Claire Dwoskin
Wednesday, August 10, 2016
Vaccines and Infant Mortality Rate
Earlier this year, Autism Development News included a post about the work of Dr. Neil Z. Miller and Dr. Gary S. Goldman on the connection between vaccines and the infant mortality rate. According to one of their studies that was published in Human and Experimental Toxicology that took a look at metadata from 34 countries on infant mortality rate and the role vaccines may play, the United States had the highest infant mortality rate among developed nations. What's more interesting is that the United States had the highest amount of vaccines given as well.
The United States gives babies on average 26 total vaccines in their first year. Let's compare this with another country Sweden, which is the second on the list for lowest rate of infant mortality. Sweden doctors only give babies 12 does of vaccines in their first year. So what does this say about vaccines and its connection with infant mortality? That is really tough to say.
The connection, though, must be noted and should be more evidence that additional research is necessary to ensure we understand what we are putting into babies' bodies to build their defenses? Is it possible that we could potentially be doing some harm to them as well now and into the future. Claire Dwoskin and the CMSRI are continually working hard to uncover these links and causation through funded research designed to ask the question Why?
The hope is to find causation and learn more about how diseases develop in order to amend medical intervention in early childhood development.
Friday, April 29, 2016
Who Is Claire Dwoskin?
Claire Dwoskin is a parent, child health
advocate and a vaccine safety supporter who has dedicated time and effort to
raise awareness of an international effort to address concerns of the
increasing prevalence of once-rare chronic diseases. She has established a
research funding body to provide scientists and other professionals to evaluate
the potential instigators of autoimmune diseases, disabilities and other
neurological diseases in both children and older adults. Through the
establishment of the Dwoskin Family Foundation, she supports innovative
research that may increase the pace of discovery to find solutions to these
growing concerns that has been ultimately ignored in recent history. The
premise and main belief of the foundations' mission is to find the cause as it
could be the key to prevention, treatment and cure.
Alongside
the charitable work that's generated from the foundation, Dwoskin is also the
founder of Children's Medical Safety Research Institute, which is a 501(c)(3)
non-profit organization that has enhanced the mission from the original
foundation. CMSRI serves as a scientific and medical collaborative funding body
that provides independent and methodologically-sound scientific research on
toxic ingredients such as mercury, aluminum, formaldehyde and others.
The CMSRI Scientific
Advisory Board consists of a wide array of highly experienced and professional
researchers that publish studies, reports and research on well-established
peer-reviewed journals. Such research has supplied the scientific and medical
community with novel information about adverse effects of toxic exposures and
how they can produce abnormal cognitive, motor and social behavior functions. This
type of research on the adverse reactions associated with aluminum adjuvants may
be the connecting link between the onset of various chronic illnesses.
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