A controversial new review of the HPV vaccine, which is recommended for boys and girls to prevent different types of cancer, suggests the shot’s safety was not adequately tested in the clinical trials leading up to its approval. Scientists widely agree that the vaccine has enormous potential to save lives globally, but unproven fears of side effects…
Tag: HPV
Newsmax reports “HPV Vaccine Linked to Autoimmune Events”
The Gardasil vaccine was first approved for the prevention of the human papillomavirus (HPV) in June 2006. It was eventually added to the childhood immunization schedule and recommended to all girls between the ages of 11 and 12. But since then, there have been reports linking Gardasil to autoimmune illnesses. In order to see if…
Systematic Reviews reports “Benefits and harms of the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccines: systematic review with meta-analyses of trial data from clinical study reports”
At 4 years follow-up, the HPV vaccines decreased HPV-related cancer precursors and treatment procedures but increased serious nervous system disorders (exploratory analysis) and general harms. As the included trials were primarily designed to assess benefits and were not adequately designed to assess harms, the extent to which the HPV vaccines’ benefits outweigh their harms is unclear….
Elsevier reports “Gulf war illness, post-HPV vaccination syndrome, and Macrophagic Myofasciitis possibly linked to vaccine-induced autoimmune dysautonomia”
Post-HPV vaccination syndrome, Macrophagic Myofasciitis, and gulf war illness analogy suggests that some vaccines or multiple vaccinations in a very short period of time may induce, in susceptible individuals, chronic pain, fatigue and dyscognition. Vaccine-induced autoimmune dysautonomia is hypothesized as the common pathogenetic mechanism for this symptom cluster. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S1568997220301671