More Proof Published that Common Childhood Vaccines May Cause Diabetes
The prestigious peer reviewed journal, Journal of Pediatric Endocrinology and Metabolism, published a study during the last week of May 2003 by Dr J Bart Classen, an immunologist at Classen Immunotherapies, and David Carey Classen, an infectious disease specialist at the University of Utah, providing support for a causal relationship between several common paediatric vaccines and the development of insulin dependent diabetes.
The prestigious peer reviewed journal, Journal of Pediatric Endocrinology and Metabolism, published a study during the last week of May 2003 by Dr J Bart Classen, an immunologist at Classen Immunotherapies, and David Carey Classen, an infectious disease specialist at the University of Utah, providing support for a causal relationship between several common paediatric vaccines and the development of insulin dependent diabetes.Their previously published work proved the hemophilus vaccine, a common paediatric vaccine, caused a 25% rise in insulin dependent diabetes in children under the age of 7. Classen’s research indicates most cases of diabetes caused by vaccines occur between 24 to 48 months after immunization of young children but the delay can be shorter in older children with prior damage to their pancreas. The time delay between vaccination and diabetes corresponds exactly to work from several independent groups, which showed a similar delay between the initiation of autoimmunity to the insulin secreting islet cells and the development of diabetes. (Source: Journal of Pediatric Endocrinology and Metabolism: www.diabetesnews.com: 6th June 2003)
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