Around 800 European Children Have Developed Narcolepsy After Being Immunized with the Pandemrix H1N1 Swine Flu Vaccine
January
23rd, 2013
When
I posted about this story back in October 2011, there were 79
victims in Finland.
And
now…
Emelie
Olsson is plagued by hallucinations and nightmares. When she wakes
up, she’s often paralyzed, unable to breathe properly or call for
help. During the day she can barely stay awake, and often misses
school or having fun with friends. She is only 14, but at times she
has wondered if her life is worth living.
Emelie
is one of around 800 children in Sweden and elsewhere in Europe who
developed narcolepsy, an incurable sleep disorder, after being
immunized with the Pandemrix H1N1 swine flu vaccine made by British
drugmaker GlaxoSmithKline in 2009.
Finland,
Norway, Ireland and France have seen spikes in narcolepsy cases, too,
and people familiar with the results of a soon-to-be-published study
in Britain have told Reuters it will show a similar pattern in
children there.
Their
fate, coping with an illness that all but destroys normal life, is
developing into what the health official who coordinated Sweden’s
vaccination campaign calls a “medical tragedy” that will demand
rising scientific and medical attention.
Europe’s
drugs regulator has ruled Pandemrix should no longer be used in
people aged under 20. The chief medical officer at GSK’s vaccines
division, Norman Begg, says his firm views the issue extremely
seriously and is “absolutely committed to getting to the bottom of
this”, but adds there is not yet enough data or evidence to suggest
a causal link.
Others
– including Emmanuel Mignot, one of the world’s leading experts
on narcolepsy, who is being funded by GSK to investigate further –
agree more research is needed but say the evidence is already clearly
pointing in one direction.
“There’s
no doubt in my mind whatsoever that Pandemrix increased the
occurrence of narcolepsy onset in children in some countries – and
probably in most countries,” says Mignot, a specialist in the sleep
disorder at Stanford University in the United States.
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