Another Study Shows No Link Between Autism, MMR Vaccine
A study of 96,000 children shows that the chances of a child developing autism is the same whether they receive the measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine or not.
Giant pharmaceutical company, GlaxoSmithKline, is slated to donate 50 million doses of the pandemic H1N1 vaccine to the United Nations public health arm, the World Health Organization it was announced yesterday.
Under a new agreement signed with with the company, WHO expects to receive the first shipments of the vaccine by the end of November.
WHO has a list of 95 developing countries that are eligible to receive donated vaccines, and aims to secure enough vaccines to cover 10 percent of the population of these countries.
"We welcome this very generous donation by GlaxoSmithKline, which will go to protect the health of the world's poorest people," said WHO Director-General Margaret after signing the agreement at the agency's Headquarters in Geneva.
"This is a real gesture of global solidarity towards those who would not be otherwise able to have access to the vaccine," said Ms Chan. "WHO will now work to see that these vaccines are distributed to those who need them."
Last week, WHO warned that the world has not yet hit the peak influenza season between January and February when more cases are expected. The agency also stressed that despite concerns about the side effects of the vaccine, it remains one of the best tools available to fight the virus.
Image courtesy of Sun Star
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