IS THERE A CONNECTION WITH ENTERVIRUS AND PCV13? (STA BREAKING NEWS and ARCHIVES)
Hi All,
This is very interesting , worth the read.
Several Chicago-area hospitals are taking precautions to stop a respiratory virus from spreading.
Advocate Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn, Advocate Lutheran General in Park Ridge and Loyola University Medical Center in Maywood are not allowing children under 18 years old to visit patients.
Adults with cold-like symptoms are not allowed to visit patients until further notice.
Doctors are concerned about Enterovirus D68, or EV-D68.
There are no confirmed cases at those hospitals but they do suspect dozens of patients may have the virus.
Enterovirus 68 has sickened children in 12 states, mainly in the Midwest. Many of those patients have been placed in intensive care units.
The CDC confirms that 11 samples it tested from children who had been hospitalized in Chicago tested positive for EV-D68.
Nineteen of the 22 specimens sent to the CDC from Kansas City also showed signs of the virus, meaning there is likely a regional outbreak.
VRM: PCV Vaccine Exposed – Breeding Ground For Staphylococcus Aureus
The PCV Vaccine PREVNAR (Pneumococcal 7-valent Conjugate Vaccine: Diphtheria CRM197 Protein – manufactured by Pfizer/Wyeth), introduced in 2000 as part of the standard immunization program throughout the West, and its later version PCV13 (Pneumococcal 13-valent Conjugate Vaccine [Diphtheria CRM197 Protein]), approved by the FDA on February 24, 2010, is typically administered to babies in 4 stages (2, 4, 6 & 12-15 months) and further given to adults 19-64 with varying chronic conditions (lung, heart, liver or kidney disease; asthma, diabetes, alcoholism/smokers, HIV/AIDS, cancer, damaged/absent spleen). According to the CDC it is ostensibly designed to project against “blood infections, pneumonia, and meningitis, mostly in young children…deafness and brain damage.”
Hospitals around the world have concurrently reported a dramatic spike in the incidence & virulence of Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus since 2000. In the United States in particular, ‘Since 2000, several reports have documented the presence of MRSA infections in previously unaffected outpatient populations…a dramatic shift in the microbial flora of soft tissue infections has occurred recently in the United States. Popovich et al. in 2008 reported data from 2000-2006 in Chicago’s Stroger Hospital/Rush University Medical Center that showed a stable rate of hospital acquired strains of MRSA infections, but a rapidly increasing rate of community acquired strains of MRSA seen in the hospital from 24% between January 2000 and June 2003 to 49% between July 2003 and December 2006.‘
Note: This increase coincides precisely with the release of the first Pneumococcal (PCV) Vaccine on the market – ‘PCV7, containing the 7 most common pneumococcal serotypes causing invasive infections in children in North America was licensed in the US and recommended for routine use in infants in 2000.’
Elsewhere the same trend is being documented. ‘In Queensland, Eastern Australia, in 2000 to 2006, population-based surveillance of antibiotic resistance patterns of MRSA strains causing infections among inpatients demonstrated an increase from 71 to 315 cases/1 million accrued patient-days for non-MDR (i.e., resistant to at least one non-β-lactam antibiotic and susceptible to ciprofloxacin)-resistant strains. A similar large increase was documented among outpatients during this period, from 52 to 490 cases/1 million outpatient visits, suggesting a rapid dissemination of the non-MDR MRSA strains.’
‘The main antimicrobial resistance profiles changed from TC-GM-CI-EM-CM in 2000 to TC-GM-CIEM-CM-RI in 2005. The main pulsed-field gel electrophoresis type changed from types C, L, and E in 2000 to types J, F, and N, respectively, in 2005. ST239-MRSA-III was the most predominant clone in 2000 and 2005, whereas ST5-MRSA-II was found only in 2005. Conclusions: There were increasing levels of antimicrobial resistance and epidemiological changes in the hospital-associated MRSA strains isolated in this facility between 2000 and 2005.’ Increasing Resistance in Multiresistant Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus Clones Isolated from a Chinese Hospital Over a 5-Year Period
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‘A recent study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) found that of the 36 children who died from H1N1 from April to August (2009), six had no chronic health conditions. But all of them had a co-occurring bacterial infection. The most common co-occurring infection that causes flu-related deaths is staphylococcus aureus. A third of the population carries it, most in their nose or on their skin. The flu causes upper respiratory damage, which allows the staph to make its way into the lungs.’ Dr. Joseph Mercola
http://vaccineresistancemovement.org/?p=9431
So what do you think, is there a connection??
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Love and Light
Pinkorchid
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- IS THERE A CONNECTION WITH ENTERVIRUS AND PCV13? - pinkorchid, 2014-10-09, 03:28 (STA BREAKING NEWS and ARCHIVES)

