Australian doctor, Deirdre Little has blown the whistle on the Human Pailloma Virus vaccine, routinely given to high school girls in Australia and throughout many developed countries. In an article published in the British Medical Journal, Dr Little reports on her investigation into clinical case of a girl who suffered the early onset of menopause at age 16 and the explains how Gardasil is possibly implicated. We provide some excerpts and links about the issue below.
Truth and Gardasil: Interview with Dr Deirdre Little
Family Life InternationalYouTube
FLI- australia
View Original Article : Here
… Establishing whether causal relationships exist between vaccines and illnesses developing in vaccinated teenagers requires scientific investigation – all the more so where the reports of possible adverse events identify empty holes in the available research. Adverse event reports do not prove causation. That is not their role. They provide a database. This database can then direct further assessment, influence surveillance and provides an early warning system, just as it did for other recent products of Merck Sharpe and Dohme. ‘Vioxx’, for example, was removed from the market after cardiac events were reported (and amid massive lawsuits) and a Food and Drug authority (FDA) warning was issued to doctors in 2007 after reports of bowel obstruction arose in babies receiving Merck’s Rotavirus vaccination.
…. What if?
If Gardasil® did perchance cause some reduction in egg-bearing capacity, with more widely spaced periods and therefore with less ovulations per year, some degree of subfertility or infertility would result. We would expect to see a sharper fall, a steeper reduction in teenage pregnancy rates in vaccinated populations, coinciding with the introduction of the vaccination programme.
In the Usa in april 2012 a report was released looking at teen pregnancy rates at 2010. Teen births in the Us from 2009 to 2010 were at their lowest level in almost 70 years. The report by the National Centre for Health Statistics identifies that the teen birth rate dropped 9 per cent from 2009 to 2010, to a historic low of 34.3 births per 1000 teens. The birth rate for teens aged 15 to 17 years dropped 12% from 2009 ton 2010 federal data further states ‘the rate for the youngest teenagers was a record low for the United States’.
The report attributes the abrupt fall to ‘strong pregnancy prevention messages’ and adds that contraceptives ‘may have contributed’ to the lowest birth rate ever recorded for 15 to 19 year olds across ethnic and racial groups. Teenage abortion rates in the US meanwhile continued their gradual drop.
While teenage births in the US had also been on a long term decline, slowly dropping 44% spread over the twenty years since 1991, a more rapid 17% decline was observed from 2007 to 2010. The more precipitate drops of 9% and 12% from 2009 to 2010 in the more comprehensively vaccinated group give pause for thought.
Gardasil® was approved in the USA by the Food and Drug Authority in June 2006. As of late 2007, a quarter of all females aged 13 to 17 had received at least one of three injections of the vaccination course, with the remainder of courses completed over 2008. On September 20th 2012, the Hon. Ian Hunter MLC in the South Australian Legislative Council addressed parliament stating:
“At the turn of the century, Australia had a considerably high rate of teenage pregnancy compared to the rest of the industrialized world yet, in 2009, thanks to programs such as SHARE, South Australia’s teen pregnancy rate was recorded at a low 32.7 per thousand, the lowest rate on record for our state. This, in part, I believe, can be attributed to the…
work of ..Shine SA”
The two year drop in teenage birth rates in South Australia, from 2008 to 2010, of 35.4 per thousand down to 31.7, is the biggest two year decline in teen pregnancies recorded in South Australia’s history. Gardasil® was given to South Australian schoolgirls aged 11 to 18 years in mid 2007. The safe sex message credited here with lowering teen pregnancy rates is unfounded, since sexually transmitted infections were actually rising in South Australia and elsewhere at this time.
Could chlamydia have damaged fallopian tubes? Yes. Could the morning after pill be surging in popularity? Yes. Sudden interest in contraceptives? Possibly. What do these statistics prove? Absolutely nothing – except the need for more research – urgently.
Research, rather than platitudes and back patting. Research rather than indignation and
‘ad hominem’ attacks on those calling for it.
Read More: Here
Teenage Girl Becomes Infertile after Gardasil Vaccination
Elizabeth CrnkovichOctober 12th, 2012
Gardasil has been controversial from the beginning. While other vaccines protect against diseases spread by casual contact, Gardasil was developed to protect against a sexually transmitted disease called Human Papilloma Virus or HPV. Merck & Co., the manufacturer, has been very effective at lobbying governments around the world to make the vaccine mandatory for school attendance. Despite the frequent objections of doctors and parents, it has been administered to tens of millions of 11- and 12-year-old young girls around the world.
Now comes the case of a 16-year-old Australian girl who suffered “premature ovarian failure” after receiving Gardasil. Her ovaries have shut down, her eggs have been destroyed, and she will never be able to have children.
Dr. Deirdre Little, the Australian physician who treated the girl, has published a complete account in the British Medical Journal. (BMJ Case Reports 2012; doi:10.1136/bcr-2012-006879) Her report explains that the girl’s menstrual cycles were regular until she received the Gardasil vaccination in the Fall of 2008. By January 2009, her cycle had become irregular. Over the course of the next two years, her menses became increasingly scant and irregular, until by 2011, she had ceased menstruating altogether.
Early menopause is highly unusual. In this case, the girl was in excellent health, and had no family or personal medical history that could explain this premature menopause. Her first effort to obtain medical assistance for her amenorrhoea resulted in the doctor advising her to take oral contraceptives. Had she agreed, such drugs would have masked the problem and most likely the possible cause as well. But she declined.
It should be noted that many young girls are told, as she was, to take oral contraceptives as an antidote to what is called in the medical field, oligomenorrhoea, which means infrequent or very light menstruation. Most probably take their physician’s advice, which means that there may be many more cases of “premature ovarian failure” than we now know, since the contraceptives mask the symptoms.
…Tens of millions of young girls have received the Gardasil vaccine since its approval by the FDA six years ago. If even a tiny fraction of them have experienced infertility as a result, then these “girl children” have been denied a very fundamental right, that is, the right to decide how many children they want to have.
In the case of the Australian girl the effect is irreversible. She has lost an integral part of her womanhood, while still but a child. Women deserve better.
Here’s a recent article I came across – a damning report by one of the scientists who developed the vaccine. The comments on the article are also instructive.
http://www.pop.org/content/merck-researcher-admits-gardasil-guards-against-almost-nothing-985
This is a very one sided view with a lot of unsupported claims. One needs to look at information based on sound scientific research.
A good place to start is the National Centre for Immunisation Research and Surveillance.
http://www.ncirs.edu.au/immunisation/fact-sheets/hpv-quadrivalent-fact-sheet.pdf. or
http://www.hpvvvaccine.org.au
One needs to understand how vaccines work. If this vaccine caused infertility that would mean that natural infection with HPV would cause infertility. If four out of five people have at least one type of HPV at some time in their lives, that would be a lot of people supposedly suffering early menopause.
Moniek, thanks for the links – I will review them, however, I would note that your assumption that ‘if this vaccine caused infertility that would mean that natural infection with HPV would cause infertility.” – not necessarily so. Vaccines are not just weakened versions of the virus, they include all sorts of other substances. The research findings suggest that in a few known cases Gardasil is implicated in the onset of premature menopause (and thus causes infertility). One assumes that in a much larger number of cases it’s impact may be unnoticed in an individual case by case basis, but taken across a large group, signs that it causes partial infertility (by inducing the process of menopause) could be detected through a declining pregnancy rate if all other factors are controlled for. As most of the vaccine subjects are young teens who are not yet sexually active this impact will be years before it is detected.
In any case, it is early days on the research for both the long term effectiveness of the vaccine as well as it’s side effects. I choose not to let my children be the guinea pigs in this experiment!
Incidentally, many STI’s do cause infertility but by a different mechanism to that described here – scarring of the fallopian tubes due to Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (caused by STI’s such as chlamydia) is a leading cause of infertility.
Francine, I think you need to read up about the ingredients of this and other vaccines. I hope you have had time to read the articles I suggested.There are many links to other journal articles in the NCIRS fact sheet. The vaccine has been rigorously tested. Implying that children are being used as guinea pigs with this vaccine shows a lack of understanding about the processes involved before a vaccine is released. It is also damaging to vaccination programs when there have already been positive results obtained from HPV vaccination.
Gardasil has not been implicated in any of the cases of premature menopause or the cause of infertility. Like MMR and the incorrect links people made to Autism it is because these events are linked in time.
Mon – The British Medical Journal is a highly reputable publication and their review process is rigorous. Your claim that Gardasil has not been implicated in any cases of premature menopause is direct contradiction to the BMJ and frankly not credible. Who are you? Someone on the payroll of Merck?