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"Protecting the health and informed consent rights of children since 1982."
Following
is a press release issued jointly by the Lyme Disease Foundation and the
National Vaccine Information Center (NVIC). May
23, 2001 SENATORS
DODD AND SANTORUM INTRODUCE LYME DISEASE BILL WHILE CONSUMERS AND SCIENTISTS
CALL FOR SAFER VACCINE As
Lyme disease cases reach a record high across the country, representatives of
the patient community traveled to Capitol Hill today to lend their voices in
support of new legislation designed to give them a greater voice in the
direction of Lyme disease and other
“tick-borne disorder” federal research. Senators Christopher Dodd (D-CT) and
Rick Santorum (R-PA) announced the introduction of a bill to establish a
Tick-Borne Advisory Committee, appointing public members from the patient and
research community to interact with government officials responsible for Lyme
disease research and public education activities. The
patient community has long felt alienated and ignored by federal research
efforts. Additionally, the debate
about treatment methods for this illness has led
many physicians to refuse to accept Lyme disease patients further
limiting access to quality treatment. In
announcing this initiative, the Senators held up this model of patient and
government interaction
as an effective mechanism for moving research and treatment development forward. Compounding
the patient community’s frustration is a continued distrust of the efficacy
and safety of the lone vaccine on the market.
Reports of serious adverse reactions in some vaccine recipients are
prompting many experts to call for a re-examination of the vaccine and its
usefulness to the public in general. “We
need a vaccine but the one out there right now is surrounded by question marks,
said Karen Vanderhoof-Forschner, co-founder and president of the Lyme Disease
Foundation, which sponsored the rally. “I
cannot in good conscience encourage anyone to take the vaccine.
There are just too many unanswered questions.” Research
scientist Paul T. Fawcett, Ph.D. of the Alfred I. duPont Hospital for Children,
spoke about the findings of a well-controlled study examining the effects of the
Lyme vaccine on diagnostic tests which also documented serious adverse events
associated with the vaccine. He was joined by Ronald Schell, Ph.D., University
of Wisconsin Medical School and Wisconsin State Laboratory of Hygiene, and Julie
Rawlings, MPH, Texas Department of Health. Barbara Loe Fisher, co-founder and
president of the National Vaccine Information Center and vaccine victims Jenny
Marra, of New Jersey, and Joe Smigo
of Pennsylvania, also urged federal health agencies to investigate mounting
evidence that the current Lyme vaccine is too reactive. The National Vaccine
Information Center is a non-profit educational organization founded by parents
of vaccine-injured children in 1982.
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