Monday, December 26, 2011

Why is the US buying $500 million of smallpox vaccines?

The U.S. government has awarded a $433-million contract to pharmaceutical company Siga Technologies for 1.7 million doses of an experimental smallpox drug called ST-246 (Tecovirimat).

In this time of limited resources and heavy budget deficits, the decision to spend nearly half a billion dollars to stockpile a drug of questionable safety and effectiveness, for a strictly theoretical danger, is puzzling -- and that is an extreme understatement.

Siga's ST-246, which reportedly works by blocking the ability of the smallpox viruses to spread to other cells, has been granted "fast-track" status by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

Under this accelerated approval process, experimental drugs are brought to market sooner, even though they've only been tested on a small number of people and their effects and safety risks are not clearly understood. Full story...

Don't miss:
  1. Vaccine-nation: ‘Globally-supported company is funding fatal polio shots’
  2. 70% of all doctors and nurses do not get the annual flu vaccine...
  3. Dr. Russell Blaylock: forced vaccinations, government and the public interest....
  4. BBC accused of propaganda for drug company...
  5. Drug companies lavish free oversees trips and sports tickets on NHS bosses...
  6. "Swine flu vaccine gave my son narcolepsy"

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