Recent studies have concluded that the H1N1 vaccines contain thimerosal, a mercury based preservative. Actually, one study implies that the quantity of thimerosal in each vaccine is the same as one full dose of mercury.
Mercury is a toxin, which has been linked to autism in the past and other neurological disorders, such as Parkinson’s disease and Alzheimers disease. Thimerosal is commonly used in vaccinations and immunizations as a preservative.
While both the Center for Disease Control (CDC) and the Institute of Medicine are denying the correlation between the use of thimerosal having any causal relationship between immunizations and increased cases of autism, prominent researchers from the University of Colorado, have concluded that thimerosal was responsible for the dramatic rise in cases of autism but their findings have been dismissed by the CDC.
Studies have shown that the incidence of autism has risen by 1500% since 1991, the year when mandatory vaccines for children doubled. Before 1991, only 1 in every 2500 children was diagnosed with autism. That number is now 1 in every 166 children.
In 1977, a study was done in Russia, which revealed that adults exposed to ethylmercury, the form of mercury in thimerosal, suffered brain damage years on. As a consequence of these findings, Russia correctly banned thimerosal from children's vaccines in 1980.
All of the Scandinavian states as well as Denmark, Austria, Japan, Great Britain have also banned the preservative.
According to an article in the Washington Post in July 2009, “Despite concerns about thimerosal and mercury, which have led to the preservative being reduced or removed from a large portion of vaccines over the last five years, thimerosal will be an ingredient of the H1N1 vaccine”.
The inserts to the H1N1 vaccines all say it may cause all demeanor of difficult effects, including guillain-barre syndrome, vasculitis, anaphylactic shock and even death.
