T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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547.1 | | SUPER::WTHOMAS | | Tue Jun 22 1993 10:31 | 18 |
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I absolutely question the theory of linking a Vit. K shot at birth
to early childhood cancer.
Cancer is a generic term which covers a multitude of conditions.
How can they be sure that the children who had the shots were not
also exposed to carcinogenic substances while growing up? Was the food
compared, the quality of air that they breathed compared, were
chemicals in their environments compared? Were stress levels and
nutrition compared? Were psychological profiles performed?
I tend to think not.
The conclusion from the research that you stated is so very flawed
that I would not be overly concerned about the injection.
Wendy
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547.2 | Ditto Wendy!! | MKOTS3::HENMUELLER | Vickie | Tue Jun 22 1993 16:45 | 1 |
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547.3 | I could be wrong, but ... | FORTY2::GOODWIN | | Wed Jun 23 1993 04:21 | 55 |
| Wendy,
I don't think you should dismiss this so easily.
>> I absolutely question the theory of linking a Vit. K shot at birth
>> to early childhood cancer.
Of course it should be questioned. I have but I am convinced on the
evidence I have seen that there is very likely to be a link between
intramuscular vitamin k & childhood cancer.
>> Cancer is a generic term which covers a multitude of conditions.
I know. The research lists the various cancers that the children in the
study suffered. The bulk are leukaemias, lymphomas and nervous system
tumours.
>> How can they be sure that the children who had the shots were not
>> also exposed to carcinogenic substances while growing up? Was the food
>> compared, the quality of air that they breathed compared, were
>> chemicals in their environments compared? Were stress levels and
>> nutrition compared? Were psychological profiles performed?
>> I tend to think not.
Clearly cancers may be caused by a number of factors, or perhaps a
combination of factors, but surely that is not to deny any strong
correlation that may be found between some particular factor & subsequent
cancer. How else can we study it?
This study looked at medical records and so could only investigate any
links between various aspects of the childrens/mothers medical history
and the cancers. It looked for links with a number of such aspects.
It found an increase in the risk of childhood cancer by a factor of 2
in those children given the vitamin k injection. The 95% confidence
interval was 1.5 to 2.5 (these figures are approximate as I don't have
the paper in front of me).
Children's vitamin k concentrations are up to 5000 times the normal
level after the injection. It doesn't seem to be out of the question
for that to have some affects other than the prevention of HDN.
After all, if vitamin k is good for babies, why does mother nature
arrange that they have so little? Or, to put it the other way around,
if vitamin k is really advantageous, surely mother nature (i.e. the
results of evolution) would provide it.
>> The conclusion from the research that you stated is so very flawed
>> that I would not be overly concerned about the injection.
I really have no idea how you can state that the conclusion is flawed
without having read the reasearch. I personally am very concerned about
the injection, but, as I say, I'm not an expert.
Mike.
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547.4 | | SUPER::WTHOMAS | | Wed Jun 23 1993 10:45 | 33 |
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100% of children who breath at birth will eventually go on to
develop a terminal illness from which they will die (in most cases that
terminal illness will be old age or accident).
If my child receives that shot and is then raised near a nuclear
dump site and then develops cancer, is it due to the shot or to the
environment, according to what you have presented that child would fall
into the shot=cancer category.
I'm not saying that the shot is fabulous, there are a lot of things
that you will be asked to do that are supposedly good for your child
that you will question (we, for one refused the hep. series now
routinely given at birth).
As to why we appear to need something that mother nature is not
providing? Perhaps some children do not indeed need any vitamin
supplement at birth, some do. In olden days it would have been referred
to as survival of the fittest, we are now able to increase the more
"non-fittest" children's chances of survival. Is that to be considered
bad or not "natural"?
I'm not telling you not to worry, it's your decision, worry about
what you want to (and there will be a million worries with your little
one ;-)), me? I'm worrying how to teach my kids to be kind to small
animals and to laugh when they feel the urge.
Please keep us updated, I'm interested in your final decision.
Wendy
Wendy
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547.5 | | FORTY2::GOODWIN | | Wed Jun 23 1993 11:15 | 18 |
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Of course the chances are minimal & there are a hundred other things
to worry about. I just happen to be on this one at the moment!
As to your nuclear dump site analogy, what if half the children in that
environment have the shot and a twice as many of that half develop cancer?
Don't you ignore the environment and concentrate on the shot?
And as to the "survival of the fittest", might it not be that that very
mechanism has been selecting in favour of low vitamin k levels all
the time? I wouldn't think twice about doing something 'unnatural'
if there wasn't a thought at the back of my mind that maybe we don't
know everything about what we are doing.
Anyway, thanks for your interest, I'd better get onto the next of my
million worries I suppose, or I'll never get through them!
Mike.
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547.6 | statistical worries | SPECXN::MUNNS | | Thu Jun 24 1993 11:32 | 9 |
| Every parent faces these statistical worries, if they are informed on
the risks of receiving the various childhood vaccinations. Even the
remote chance of complication can get a parent to worrying.
All you can do is act based on the information you have, however
incomplete it may be. If you can learn the risks of getting
Haemorrhagic Disease, comparing Vitamin K supplemented kids vs.
untreated, then perhaps you will have enough information to make
a decision.
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547.7 | Is this routine in the U.S.? | SWAM1::MATHIEU_PA | | Thu Jul 01 1993 20:29 | 16 |
| Sorry not to be giving you any of the answers that you need, but one
thing I was curious about: Are these vitamin K routine in the US? I
was never asked for consent for any such thing, and I have never
heard of vitamin K shots or oral dose before.
Eventually, you'll have to go with your gut feelings when it comes to a
final decision. Sometimes parental decisions fly in the face of current
fashion and end up being correct in the long run. For example, I
insisted on lying my newborn daughter on the back, even though all the
nurses kept really telling me off. It just looked more "natural" to me,
and that's the way we were all raised back home. Now of course, medical
fashion has gone back to back-sleeping, and I feel vindicated.
Good luck in your decision.
Patricia.
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547.8 | Vitamin K shots | CSC32::DUBOIS | Discrimination encourages violence | Tue Jul 06 1993 15:38 | 7 |
| Vitamin K shots are routine in the U.S. They help the blood clot, which
is especially important if parents decide to circumsize a baby boy before
he is 8 days old. (I thought it really interesting when our doctor told
us that the blood doesn't clot well until they are 8 days old, and that
this is the age that the Bible suggests circumsizing a boy).
Carol
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547.9 | Required in Mass. | AKOCOA::BOLAND | | Wed Jul 07 1993 14:56 | 25 |
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I've been meaning to enter this note for a while but... well I always
manage to forget. Today is my last day (for a while), I'm due with my
second in two weeks.
After reading this note, discussing it with hubby and then going thru
all my Lamaze refresher stuff I discovered that this Vitamin K shot
is mandatory in Massachusettes. I left the paper at home, on the table
where it has been patiently waiting for me to remember to bring it in,
but alas, I've forgotten again. The article/paper mentioned the law(?)
number (if that is the correct term), but basically it seems you don't
have a choice in Mass. If you expect your child to attend public
schools etc. then certain innoculation requirements must be met.
This always confuses me...since you "MUST" have these shots to attend
public schools but students without innoculations are in
schools....hmmm. Just something to think about. You may find that
your state just does things and the hospital/dr you choose has no
options for you.
Just a thought....
anxiously awaiting #2,
Rose Marie
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547.10 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | hate is STILL not a family value | Mon Jul 12 1993 13:22 | 16 |
| Vitamin K isn't an immunization, it is a vitamin which is given to
prevent hemorraging in newborns.
There is some debate among people on whether it is necessary,
particularly if the mother will be breastfeeding (breastfed babies seem
to get the bacteria which manufactures vitamin K more quickly than
formula-fed babies), and there was no use of forceps, or other
extraction techniques during the birth. Extraction methods often cause
some trauma which can cause bleeding.
I had my two youngest girls at home, so this wasn't an arguement as
direct-entry midwives can't give innoculations or drugs, or use any
extraction equipment.
Meg
Meg
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547.11 | Evidence questioned
Evidence questioned
| SEALS::MARSH | The dolphins have the answer | Tue Jul 13 1993 05:40 | 15 |
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The cancer numbers mentioned in .0 have been questioned by a different team in
Sweden who found no increase in cancer cases in children who had been given Vit
K at birth. This was in "The Guardian" health section about a week ago. I no
longer have the paper.
Given all the other risks we subject children to, I think the Vit K jab is a
very minor factor. I mean should you put petrol in your car when your child is
is it - what about all those bezene fumes? What is in the water around here?
I live Berkshire, England and I am far more worried about what may be coming
out of the MoD places around here and the quality of the air and water than
the fact that my child was given Vit K at birth.
Celia
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547.12 | Counter-study | STAR::LEWIS | | Wed Sep 29 1993 12:41 | 11 |
| This was in last Thursday's Boston Globe (9/23)
Vitamin-cancer link in infants disputed
The Vitamin K shots given to all newborns to reduce the chance of
dangerous hemorrhaging do not appear to increase the risk of childhood
leukemias or other cancers, according to a study in today's New England
Journal of Medicine. The survey, which included nearly 55,000 children,
counters two previous smaller studies suggesting a doubling of the
cancer risk.
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547.13 | H-Fever, what is it? | DECWET::JO | Mary had a little lamb, with mint jelly. Dot Warner | Mon Sep 19 1994 15:43 | 10 |
| since this is the only place i've seen heamorrghic mentioned, i'll post
my question.
i remember being sick in first grade and being told that i had H-Fever.
as far as my parents can remember the H stood for heamorraghic.
does anyone know what it is? i'm 31 today and fairly healthy.
i'm just curios.
jo
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