Item sent by "Wildcat" which gives lots of information on Anthrax
vaccination.

Noted this one soldier who allegedly died from this vaccine, and BioPort
again (assume this is Admiral Crowe's investment) involved.

This woman died of aplastic anemia - bone marow damaged - which reminded
me of the 9 cases of aplastic anemia recorded in California in 1964
(when all denied Tolune was dangerous as used in airplane glue)
involving young children most of whom probably died.

One can see where the big bucks are going to be made in the future -
pharmaceuticals and vaccines and the same people making this stuff also
engaged in making pesticides said pesticide companies ready to go into
full gear with chemical and bacteria warfare at the drop of a hat.

Saba


Stripes.com - HomeFriday July 6, 2001

Anthrax Vaccine Maker Didn't Report Army Sergeant's Death, According to
FDA
Mar 6, 2001
Dave Eberhart
Stars and Stripes Veterans Affairs Editor
The Pentagon's lone anthrax vaccine manufacturer failed to report a
vaccine-related death that occurred in June 2000, according to an Oct.
26, 2000, Food and Drug Administration report of an inspection at the
BioPort Corp. plant in Lansing, Mich.
BioPort also failed to investigate or react to reports by the Pentagon's
Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS) of servicemembers
becoming ill after receiving one or more shots in the DoD's Anthrax
Vaccine Inoculation Program (AVIP), according to the report, a copy of
which was obtained by The Stars and Stripes.
The FDA said: "The military reported a death of an individual who had
received Anthrax vaccine lot #FA V031. The individual was inoculated on
3/14/00 and died on 6/14/00. The cause of death is reported as Aplastic
Anemia and Invasive Aspergillosis. The firm received information in a
VAERS form but there is no documentation as to when that report was
received by the firm [BioPort]."
Blood Disorder
Redmond Handy
Redmond Handy, president of the National Organization of Americans
Battling Unnecessary Servicemember Endangerment (NO ABUSE), told The
Stars and Stripes Feb. 5 that the servicemember involved was Sandra
Larson, an Army sergeant whose sister, Nancy Rugo, testified before the
House Government Reform Committee last year that Larson had died of an
autoimmune blood disorder. She said Larson had blamed the anthrax
vaccine for her illness.
Rugo told lawmakers that Sandra Larson joined the Army in 1995 and was
transferred to South Korea in 1998, where she began the 18-month vaccine
program and received four of the six required shots from lot 17. In
October 1999 she was transferred to Fort Riley, Kan., where she received
the final two shots, from lot 44 in September of that year and from lot
31 in March 2000.   On April 7, 2000, just four weeks after being
injected from her sixth shot, [Sandra Larson] was admitted into the
hospital with a serious rare blood disease.-�Nancy Rugo
"On April 7, 2000, just four weeks after being injected from her sixth
shot, [Sandra Larson] was admitted into the hospital with a serious rare
blood disease, aplastic anemia, which could be considered an autoimmune
disease," Rugo testified. "On June 14, 2000, twelve weeks after
receiving her sixth shot, she had deceased."
"This was not a gradual case of aplastic anemia," Rugo said. "She went
from a healthy woman just four weeks prior to having no bone marrow,
platelets and an extremely low count of red and white blood cells. It
was as if there was something in her that was killing her immune system,
shutting her down."
"The firm [BioPort] has not reported the death to FDA in a 15-day
report. The firm has not conducted an investigation [of the death] as a
result of this VAERS report," said the FDA report, which was prepared by
inspectors Marsha W. Major, William D. Tingley and Paula A. Trost.
'No Documentation'
And, the report said, "The firm does not trend data received relating to
adverse events. Further, there is no documentation to show that the firm
investigates adverse events [drug reactions] when received."
Uninvestigated adverse events included "nausea, diarrhea, vomiting,
double vision, dizziness, memory loss, shortness of breath, and
blackouts," the inspectors reported.
The FDA report identified three anthrax vaccine lots that failed initial
sterility testing. One lot "was retested and failed the retest," the
report said. The FDA characterized BioPort's investigations into the
initial sterility test failures as incomplete and "not addressing
corrective actions relating to [BioPort] personnel."
The report cited a "lack of reconciliation of vials that are returned to
the firm from customers" on the part of BioPort. In one instance,
according to the report, BioPort was discovered to have changed its
records on the number of anthrax vaccine vials returned by the military
for destruction.   Larson's death is being investigated by several
organizations, including the FDA and the anthrax vaccine expert
committee, a group of civilian physicians that reviews VAERS reports.
-�Bioport
BioPort spokeswoman Kim Brennan Root told The Stars and Stripes Feb. 6
that Larson's death "is being investigated by several organizations,
including the FDA and the anthrax vaccine expert committee, a group of
civilian physicians that reviews VAERS reports." The committee members
are appointed by the FDA, Root said.
Probe 'Not Complete'
"What we'll do is an investigation based on that report" by the
committee, Root said. "I'm not sure what that investigating will be. In
my opinion, the investigation is not complete."
Referring to the VAERS report of Larson's death, Root said: "That is the
first VAERS report filed by the military implicating the vaccine that we
know of."
Root's response concerning the reported lack of a timely reaction to the
Larson VAERS: "We received that report the day the FDA inspectors
arrived [Oct. 6, 2000]." She said that BioPort has since put new
software into play "to turn that data in a way that will be compliant
with the way FDA wants us to do it."
Robert C. Myers, BioPort's chief scientific officer, earlier had
defended the vaccine and his company's manufacturing process, saying:
"Now licensed for thirty years, with two million doses given in the last
two and a half years alone, the vaccine is proven safe. In total, there
have been 13 safety studies of many different types involving 366,000
patients and there is no pattern emerging that would call the vaccine's
safety into question."
"Anthrax vaccine is also purer than the diphtheria and tetanus vaccines
we give our children and is safe or safer than these and other vaccines
we give to our children and take ourselves as adults," he said.
And a Pentagon spokesmen said: "Thirty years of experience with anthrax
vaccine in the United States suggests that it has a side-effect profile
similar to other commonly used vaccines. The Army is conducting a
long-term, prospective study using a cohort of 600 soldiers at Tripler
Army Medical Center in Honolulu. The intent is to identify side effects
that may be associated with the anthrax vaccine. Thirteen human safety
studies affirm the safety of anthrax vaccine."
Production Quotas
Dr. Meryl Nass, a longtime AVIP critic, told The Stars and Stripes Feb.
6: "I feel just as I did when I commented on the first inspection report
I ever saw of BioPort in early '98: It looks as if the manufacturer was
solely trying to meet production quotas, with no thought ever being paid
to the fact that this product would be injected into human beings."
"The amazing thing is that after three years of similar inspection
reports, millions of taxpayer dollars and a multitude of experts, they
remain so far off the mark," said Nass. "Where is the quality assurance?
I sent a Canadian bio-defense expert a copy of a BioPort inspection
report, and he said he couldn't sleep that night."
FDA Warned BioPort of Mad Cow
Bovine-derived materials have traditionally been used in the manufacture
of vaccines. Bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), the deadly "mad cow
disease," was first reported in the United Kingdom in the 1980s.
Animal-derived products used in vaccine production can include amino
acids, glycerol, detergents, gelatin, enzymes and blood.
To minimize the possibility of contamination, the FDA, in 1993 and again
in 1996 recommended that manufacturers, including BioPort, not use
materials derived from cattle that were born, raised or slaughtered in
countries where BSE is known to exist. The FDA also alerted
manufacturers to a U.S. Department of Agriculture list of countries
producing potentially BSE-tainted beef.
But despite such warnings, the FDA's Center for Biologics Evaluation and
Research last fall reported that BioPort was still using bovine-derived
materials of unknown geographical origin.
Please post your comments below or email the Editor at
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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Growing in Congress Against Pentagon Anthrax Vaccine�May 22,
2000Anthrax Vaccine Recipients Report Ailments�Oct 6, 2000GAO:
Hundreds Leaving Because of Anthrax Shots�Oct 13, 2000Anthrax Vaccine:
A Doctor's Oath And A Military Code Collide�Feb 20, 2001Resistance To
Anthrax Vaccine Ripples Through the Ranks�Feb 22, 2001Patients' Survey
At Dover AFB Indicates Anthrax Vaccine Ills�Feb 23, 2001Dr. Meryl
Nass: On The Front Lines Of The Anthrax Vaccine Wars�Mar 5, 2001
Dave Hulme�Another death?�Mar 8, 2001WeatherNinja�Anthrax�Mar
11, 2001


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