Did drug-maker influence lead to WHO H1N1 overkill?

flu2The World Health Organization denied Jan. 26 that undue influence by pharmaceutical companies led to the UN health agency’s declaration last year that the swine flu was a pandemic, Reuters reports.

The Council of Europe, a human rights organization with 47 member countries, conducted an emergency hearing into the issue after widespread accusations that the WHO was pushed into the pandemic declaration for H1N1 by drug companies anxious to win vaccine contracts.

The Council’s lead health expert, Wolfgang Wodarg, charged a couple of weeks ago that major drug firms orchestrated a “campaign of panic” to elicit the pandemic finding. Wodarg characterized the WHO decision as “one of the greatest medicine scandals of the century.”

As other media reports and politicians have echoed Wodarg’s arguments, at the Council of Europe hearing Tuesday in Strasbourg, France, the WHO’s top flu expert conceded mistakes by the organization but denied that drug firms improperly influenced the pandemic decision.

“Let me state clearly for the record,” said the WHO flu expert, Keiji Fukuda. “The influenza pandemic policies and responses recommended and taken by WHO were not improperly influenced by the pharmaceutical industry.”

While thousands of people died from H1N1, Wodarg charged that the death toll was far less than the usual number of people who die from the seasonal flu.

While the WHO did not recommend travel restrictions because of the H1N1 outbreak, it did cause major disruptions and quarantines in some markets, and had the travel industry prepared for the worst.

The WHO also is conducting its own internal review of how it handled H1N1.


Comments

  1. Philip123 says:

    There have been no double blind placebo controlled trials of vaccination in influenza (it is approved based off the surrogate marker of antibody response to the injection – but no evidence that it does in fact prevent disease). Conversely there are at least three population studies, two in the US and one in Italy that found that influenza death and hospitalization rates either did not decline or in fact increased after mass vaccination was instituted. So to sum it up, in the medical literature there is no evidence that flu vaccination prevents disease the only evidence available says it does not. And this is seasonal influenza we are talking here not the recent swine flu about which less is known.

    Interestingly, the recommendation to vaccinate children for flu was made only as recently as 2007 or 2008 as I recall, they were never vaccinated because healthy children almost never die of flu. This change in vaccine recommendations came quickly on the heals of former president Bush’s veto of a bill which would have outlawed thimerosal from all pediatric vaccines.

    Save yourself the needle prick and take some vitamin D – which by the way does have evidence in the medical literature supporting that it prevents influenza.

    http://healthjournalclub.blogspot.com/

  2. Emilio Coladonato says:

    yea great Work

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