Measles Vaccine Responsible For Outbreak; Vaccinated Population Contracts Mumps
Posted by kandylini on June 8, 2008
From Red Pill Reich, a great blog by nurse Olivia Love Worthy. Check it out!
Research shows that vaccines corrupt the immune system and cause autoimmune diseases. They have never worked, and have been responsible for many outbreaks of the very diseases they were meant to prevent.
Infectious diseases are commonly seen in those vaccinated. Below is an example from What Doctors Don’t Tell You (citing the New England Journal of Medicine) concerning an outbreak of mumps in a population that was 100% vaccinated, followed by another article pertaining to a similar situation with the measles.
The CDC’s response in the first article, of course, is that the strain responsible for the mumps outbreak is different from that offered in the vaccine, and therefore another vaccine should be added to the current schedule (increasing the children’s exposure to poisonous mercury). What they didn’t address is the fact that no one not-vaccinated suffered from the mumps outbreak.
The second article, taken from the American Journal of Public Health, actually states that at least 48% of those affected by the measles outbreak contracted the illness from the vaccine itself.
Too bad drug companies don’t offer a money back guarantee.
MMR: Major mumps outbreak proves the vaccine doesn’t work
At a time when health officials are quietly admitting that there could be a link between the MMR (measles-mumps-rubella) vaccine and autism, a new study has also discovered that it doesn’t work.
Researchers investigating a large outbreak of mumps in 2006, when 6,584 cases were reported among college students, have discovered that virtually every sufferer had been vaccinated twice against the disease.
The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) reveals that at least 84 per cent of young adults aged between 18 and 24 years had received two-dose vaccines against mumps. And in 2006 – when the outbreak occurred – the national two-dose coverage among adolescents reached 87 per cent, the highest in US history, and just one point below that needed for ‘herd immunity’.

CDC researchers speculate that the outbreak – primarily among 18- to 24-year-olds – was the result of the ‘wrong type of mumps’. The vaccine is supposed to protect against A-virus mumps, whereas the outbreak in 2006 was caused by the G-virus strain.
Despite its limitations, the CDC team reckons that all children need a third dose of MMR – even though the two-dose vaccine was introduced following a 1980 mumps outbreak among children who had received a single vaccine dose.
It may be a measure that will be hard to introduce at a time when health officials are accepting that the MMR vaccine can cause autism among children with a ‘mitochondrial disorder’.
(Source: New England Journal of Medicine, 2008; 358: 1580-9)
(To see this article in its original location, click here.)
Here’s part of an article from the American Journal of Public Health pertaining to the outbreak of measles in a vaccinated population:
An outbreak of measles occurred in a high school with a documented vaccination level of 98 per cent. Nineteen (70 per cent) of the cases were students who had histories of measles vaccination at 12 months of age or older and are therefore considered vaccine failures. Persons who were unimmunized or immunized at less than 12 months of age had substantially higher attack rates compared to those immunized on or after 12 months of age. Vaccine failures among apparently adequately vaccinated individuals were sources of infection for at least 48 per cent of the cases in the outbreak.

There was no evidence to suggest that waning immunity was a contributing factor among the vaccine failures. Close contact with cases of measles in the high school, source or provider of vaccine, sharing common activities or classes with cases, and verification of the vaccination history were not significant risk factors in the outbreak. The outbreak subsided spontaneously after four generations of illness in the school and demonstrates that when measles is introduced in a highly vaccinated population, vaccine failures may play some role in transmission but that such transmission is not usually sustained.
(To see the rest of this article, click here.)
