Sunday, July 5, 2009

Hogging The Headlines #2: Swine Flu Vaccine Update

A Swine Flu vaccine is being fast-tracked, for commercial availability tres soon. Pharmaceutical giant Baxter says it has patented technology that cuts the usual vaccine development time in half, to about 13 weeks instead of 26.
While this may seem great news for those extremely concerned about contracting Swine Flu, we should be quite cautious about this “cure-all”. With such pressure on drug companies to produce a 'magic bullet' within a very tight timeframe, it is surely impossible to test the product to the rigorous levels normally adhered to. So, should compulsory vaccinations be imposed, we may find ourselves being the 'crash test dummies' for an unproven drug.
The last Swine Flu threat was in the mid-70s and, in America, it resulted in a massive vaccine campaign. But within a few months, $US1.3 billion of claims were filed by victims who had suffered paralysis from the experimental vaccine. Several hundred people developed crippling Guillain-Barré Syndrome (GBS) after their injections. Even healthy 20-year-olds ended up as paraplegics. The vaccine was also blamed for 25 deaths. Meanwhile, the deadly Swine Flu pandemic itself NEVER materialised.
When a vaccine is developed in a mere 13 weeks, you can be virtually assured it has not had the time to be tested in clinical trials to determine safety and effectiveness.
You may want to find out what your rights are, should any public health legislation require you and your children to be vaccinated.
And, as mentioned in my previous Swine Flu posting, maintain normal health precautions, and keep your immune system in optimal working order so that you're far less likely to acquire the infection to begin with.
Read my next Swine Flu update: 03 Sept.2009.

Saturday, July 4, 2009

Bottoms Up!

The Beer Store logo Some people stumble over things when they're drinking alcohol... today I stumbled over an alcohol site while completely sober!
It's for a New Zealand company, The Beer Store, an on-line shop for specialty beers, with over 350 beers in-stock from 20+ different countries.
What caught my eye was the option to purchase not a dozen of this, or a 6-pack of that...but mixed packs - either compiled by "The Beer Store" or your own good self. So you can put together a gift box containing all the recipient's favourite brews from around the world, or browse the stock list for flavours you've never tried before...and be a little adventurous!
Hmmm, wonder if I'll get commission for this plug...? I'm happy to accept a mixed case of Rolling Rock and Molson, thanx!

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

DOC Kicks Rat Arse!! News At 6...

native rats raiding a nestThe Department of Conservation (DOC) has begun aerial bait drops on the two Hauraki Gulf islands of Rangitoto and Motutapu.
The aim is to wipe out pests such as rats, feral cats, rabbits and stoats (following the successful eradication of possums and wallabies). This will create a sanctuary for native species such as kiwi, takahe and tuatara, and also protect the world's largest pohutukawa forest on Rangitoto.
You can link here to DOC's pest control and restoration plans for these islands (have a good look around the DOC site: it's informative and well laid-out).
As none of us have had the opportunity to fully enjoy New Zealand's wonderful bush and birdlife as it was before European impact, it's exciting to think this restoration may bring that ideal to our doorstep within a decade...

Rangitoto Island in the Hauraki Gulf