Reply To: Should We Give The H1N1 Vaccine For Kids

Home Forums Health & Fitness Should We Give The H1N1 Vaccine For Kids Reply To: Should We Give The H1N1 Vaccine For Kids

#671929
anon for this
Participant

Many people became concerned about complications from the swine flue vaccine after a cheerleader reported that she had been diagnosed with dystonia–a movement disorder in the brain–shortly after she received the vaccine. She claimed that physicians at Johns Hopkins examined her and provided this diagnosis; however, she didn’t give her treatment team permission to discuss her case, so they couldn’t confirm her statements. Other neurological experts who observed tapes of her moving maintain that her illness is psychogenic, and therefore not a result of any vaccine.

Luckily, she now says that she was cured through chelation therapy, which she claims removed the toxins from the vaccine that had affected her brain. She reports that within minutes of beginning the therapy, her symptoms began to resolve. Neurologists have noted that someone suffering from true dystonia could not experience a cure that quickly. The brain damage which causes dystonia simply doesn’t go away that fast. This lightning-fast “cure” confirms that her disease was psychogenic. This isn’t to say she was “faking”; she may well have believed that her movement problems were caused by the vaccine.