so it is likely to be safe and can't transmit the flu. As the trial was enrolling, he says, flu began spreading widely in Kansas City. In the past month, he says, half a dozen children with H1N1 have needed intensive care. A 16-year-old has died.

Moise notes that 36,000 people die each year of seasonal flu and says one death is too many. She begins reciting names of children who have died and whose parents banded together in Families Fighting Flu. "All these children were healthy. Every one had insurance," she says.

"How many times did I say in a 24-hour period, 'Oh, it's just the flu'? I didn't know flu kills healthy children. That's what's so scary."

http://www.usatoday.com/LIFE/usaedition ... p=34#Close

§N9sh2bj

Sounds like the family has a lot more problems then what a 'flu-jab' is said to 'prevent':

Quote from: "maz"In 2003, their brother Ian, a robust 6-month-old, died of seasonal flu.

Immunodeficiency. 'Robust' could mean 'fat'; given the sources of fats and the mineral content of the typical intake, he didn't have the 'good kind', imho.
moved on.
the author does not adopt jewish \'race theory\' or \'darwinism\'.
and believes \'jewish culture\' is mostly one of supporting their organized crime syndicates, with a enough veneer and an organized system of destroying and reshaping other cultures, to obfuscate the truth to most people.