Bill
Would End Hepatitis B Shots For Children
Parents
in Favor But Health Department Opposed

Judy Converse hugged her
two-year-old son, Ben, in 1999 after he suffered a
nightmare of nerve damage after a shot at birth for
hepatitis B at Falmouth Hospital. |

France
Suspends Hepatitis B Shot
Commissioner
Koh's Testimony Was 'Wild
PARENTS
CAN HELP PREVENT VACCINE REACTIONS
By
Ed Oliver
July 2001
Parents
would be able to choose whether to vaccinate their children
against hepatitis B under a bill being considered on Beacon
Hill.
Under
current law, the Dept. of Public Health has the power to specify
which diseases a child must be protected against before entering
school. Hepatitis B is one of the diseases mandated by the DPH.
The
bill is in response to alarming reports from around the nation
about children who suffered severe reactions and even death
shortly after they were vaccinated against hepatitis B, says
Debbie Bermudes, Arlington, Executive Director of Massachusetts
Citizens for Vaccination Choice.
She
testified in favor of the parental choice bill. Medical
authorities, however, dismiss such evidence as anecdotal.
Under
current law, parents must obtain a religious or medical
exemption to allow their children to attend school without the
vaccinations. Any parent can refuse to allow the vaccination at
birth.
The
hepatitis B vaccine is routinely administered to newborns in
Massachusetts although the state law does not require it to be
given at such an early age.
Two
important facts regarding hepatitis B:
-
Newborn
babies are not at risk of contracting hepatitis B unless
their mother is infected with the disease.
-
Hepatitis
B is primarily a disease of homosexuals, drug addicts and
promiscuous heterosexuals. The vaccine is given to babies
because health authorities are having trouble getting those
risk groups to take the vaccine.
Now
In Health Committee
The
bill was introduced by Rep. John Rogers (D-Norwood). The
Education Committee heard testimony on H.B.1936 in late March.
It was then bumped over to the Committee on Health Care in
mid-April.
Bermudes
told the committee, "We as parents and as organizers
working on behalf of parents want to be able to trust the
Department of Public Health. Yet, when we see vaccines such as
the hepatitis B vaccine being mandated for a population that is
clearly at minimal risk in the absence of any kind of public
health emergency, we must pause to question the rationale."
She
tells MassNews that the state agency actually instructs people
that they are required to have their babies get the shots,
although state law (MGL., c.76 s.15) only says vaccinations are
required for entry into school.
Current
policy is to require hepatitis B vaccinations for children who
will attend licensed day care or pre-school and also at entrance
into kindergarten and grade 7. This entry requirement will be
phased in for all other grades between K-12 by the year 2005.
College students will also be phased in during that period.
Judy
Converse, Falmouth, testified in favor of the proposed bill. In
1996, her newborn son nearly died from a dose of the hepatitis B
vaccine administered by the Falmouth Hospital without her
knowledge. The child suffered from a host of symptoms requiring
extensive and costly therapy. Her experience mirrors that of
thousands of others in the United States. (Search for
"Converse" in the MassNews archives or look at the
June 1999 print edition.)
Converse
also testified in 1999 before a congressional committee
investigating the poor safety record of the vaccine. She is a
registered dietician with a master's degree in public health.
Converse
questioned the need for vaccinating children when most cases of
hepatitis B in the United States occur in adults and are
transmitted through sexual contact with an infected person.
Vaccine
Is Greater Risk
She
testified that a child in Massachusetts has a greater chance of
reacting adversely to this vaccine and suffering lifelong
impairment than they have of contracting the virus itself.
"Without
imminent risk for contracting this virus, any school system
which requires this vaccine for entrance is, in my opinion,
acting criminally and putting its students at hazard for
outcomes like autism, degenerative neuromuscular diseases,
chronic fatigue syndrome, deafness and more. All of these have
been linked to hepatitis B vaccine injury," testified
Converse.
Commissioner
Koh testified that the Dept. of Health opposes the bill.
"Those not already infected need to be protected before
they reach the age at which they are most likely to be
exposed." He said, "The vaccine is extremely safe with
severe reactions being very rare."
The
Centers for Disease Control began recommending universal
vaccination of children in 1991. Currently, 43 states have
childhood, mandated, hepatitis B vaccination programs in place.
Infant
vaccinations were suspended for a short while in 1999 after the
vaccine was found to contain mercury, but a new vaccine was
rushed onto the market and regular vaccination of infants
resumed.
Marketing
of the hepatitis B vaccine is a large profit center for drug companies,
most of which comes from mandatory vaccination programs for children.
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