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Multiple vaccines given at one visit are not good for children, according to an article in the Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons. This flies in the face of decades worth of claims from public health officials that the practice is completely safe. Neil Z. Miller authored the paper. Yahoo Finance was the first mainstream media outlet to release the information. The report will be released in the summer issue of the Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons.

“Although CDC recommends polio, hepatitis B, diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis, rotavirus,Haemophilus influenzae type B, and pneumococcal vaccines for two-, four-, and six-month-old infants, this combination of eight vaccines administered during a single physician visit was never tested for safety in clinical trials,” Miller writes. “This is at odds with a CDC report which found that mixed exposures to chemical substances and other stress factors, including prescribed pharmaceuticals, may produce ‘increased or unexpected deleterious health effects.’”

Look at the data shown regarding infant mortality. This seems to confirm every fear regarding the United States terrible infant mortality rate, deemed a national embarrassment by the Washington Post.

“Our study showed that infants who receive several vaccines concurrently…are significantly more likely to be hospitalized or die when compared with infants who receive fewer vaccines simultaneously,” he writes. “It also showed that reported adverse effects were more likely to lead to hospitalization or death in younger infants.” In infants receiving five or more vaccines concurrently, 5.4% of reported reactions were fatal, compared with 3.6% in those receiving four or fewer, the study shows.
“Parents and physicians should consider health options associated with a lower risk of hospitalization or death,” Miller concludes.

Read the full article here.

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