Lucinda Marshall: Making the HPV Vaccine Mandatory is Bad Medicine
A BUZZFLASH GUEST CONTRIBUTION
by Lucinda Marshall
Governor Rick Perry's decision to sidestep the Texas legislature and issue an executive order mandating that girls entering the 6th grade receive the new HPV vaccine raises troubling questions about the influence pharmaceutical companies wield on the crafting of public health policy. Cervical cancer is only expected to cause 3,670 deaths in the U.S. in 2007, a miniscule percentage (less than 2%) of the 270,000 deaths from the disease worldwide and only 1% of the total annual number of deaths from all cancers in the United States.
While cervical cancer used to be one of the deadliest diseases for women in the U.S., the number of deaths it causes has dropped dramatically (by 74% from 1955-1992) and it continues to drop). Why then are so many states considering mandating a vaccine that costs $300-$500 per patient for a type of cancer that is already largely under control in this country and which can be almost entirely prevented by regular gynecological checkups and Pap smears?
Merck & Co., the giant pharmaceutical company that makes the vaccine Gardasil, is spending millions of dollars lobbying state legislators. In Texas, where Merck recently doubled its lobbying efforts, Gov. Perry received $6,000 from Merck's political action committee during his last campaign. One of Merck's key lobbyists in Texas is Perry's former chief-of-staff, the mother-in-law of his current chief-of-staff, and the state director of Women in Government, a national advocacy group of female state legislators that has received substantial funds from Merck.
It is important to note that low-income women and women who do not have health insurance are most at risk because they are less likely to get regular Pap smears. More than half of the diagnosed cases of cervical cancer are in women who have not had a Pap smear in three years. While Gov. Perry has mandated that the state of Texas foot the bill for those who can't afford the expensive HPV vaccine, it is unclear where those funds would come from either in Texas or in other states that are considering making the vaccine mandatory. And obviously the cost of the vaccine makes it prohibitive in the countries where it is most needed and would potentially do the most good.
What is clear is that Merck has a substantial financial interest in the vaccine becoming mandatory even though the added benefit to public health is both minimal and costly. With more than 10 million girls in the U.S. between the ages of 10-14, the drug company stands to make billions of dollars preventing a disease that is already treatable in the targeted population. Since the vaccine does not eliminate the need for regular Pap smears, it would appear that a far more appropriate and cost effective first step would be to make regular gynecological healthcare available for all women regardless of income and medical insurance, particularly since this step by itself would go a long way in reducing the few cases of cervical cancer that still occur in this country.
There is however another significant public health concern in regards to the HPV vaccine, namely that it is a very new drug with no history. We are of course being told that it is perfectly safe and has few side effects, but we were also told that about Thalidomide, DES, and Hormone Replacement Therapy. Negative health concerns have also been raised about other children's vaccines and the Anthrax vaccine given to those in the armed forces as well as drugs such as Vioxx, another Merck drug.
While Merck says that Gardasil is 100% effective in preventing the two types of the HPV virus that cause 70% of all cervical cancer, questions have arisen about these results. In an article in Healthfacts, Maryann Napoli, associate director of the Center for Medical Consumers reports that according to Barbara Loe Fisher, president of the National Vaccine Information Center and a former member of the FDA Vaccines and Related Biologic Products Advisory Committee, the placebos in Merck's studies contained aluminum (which is reported to cause inflammation and cell death in animals and humans) rather than saline solution, which according to Fisher "violates the principle of scientific method...making it hard to tell whether the many adverse events reported were due to the use of aluminum in both the placebo and the drug or to the Gardasil itself.
And in an essay published in The New York Times in July 2006, Roni Rabin points out that most of the subjects in the Merck trials were women over the age of 16. Rabin found that the vaccine was only tested on 1,200 girls under the age of 16. In addition, the vaccine is so new that it is not yet known for how long it will be effective or whether a booster will be required. It is also important to note that Merck's own literature states that Gardasil, "has not been evaluated for the potential to cause carcinogenicity or genotoxicity."
It is not that guarding against HPV is not a good idea; in theory of course it is a great idea, but a healthy dose of skepticism is appropriate when it comes to believing the promises or stated motives of pharmaceutical companies. It seems unconscionable to mandate the use of a vaccine that has the potential to put the lives and health of an entire generation of girls at risk for the sake of preventing a cancer that is a risk to so few young women in this country and which can already be prevented by other less risky means.
A BUZZFLASH GUEST CONTRIBUTION
Lucinda Marshall is a feminist artist, writer and activist. She is the Founder of the Feminist Peace Network, www.feministpeacenetwork.org. Her work has been published in numerous publications in the U.S. and abroad including, Counterpunch, Alternet, Dissident Voice, Off Our Backs, The Progressive, Countercurrents, Z Magazine, Common Dreams, and In These Times Information Clearinghouse. She blogs at WIMN Online and Sheroes.
- Login or register to post comments
- Printer-friendly version
Buzz this on Buzzflash.net




Technorati Tags:
unexplained deaths, also not substitute for screening
Vaccination does not substitute for routine cervical cancer screening. Females who receive GARDASIL should continue cervical cancer screening.
http://www.passporthealtheastsc.com/gardasl.html
The Illinois Vaccine Awareness Coalition raises serious concerns, including questions about some unexplained deaths:
IVAC's concerns about Human Papilomavirus (HPV) Vaccine Types 6, 11, 16, 18 from vaccine package insert
lack of safety studies on the ingredients singly, combined, cumulative, synergistically with other vaccines' ingredients;
aluminum as an ingredient and in placebo;
unknown ingredients in culture medium;
lack of identity of trial subjects: country, race;
“clinical trials population approximated general population of American women;”
only 4 yr follow up;
no accounts for 7 deaths out of 17 subjects who died;
confusion re injection into pregnant women:
“Gardasil is not recommended for pregnant women.”
unknown if Gardasil can cause fetal harm when infected into a pregnant woeman or if it effects reproduction capacity;
“Gardasil should be given to a pregnant woman only if clearly needed.”
“Merck & Co..., Inc. maintains a Pregnancy Registry to monitor fetal outcomes of pregnant women exposed to Gardasil.”
birth abnormalities within 30 days of mother's vaccination: narrowing of pyloric sphincterthat blocks food passage from stomach into duodenum; kidney distension/obstruction, hip abnormality, club foot:
no studies on male fertility;
unknown if vaccine is excreted in breast milk;
in clinical studies, higher number of breast fed babies, whose mothers received Gardasil, had acute respiratory illnesses within 30 days after mother vaccination as compared to babies whose mothers received placebos;
no studies of vaccine given with other vaccines other that hepatitis B vaccine nor does it state specifically which hepatitis B vaccine used in study;
confusion about immogenicity bridging, that effectiveness of vaccine in 9-15 year old girls is inferred;
http://www.vaccineawareness.org/concerns.htm#09
I'm not persuaded
I think this vaccine is great, a big breakthrough for women's health. The first vaccine against cancer! the author would have been more persuasive if she'd had some medical experts to back up her claims.
Who are the taskmasters
The story of gardasil really shows which organ grinder the republican monkeys are dancing for.
First they didn't like gardasil because it was related to sexual activity - thank you fundamentalist talking point. But when big pharma stepped on the fundie bug, the republicans couldn't deny a billion dollar deal maker.
Cash trumps piety every time for these folks. To quote the bible "Jesus wept".
Mandatory HPV vaccine
postina
What if this was a way to implant the Verichip without raising anyone's suspicions. It's interesting that a vaccine was one targeting women. They probably could have just as easily have developed one for future prevention of prostate cancer...but, I digress.