God is our Guide  Number 1 site for helping reverse diseases on Planet Earth

 

CIDPUSA.ORG

 
Home
Diagnosis
Treatment
Pathology
Variants
CIDP info
Fibromyalgia
IVIG
Anti-inflammatory Diet
Burning  Feet Home
Services Page
Chronic Fatigue
Autoimmune diseases
Prognosis
Bible healing
Celiac disease

Vaccination Dangers

CDC VACCINE ALERT

Gardasil Facts

WHO caused Aids

Mycoplasma

H.pylori & AITP

IVIg & platelets

B-12 deficiency

zapper

Cancer therapy

Polio drops details

Bird Flu

Cancer killer cells

Oils for health

Vitamin-D Deficiency can Kill You

 

morgellens

Neck pain

Plastic Bags

Takayasu arteritis

  SmallPox Vaccination    CIDPUSA Foundation

   alternatives treatment of autoimmune disease read our e-book 

Special Google Health Search

Smallpox vaccination and adverse reactions.

 Guidance for clinicians.

Cono J, Casey CG, Bell DM; Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Bioterrorism Preparedness and Response Program, National Center for Infectious Diseases, USA.

The guidance in this report is for evaluation and treatment of patients with complications from smallpox vaccination in the preoutbreak setting.

. Agents for treatment of certain vaccine-associated severe adverse reactions are vaccinia immune globulin (VIG), the first-line therapy, and cidofovir, the second-line therapy.

These agents will be available under Investigational New Drug (IND) protocols from CDC and the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD). Smallpox vaccination in the preoutbreak setting is contraindicated for persons who have the following conditions or have a close contact with the following conditions: 1) a history of atopic dermatitis (commonly referred to as eczema), irrespective of disease severity or activity; 2) active acute, chronic, or exfoliative skin conditions that disrupt the epidermis; 3) pregnant women or women who desire to become pregnant in the 28 days after vaccination; and 4) persons who are immunocompromised as a result of human immunodeficiency virus or acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, autoimmune conditions, cancer, radiation treatment, immunosuppressive medications, or other immunodeficiencies. Additional contraindications that apply only to vaccination candidates but do not include their close contacts are persons with smallpox vaccine-component allergies, women who are breastfeeding, those taking topical ocular steroid medications, those with moderate-to-severe intercurrent illness, and persons aged < 18 years. In addition, history of Darier disease is a contraindication in a potential vaccinee and a contraindication if a household contact has active disease. In the event of a smallpox outbreak, outbreak-specific guidance will be disseminated by CDC regarding populations to be vaccinated and specific contraindications to vaccination. Vaccinia can be transmitted from a vaccinee's unhealed vaccination site to other persons by close contact and can lead to the same adverse events as in the vaccinee.

 
  • Sesame seed oil and bigger breast

     

  •