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Are Parents Fully Informed of Risks of HPV Vaccine Before Consenting?

HPV Uniformed Consent [1]

HPV Vaccine – Risk of Uninformed Consent

By Robert Verkerk PhD [1]
Founder, executive and scientific director, Alliance for Natural Health International [1]
Scientific director, Alliance for Natural Health USA

Excerpts:

When your 12-year-old daughter comes back from school with the consent form for HPV vaccine in hand, and you have to make the decision on her behalf, all the issues around informed consent come sharply into focus. My older two daughters — now adults — missed the boat on this one.

My youngest two daughters, however, face a new predicament — one that’s only been on offer to humans for a decade: the HPV vaccine.  Should or shouldn’t they be exposed to a genetically engineered vaccine, hailed as the best shot at cervical cancer prevention?

It’s an issue we’ve reported on before, so we won’t duplicate information we’ve already provided.  Following is a selection of some of our previous pieces (in reverse chronological order) on the HPV vaccine and informed consent:

18/01/17 – Its official: HPV vaccine, the most dangerous vaccine yet
07/09/16 – HPV vaccine propaganda [2]
20/01/16 – HPV vaccine ‘cover-up’ allegations [3]
16/12/15 – Grassroots pressure against HPV vaccine grows [4]
04/11/15 – Swedish cover-up HPV vaccine side effects- and more
10/06/15 – ANH Feature: HPV vaccine: should you or shouldn’t you? [5]

Signing on the dotted line

My daughter came home with 3 papers in hand. One was a letter from NHS England [6] with the subject “Good news – Beating cervical cancer”. The second was a “Vaccination consent form” that offers the parent or guardian two choices:

At the bottom of the form is a statement that says, “Any side effects following the HPV vaccination should be reported to the school nurse or your GP”. This is interesting as I have now met with many young girls who have developed severe reactions, which were reported to schools or GPs and were rapidly dismissed as not being linked.

The third item that my daughter brought home from school was a folded leaflet entitled “Beating cervical cancer” that is also available electronically [7].

The big question for my family earlier this week was: what information was being provided, and was this sufficient to make an informed consent?

Uninformed consent

The reality is that the information my daughter was given, information that’s intended to help guide us in this very important decision, amounts to — in my personal view — a sales pitch for Merck (the vaccine’s manufacturer) [8].

It couldn’t be described as anything approaching the provision of all relevant, currently known information about the likely benefits and risks of HPV vaccination. It also gave away nothing about other options available, should we choose to not go down the vaccination route for my daughter.

Yet, my daughter also has a legal right to accept vaccination in the event that we, as parents don’t provide our consent. In the UK, as school nurses are the primary party administering vaccines, they also — somewhat incredibly in our view — have the right to vaccinate against the will of parents or guardians if they have assessed the potential recipient of the vaccine as Gillick competent [9]. With only 12 years of life in the tank, a sales pitch thrown at them and a mass of information withheld, is the original subject matter — contraceptives/birth control — decided by the House of Lords in 1986 (Gillick v West Norfolk and Wisbech AHA [1986] [10]) really of relevance to HPV vaccination [11]?

Our petition [12] (please sign if you agree with it and haven’t already done so) spelt out the definition of informed consent: “Informed consent means that all relevant information should be available before someone is asked to decide about their own, or their child’s, vaccination. This should include the known benefits and risks, as well as any alternatives, to the proposed treatment.” We linked [13] this explanation to a legal primer to remind readers of the legal importance of providing information about alternatives to the proposed treatment.

What they haven’t told us

We could write a book about this, but everyone’s time challenged. So here’s a summary:

Read the Full Article at Alliance for Natural Health International [1]