Swine flu, it seems, is back. Yesterday a mostly compliant media dutifully reported the latest efforts by the Commonwealth’s Chief Medical Officer Professor Jim Bishop to scare Australians into getting a swine flu vaccination to ward off a threatening “second wave” of the influenza strain. A host of medical authorities fell into line to tell the media the second wave could be far more deadly than the first.
Only Sydney’s Sunday Telegraph, to its credit (and, as we will see below, not before time) showed some scepticism, although the journalists failed to note that mass vaccination critic Professor Nikolai Petrovsky isn’t just any old “medical researcher” but research director for Vaxine, which has criticised the Government for not buying its vaccine rather than CSL’s.
In total, the Government has handed $120 million to CSL for more than 20 million doses of H1N1 vaccine. Two-thirds of the vaccines are sitting in warehouses going off, despite GPs virtually throwing them at patients presenting for anything from a cough to a sprained ankle. The latest efforts to convince Australians of the mortal threat posed by swine flu bear a very close resemblance to an effort to spare the Government embarrassment.
It’s not politicians who should be embarrassed, though it’s their health bureaucrats and advisers and the elements within the health industry who encouraged them. Let’s revisit their original warnings about swine flu. In July, Nicola Roxon, on the advice of her department, said that the worse case scenario was 6000 deaths from swine flu (a figure that has since vanished from the Health Department’s “Health Emergency” page). She made the comment in response to hysterical reporting, for example from the Telegraph’s Joe Hildebrand, that the death toll could reach 10,000 “in NSW alone” (the “in NSW alone” bit is the killer, ain’t it?)
The context for the 6000 figure is that more than 3000 Australians die each year from influenza.
As of the most recent update, 191 Australians have died from swine flu. ANU’s Professor Peter Collignon, a consistent proponent of taking a more realistic look at swine flu and mass vaccination, has said that the 2009 flu season was about on par with, or slightly less severe than, other years in the last decade or so, although certain groups such as pregnant women were over-represented (eight pregnant women have died of swine flu in Australia).
The Department of Health’s estimate — eminently conservative as it was compared to the garbage coming from the tabloids — was about as useful as those thermal imaging machines the department sent to airports to detect swine flu cases. Too bad the bulk of swine flu victims don’t develop a fever and would pass unnoticed through a thermal scanner.
Professor Bishop and the Department of Health have offered no acknowledgement that their estimates of the impact of swine flu were so badly wrong. Instead, we continue to get horror scenarios and meaningless factoids (“37,584 confirmed cases of H1N1”). In a recent interview with Croakey’s Melissa Sweet, Bishop insisted there had been no overreaction. In fact, Bishop went further and suggested they had always known swine flu wouldn’t be severe: “people at the start of this were genuinely unclear about what the virus looked like. We were very fortunate that we had about seven weeks at the start where we watched what was happening overseas before there were any cases here. That allowed us to understand it wasn’t causing a high death rate in a modern society.”
That didn’t stop predictions of thousands of deaths, curiously.
Putting aside Bishop’s claim that the Government always knew swine flu would be mild, the severity — or lack thereof — of swine flu was known well before a vaccine was developed and tested and the Government embarked on a mass vaccination campaign, which started at the end of September. Indeed, Collignon had identified in Crikey in May why swine flu wouldn’t be severe and followed that up on 20 August showing that the strain had clearly been far less severe than expected and indeed little different to normal flu seasons.
The public have shown almost a complete lack of interest in immunisation September, which Bishop puts down to “people have felt it is over and it’s last year’s problem”. It wouldn’t have anything to do with the Government and the media being so demonstrably wrong about swine flu, presumably.
The big winner from the mass vaccination campaign, regardless of whether anyone gets vaccinated or not, is CSL, which a long time ago was publicly owned but flogged off by the Keating Government. CSL has a contract with the Commonwealth Government to produce flu vaccines, having won the contract after a tender process in 2004. Another vaccine, Gardasil, helped turn CSL into one of the world’s leading biotherapy companies.
The contract is not CSL’s only link with the Government. On the CSL board is former Big Carbon player John Akehurst, who is a Reserve Bank board member. Chair Elizabeth Alexander was until last year a member of the Takeovers Panel. The CEO is Brian McNamee, who chaired Kim Carr’s review of the pharmaceutical industry in 2008. Chief Scientific Officer Andrew Cuthbertson was appointed to the National Health and Medical Research Council last year.
In October, the NHMRC endorsed the Government’s flu vaccination strategy. Cuthbertson declared a conflict of interest and didn’t participate in the discussion.
Later in that meeting, Cuthbertson commented “on the need to engage with the community and especially about increasing public understanding of the risks and benefits of the use of effective medical interventions, for example, vaccination.”
Risks and benefits are indeed an issue with swine flu vaccine. CSL has been indemnified for adverse reactions to the vaccine, despite, as Collignon has noted, a well-established history of (very rare) serious side effects. The benefits in terms of reduced mortality or actual impact (e.g. working days lost) have not been clearly demonstrated. Given the mildness of swine flu, the case for mass swine flu immunisation — as opposed to the case for high-risk group immunization, which is very strong — remains unmade by Bishop.
Sweet asked Bishop about the issue of conflict of interest, less at high corporate level than at expert consultant level. Bishop replied “we have a number of expert groups all required to declare their conflicts of interests, such as advising a drug company. The Federal Government has a lot of conflict of interest arrangements.”
Conflict of interest is a clear and easily-remedied problem, at least for objective observers. Crikey is not suggesting anyone involved in the Government’s response to swine flu did not address conflict of interest issues, if and where they arose, appropriately.
Rather, the problem is one of groupthink across an entire sector, encompassing industry, regulators, advisers and academics: groupthink occasioned by disproportionate capacity to influence government decisions and to gain access to taxpayer funding. Nicola Roxon could never have rejected the advice of Bishop and the departmental advisers on mass immunisation, for fear of the political fallout merely from being seen to place Australians’ health at risk. In no other portfolio except possibly Defence, and even there nowhere close to the degree that it applies in Health, are stakeholders so powerful and the capacity for genuine political oversight so limited.
The health industry – or more correctly the health complex, made up of industry, academics and health bureaucrats, and facilitated by a compliant media – never met a problem that couldn’t be solved with tens and hundreds of millions of dollars of extra funding, and rare are the politicians who can say no. That’s why there’s such a learned helplessness at the political level toward increased health costs associated with an ageing population. Moreover, health programs can be extended almost infinitely into new areas of activity that requires funding. Talk of an “obesi-genic society” allows education, transport, urban planning, housing and broadcasting to be brought within the health remit for regulation and new spending, and opens up exciting prospects for expensive social engineering on a vast scale.
Those who point out the alarmist and false estimates of the impact of swine flu are scolded for missing the point about what might have been; such measures were necessary from a risk management point of view (see, for example, this response to Guardian and Telegraph commentary in the UK).
To which the appropriate answer: risk management for whom? The allocation of every dollar in health is an exercise in risk management, a process of identifying where it can be spent most effectively in terms of a range of outcomes, but most particularly illness minimised, quality of life maintained, deaths prevented. There is as yet no evidence $120m hasn’t been wasted on a stockpile of useless vaccine and better returns for CSL when a much smaller, targeted rollout of vaccines to high-risk groups would have sufficed.
What would $120m have achieved for health areas of greater priority but without extensive and well-organised support from Big Pharma, the health industry and academics – areas like rural and regional health services, or indigenous health? Australians in those communities are living out the “what might have been” scenario every day of the week.
About two weeks back, that well known PR arm of the Australian Federal Government, New Scientist, published a pretty compelling article on pandemic flu and the chances that Wave II will be worse than Wave I.
I use the logic I use for making most decisions on this one. Are the consequences worse of:
1. Taking action (here, vaccinating) when there’s no need
or
2. Not acting when there is a need to.
A point of order about swine flu also: the median age of people who die of seasonal flu is 83; the median age of the 100,000++ who died worldwide in Wave I was 53.
The medical evidence is that most people aren’t particularly at risk from swine flu but (the not all that rare) people who have an hereditary deficit in Immunoglobulin B are. An alternative to vaccinating the maximum number of people to save the ones who’ll die otherwise would be mass test for the deficiency and only vaccinate them.
I know what I regard as a more economical strategy.
And flu sux anyway, so why catch if you don’t have to?
I confess to having mixed feelings on this issue. On the one hand and as you point out Bernard, spending $120 million on the fairly hasty roll-out of a mass vaccination program may represent an overreaction to a less severe than anticipated flu strain. As you point out, $120 million may have achieved a lot if spent elsewhere.
On the other hand, $120 million may have been a reasonable investment to protect population health under conditions of some uncertainty. Though this strain never seemed likely to have a very high mortality rate, there were questions in the early days about whether new populations sub-groups would be at greater risk. If last year’s H1N1 strain was as lethal as the H2N2 Asian flu of ’56-’58, let alone the Spanish flu of 1918-1920, we’d all be singing a different tune.
Some of my acquaintances working in public health have also suggested that a side benefit of the H1N1 episode has been to sort out any problems with outbreak monitoring and mass vaccination, which will come in handy if a more lethal flu strain or zoonotic disease ever occurs.
Is this an illustration of the problems of not being able to see the true value of preparedness?
Twenty twenty hindsight is a wonderful thing.
The Victorian Government took a light handed (low cost) approach to fire management and we all know where that led.
If they had spent loads of money on fire management and community preparedness and then the fires of Black Saturday fizzed out as a consequence of the preparations, the 20/20 Hind Sight brigade would be out in force telling everyone what a waste of money it all was.
Much the same as the Year 2000 bug. When the world didn’t come crashing down on the turn of the century the 20/20 brigade told us it all was a hoax. Fortunately people who run critical computer systems didn’t want to find out on the night so they fixed a lot of Y2K problems and amazingly they did a good job so nothing much happened.
Wake up Bernard,
Flu vaccine whether swine flu or ordinary flu injections don’t really hurt
Only 3 year olds cry as did my granddaughter who is very proud of herself now.
Just as people failed to get measles vaccine and suffered the really bad consequences, it is a good idea to take precautions as you advise all the time with climate change.
So get a small prick and don’t cry.
Excellent points made Bernard. We seem to be in accord once more. Here is my take on this in light of recent published work on last season.
Even before it was declared a level 6 pandemic by the World Health Organization (WHO), a group of “scientists” was sounding the alarm that this might indeed be the terrifying, deadly pandemic they had been waiting for. Naturally, the vaccine manufacturers were doing all they could to fuel this fear and they were quietly making deals with WHO to be among the companies selected to manufacture the “pandemic” vaccine for the world. The client follower media were also bursting with excitement at the chance to scare the public into a delirium.
Once the pandemic had been declared, virologists tested the potency of this virus using a conventional method, i.e. infecting ferrets with the virus which showed it to be no more pathogenic than the ordinary seasonal flu.
A study reported in the New England Journal of Medicine on October 8, 2009, called the AZIC study, analyzed all ICU admissions in New Zealand and Australia, looking at a number of factors. Here is what they found. Out of 25 million people, 722 were admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) with a confirmed diagnosis of H1N1 influenza. Overall, 856 people were admitted with a flu virus, but 11.3% were a type A flu that was not subtyped and 4.3% were seasonal flu.
They also analyzed the number of people admitted with viral pneumonia and found the following:
Number of People Admitted to the Hospital each Year with Viral Pneumonia
• 57 people in 2005
• 33 people in 2006
• 69 people in 2007
• 69 people in 2008
• 37 people in 2009
So, in 2009, 32 fewer people admitted with actual viral pneumonia. The various official health bodies across the West and other public health agents of fear like to imply that mass numbers of people are dying from “flu”, that is, actual influenza viral pneumonia, when in fact, most are dying from other complications secondary to under¬lying health problems either diagnosed or undiagnosed. They also found that the average person’s risk of ending up in the ICU was one in 35,714 or about three thou¬sandths of one percent (0.00285%), an incredibly low risk. When they looked at actual admis¬sion to the ICU, they found that it was people aged 25 to 49 who made up the largest number admitted. Infants from birth to age 1 year had the higher admission per population, and had a high mortality rate.
It is inter¬esting to note that babies this age respond poorly to either the sea¬sonal flu vaccine or the H1N1 vaccine and according to Robert Kennedy Jr’s work on vaccines and autism, pretty badly to the other shots they are plied with at from age one day! One of the largest studies ever done, found that chil¬dren below the age of 2 years received no protection at all from the seasonal flu vaccine.(refer The Cochrane Collaboration: Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, 2006, Article number CD004879.)
Further, the recently completed study on the effectiveness of the new H1N1 vaccine reported by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease found that 75% of small children below age 35 months received no protection from the H1N1 vaccine and that 65% of children between the ages of 3 years and 9 years received no protection from the vaccine.
So is the risk from this virus sig¬nif¬i¬cant enough to justify draconian measures by governments and parts of the medical com¬mu¬nity. If not what interest do the various parties have in plying this vaccine? Why are we implementing mass vaccinations with a product that is essentially an experimental vaccine, poorly tested and of questionable benefit?
One of the real surprises from this ANZ study was that one of the more powerful risk factors for being admitted to the ICU and of dying was obesity. Obese people are admitted 6 times more often than those of normal weight. And it also appears that obesity played a significant role in the risk to children and pregnant women as well, something that has never been discussed by the media, the Dept of Health or other health officials.
The ANZ study found that 32.7% of those admitted to the ICU had asthma or other chronic pulmonary disease, far higher than the general population. It also had a large number of aboriginal patients and those from the Torres Strait. It is known that nutrient deficiencies are common in both populations, which means an impaired immune system.
Obesity is associated with a high inci¬dence of insulin resistance and metabolic syndrome, both of which would increas one’s risk of having a serious infection, even to viruses that are mildly pathogenic.
H1N1 Vaccine is NOT Made the Same as Regular Flu Vaccine!!I am really upset at the insistence by medical doctors and the media that all pregnant women should be vaccinated by this experimental vaccine. The media repeats the manfacturers’ mantra that this vaccine is produced exactly like the seasonal flu, when in fact it is not. Yes, they use chicken eggs, but the rest has been fast tracked and many short¬cuts on safety procedures have been allowed.
There are 250,000 pregnant women in Australia and New Zealand combined. Only 66 pregnant women were admitted to the ICU, an incidence of 1 pregnant woman per 3,800 pregnant women or a risk of .03%.6 Put another way, a pregnant woman in these two coun¬tries can feel comfortable to know that there is a 99.97% chance that she will not get sick enough to end up in the ICU.
Pregnant women do not appear at increased risk but obese women are!
The Australian/New Zealand study found that one of the major risk factors for pregnant women was indeed being obese and that obesity was asso¬ci¬ated with a high risk of underlying med¬ical disorders.
They also found that death from H1N1 infection correlated best with increasing age, contrary to what the media says. They concluded the study with the following statement:
“ The proportion of patients who died in the hospital in our study is no higher than that previously reported among patients with sea¬sonal influenza A who were admitted to the ICU.”
In fact, they report that of those infected with the H1N1 variant virus who were sick enough to be admitted to the ICU, 84.5 % went home and 14.3% died and that of those admitted with seasonal flu 72.9% were discharged and 16.2% died. That is, more died from the seasonal flu.
In the Oct, 8th 2009 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine researchers reported on the American experience with the H1N1 variant virus. The study examined 13,217 cases of infection across 24 states involving 1082 people who were hospitalized with widespread influenza infec¬tion from April through June 2009. The study found
Of the total hospitalized patients:
• 60% of children had underlying medical conditions
• 83% of adults had under¬lying medical conditions
They also found that 32% of patients had at least 2 medical conditions that would put them at risk. We are constantly told that it is the young adult aged 25 to 49 who is at the greatest risk. Note that 83% of these people had underlying medical conditions. This means that in truth only 292 “healthy” people out of 1082 in 24 states were sick enough to enter the hospital that is 292 healthy people out of tens of millions of people, not much of a risk if you do not have an underlying chronic medical problem.
When they looked at people over age 65 years of age, that is, the folks who are most likely to die in the hospital, 100% had underlying medical conditions – all of them. So, there was not one healthy person over age 65 who has died out of 24 states combined.
This US study also found that 60% of children admitted had underlying medical conditions and that 30% were either obese or morbidly obese.
In Neil Z. Miller ‘s book Vaccine Safety Manuel —once the flu vaccine was given to small chil¬dren the death rate from flu increased 7-fold.10 Not surprising given the mercury (thimerosol) in the vacine suppresses immunity.
Pediatric Flu Deaths by Year are worse after Flu Vaccine introduced! (US data)
1999— 29 deaths
2000— 19 deaths
2001— 13 deaths
2002— 12 deaths
2003— 90 deaths (Year of mass vaccnations of children under age 5 years)
2006— 78 deaths
2007— 88 deaths
2008 —116 deaths (40.9% vac¬ci¬nated at age 6 months to 23 months)11
Parents should also keep in mind that the US study, as well as the Australian/New Zealand Study found that childhood obesity played a major role in a child’s risk of being admitted to the ICU or dying. This is another dramatic demonstration as to the danger of obesity in children and that all parents should avoid MSG (all food-based excitotoxin additives), excess sugar and excess high glycaemic carbohydrates in their children’s diets. This goes for pregnant mothers as well.