-Caveat Lector-

Well, first it is reported to be in there .  Then that report is denied.
Now this new report states that it IS in the vaccine.  How difficult can
this be to determine one way or the other!
Ake


Sent: Sunday, October 01, 2000 7:22 PM
Subject: [: Additive Found in Anthrax Vaccine


>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Sage Bushy" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Sent: Saturday, September 30, 2000 3:03 AM
> Subject: Additive Found in Anthrax Vaccine
>
>
> > Additive Found In Anthrax Vaccine
> >
> > By THOMAS D. WILLIAMS
> > The Hartford Courant
> > September 28, 2000
> >
> > Trace amounts of the additive squalene have been found
> > in the anthrax vaccine used to protect U.S. service members
> > from the biological warfare agent, federal health officials
> > have found.
> >
> > The finding contradicts repeated assertions by the Pentagon
> > that squalene is not present in the vaccine.
> >
> > The federal Food and Drug Administration said its results
> > were based on tests of five lots of the vaccine. The agency
> > did not make clear whether
> >
> > those lots containing squalene were used to inoculate
> > troops during the Persian Gulf War, those receiving the
> > vaccine since a mandatory inoculation program began in
> > 1998, or both.
> >
> > The FDA also did not address potential health problems
> > with the vaccine; agency spokeswoman Lenore Gelb
> > declined to comment.
> >
> > Squalene is found in the human liver, some vegetable oils
> > and shark oil; as an additive to a vaccine, it is used to foster
> > a faster, stronger or longer protective reaction, according to
> > a 1999 U.S. Government Accounting Office report. It is not
> > approved by the FDA for use in the anthrax vaccine.
> >
> > Squalene's safety was called into question when a 1999
> > Tulane University study of blood samples taken from sick
> > gulf war veterans detected the presence of antibodies linked
> > to the additive. Some of the samples were taken from
> > soldiers who did not take part in the war; but all presumably
> > received the vaccine.
> >
> > Previously, Congress' watchdog agency, the General
> > Accounting Office, had reported that gulf war veterans were
> > complaining of mysterious, undiagnosed illnesses similar to
> > patients with auto-immune disorders. A Tennessee
> > immunologist, Dr. Pamela B. Asa, concluded those
> > illnesses were caused by exposure to additives in vaccines,
> > the GAO said.
> >
> > James Turner, a Pentagon spokesman, said Wednesday
> > that officials in his department were not prepared to comment
> > on the FDA's finding.
> >
> > Last year, the Pentagon challenged the Tulane University
> > study and the implication that gulf war veterans could have
> > become ill from the additive- even if it were in the vaccine.
> > And if antibodies are in the veterans' blood, Pentagon officials
> > said at the time, the tests still did not prove the veterans
> > became sick from the vaccine.
> >
> > U.S. Rep. Jack Metcalf, R-Washington, who has investigated
> > the additive for three years, told a congressional committee
> > Wednesday that the development raises questions about the
> > vaccine's safety and the truthfulness of Pentagon officials.
> >
> > Metcalf said his congressional inquiry concludes Pentagon
> > officials "stonewalled" attempts to examine the vaccine's
> > additives, an effort GAO investigators called a "pattern of
> > deception.''
> >
> > Metcalf distributed his inquiry report Wednesday to the
> > House Subcommittee on National Security, Veterans' Affairs
> > and International Relations headed by U.S. Rep. Christopher
> > Shays, R-Conn.
> >
> > Shays' committee is continuing a lengthy investigation into
> > the illnesses of gulf war veterans. Shays also is among a
> > group of congressmen who have called for an end to the
> > vaccination program, saying the Pentagon has not proved
> > the vaccine to be safe or effective.
> >
> > Thousands of gulf war veterans complained of various
> > illnesses in the years after the war. In addition, more than
> > 1,500 service people inoculatedsince 1998 have complained
> > about side effects of varying severity that some blame on
> > the vaccine.
> >
> > Hundreds of service people have refused to be inoculated
> > and been disciplined or discharged, while hundreds more
> > in the reserve and National Guard have resigned rather than
> > take the required series of six inoculations.
>

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