CANINE
VACCINATION
Catherine O’Driscoll
Pro-vaccinators use
statistics to 'prove' that vaccines have eradicated epidemics. However, the way
they have interpreted these statistics is open to question. When you look at
the medical literature, you find research project after research project which
shows that as many vaccinated humans contract a disease as do unvaccinated -
and it can even be argued that more vaccinated people contract the diseases.
In absolute truth,
it is clear that immunity only sometimes follows vaccination. Research recently
conducted by the Canine Health Census (CHC) shows that at least 50% of the dogs
with viral diseases (parvovirus, distemper, etc), contracted the diseases
within three months of being vaccinated. This supports the view that vaccines
often fail to protect, and that in some cases they can actually cause the
disease they are designed to prevent. In the case of leptospirosis,
every single dog with the disease contracted it within three months of being
vaccinated. So where was the protection?
In contrast, the
adverse effects of vaccination are well documented. Vaccine manufacturers admit
that vaccines can cause encephalitis, an inflammation of the brain.
Encephalitis has many diverse symptoms, ranging from acute to chronic. Emeritus
professor of neurology at
Diarrhoea, vomiting,
flatulence, gastroenteritis, stomach aches, headaches, enuresis, constipation,
breathing difficulties, hyperactivity, obsessiveness,
inatentiveness, mental retardation, seizures,
paralysis, aggression, and other conditions are known to be sequelae
arising from viral encephalitis.
Death is quite
possible. Dr Harris L Coulter argues that encephalitis from infectious disease
or traumatic injury is known produce severe neurologic
damage in the absence of an acute reaction, and that
vaccine-induced encephalitis should be no exception. So you take your
newly-vaccinated dog home from the vet's, and he seems fine, and then a few
weeks later, he starts having skin problems or digestive problems, or biting
the children. And no-one thinks to tie it in with the vaccine...except that
some vets are now making this connection.
When a dog (or any
species) reacts to a vaccine with drowsiness, a slight fever, or appears off
his food, there is every reason to fear that this is the hypersensitivity
reaction described in the vaccine manufacturers' literature, which can cause
inflammation, which can lead to encephalitis, which is capable of producing
quite severe neurologic consequences and even death.
Further, the symptoms need not manifest themselves immediately for damage to
ensue.
Dr JA Morris, a
leading
Dr R Mendelsohn said: "There now exists a growing
theoretical concern which links immunisation to the huge increase, in recent
decades, of autoimmune diseases, e.g., rheumatoid arthritis, multiple
sclerosis, lymphoma and leukaemia."
Vets and vaccine
manufacturers tell us that 'only a tiny minority' of dogs suffer adverse
reactions to vaccines. According to research conducted by the CHC, this tiny
minority is, in fact, one in every hundred dogs. Many dogs with behavioural
problems, eating disorders, digestive problems, allergies, organ damage, skin
complaints, autoimmune diseases, arthritis and so on, could well trace their
origin to the door of the veterinary practice, and to the needle.
I have three living
Golden Retrievers, and three dead Golden Retrievers. Oliver died when he was
four: we woke one morning to discover that his back legs were paralysed. We
rushed him to the vets where he was put on a steroid drip and died that day.
Although the conventional vet could offer no explanation, a homoeopathic vets tells me that, in his view, this is a classic vaccine
reaction.
Prudence died when
she was six from an autoimmune disease. Dr Jean Dodds
DVM claims that, "Many veterinarians trace the present problems with
allergic and immunologic diseases to the introduction of MLV (multiple live virus) vaccines some twenty years ago."
A few days after his
puppy jab, Samson was found in the garden, his back legs - like Oliver's - were
paralysed. We panicked and called the vet, who told us to give Sam a paracetamol (which, incidentally, are poisonous to dogs).
Sam recovered. The next year, again a few days after his vaccine, Samson's head
swelled up like a balloon and he ran round screaming and crying. Shortly
afterwards, we discovered that Samson had autoimmune disease. He died a few
weeks ago, aged five, from cancer. We can trace his death right the way back to
the door of the veterinary practice, to the day when a vaccine destroyed his
immune system.
And
of the three living dogs? Chappie, now 13, has been treated for
thyroid disease. Underlying thyroid disease pre-disposes a dog to autoimmune
diseases, the triggers for which include vaccines. One vet observed to me that
thyroid disease is itself rampant where vaccine coverage is high. Sophie has
had arthritis since she was six - also linked to vaccines.
Gwinnie was vaccinated before she came
to live with us at the age of five months: her back would ripple if you put
your hand on it, and she chewed at her paws and gnawed
at her flesh. We took her to a homoeopathic vet where 'vaccinosis',
a morbid reaction to vaccines, was diagnosed and successfully treated. Don't
imagine that I am speculating that vaccines are doing these things to our dogs.
The scientific literature tells us that vaccines are quite capable of causing
all this damage.
According to one
vaccine manufacturer, only 15 dogs had suffered adverse vaccine reactions in
three million administered doses. If the vaccine manufacturer is right, then
the probability of one of my six dogs experiencing a vaccine reaction is about
three in a million. The chances of three of my dogs having a vaccine reaction
is about one in fifty billion Tera-doses. Six out of
six, like three out of six, is mathematically impossible. So someone is
mistaken.
The fact is that
there is no effecting reporting system. No-one actually knows how many dogs
react to their vaccines; and even fewer people know (because no-one has told
them) how a vaccine reaction can manifest.
The vaccine manufacturers state, in their own literature - in their
veterinary data sheets - that vaccination is not without risks. Does your vet
warn you? One vaccine manufacturer writes:
"Only healthy
dogs should be vaccinated. Following initial vaccination dogs should not be
exposed to infection for at least 14 days. Generalised hypersensitivity
reactions following administration may occasionally occur.
"A good immune
response is reliant on the reaction of an immunogenic agent and a fully
competent immune system. Immunogenicity of the
vaccine antigen will be reduced by poor storage or inappropriate
administration. Immunocompetence of the animal may be
compromised by a variety of factors, including poor health, nutritional status,
genetic factors, concurrent drug therapy and stress."
In plain English,
this means that there are around nine factors associated with vaccination that
will put every dog at risk. The first of these is the irrefutable statement
that only healthy dogs should be vaccinated. Flying in the face of this advice,
vets routinely vaccinate sick dogs. Their logic is that, because the dog is
sick, he needs the protection vaccines supposedly confer. My book contains a
number of case stories where vets vaccinated sick dogs, and the dogs died.
Nutritional factors
may also render vaccines harmful. For example, in one experiment, puppies
deliberately starved of vitamin B5 were injected with vaccines and died.
Vitamin B5 can be destroyed when cooked or frozen - and most dogs are given
(cooked) processed and/or frozen food. The mineral selenium and vitamin A are
vital for healthy thyroid function - pet food additives ethoxyquin, BHA and BHT are
proven to destroy both selenium and vitamin A. As stated
earlier, underlying thyroid disease pre-disposes dogs to autoimmune disease,
triggered by vaccines.
Vaccine
manufacturers warn that genetic factors might put dogs at risk from
vaccination. They don't tell us what these are - but neither does your vet have
a clue. He or she vaccinates anyway. At least doctors and nurses ask humans
whether there is any history of epilepsy, arthritis or allergies in the family
before getting the needle out.
The phrase
'concurrent drug therapy' refers to the fact that immune-suppressant drugs
should not be given in conjunction with vaccines. A dog taking steroids, for
example, might die if vaccinated. This is because the whole basis of
vaccination is that a virus is injected into a dog so that he can mount an
immune response and develop antibodies to the virus. If the dog's immune system
is suppressed - either by drugs, ill health, poor nutrition, genetic
weaknesses, or stress - then he isn't going to be able to mount that immune
response, and the vaccine could kill him or cause chronic disease.
MLV vaccines, by the
way, are designed to multiply over time in the host.
So a dog with a poor immune system will find himself gradually bombarded with a
multiplying virus until such time as he either defeats the virus or succumbs to
it (dies). The picture is complicated by the fact that the way the vet stores
and handles the vaccine also has a bearing on whether the vaccine is successful
or not. Another factor is associated with the word, 'attenuation'. Attenuation
is where the vaccine is supposedly rendered harmless (i.e., is not capable of
producing disease). According to Dr Ronald D Schultz, vaccines will cause
disease in an animal (or human) where attenuation has been unsuccessful, or
where the host's immune system is suppressed.
Vaccines also can,
and do, shed in the environment and revert to virulence - which means that a
dog can catch a disease from a vaccinated dog. Other species can be affected:
parvovirus is thought, for example, to have been caused by shedding of the
feline enteritis vaccine.
I hope that I have alarmed
you sufficiently to consider whether vaccination is really necessary, or
whether there is a safer alternative, such as homoeopathic nosodes
(for further information on this, contact us at the Canine Health Census and we
may be able to point you in the direction of a homoeopathic vet near you).
By the way, don't
expect your vet to furnish you with unbiased information concerning
vaccination. To begin with, in the words of Dr Jean Dodds,
"vets need to be better educated about the risks associated with
vaccination". Most vets are just as much in the dark as you are. Within
weeks of the publication of my book, the National Office of Animal Health in
the
The case against
vaccines is explored in significantly greater detail in Catherine O'Driscoll's book, "Who
Killed the Darling Buds of May?: What Vets Don't Tell
You About Vaccines". It is available from Abbeywood
Publishing,
Copyright
2001 Catherine O’Driscoll. All rights reserved.