Is There a Link Between Vaccines and the Rise in Pediatric Cancer?

Chemo Patient

The possible link between vaccines and pediatric cancer has not been fully investigated. #featured_mcat_health

According to the American Cancer Society, after accidents, cancer is the second leading cause of death in children between the ages of one and four. Although pediatrics cancers account for less than one percent of all cancers diagnosed each year, the number of children diagnosed with cancer has been rising steadily over the last few decades.1

The National Cancer Institute (NCI) at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) estimated that 10,270 new cases of pediatric cancers would be diagnosed in 2017 in children from birth to the age of 14. Approximately 1,190 of these children were expected to die as a result of cancer. . .

Source: Is There a Link Between Vaccines and the Rise in Pediatric Cancer?

6 thoughts on “Is There a Link Between Vaccines and the Rise in Pediatric Cancer?

  1. Maybe but radionuclides more likely. 4 of my classmates, in kennewick died of childhood cancer. It is by hanford. The radionuclide coverup is the greatest genocide and lie in the human race. Not much time left

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    • Ken, I tend to agree with Kenneth. I think there are a probably a number of determinants here, including diet. The incidence of cancer started increasing around 1910 when people began substituting cheap vegetable oils for animal fats.

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  2. There are many links, even the food, water, or air we breathe can be problematic.
    The human body is as easy to damage (right down to the DNA) as getting a cut on the finger.

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  3. Thomas Edison developed newfound fascination with the chemical reactions and gasses in Roentgen’s fluorescent tubes and the X-rays he had discovered, when he heard about it. Equally fascinated, Clarence Dally took to the work enthusiastically, performing countless tests, holding his hand between the fluoroscope (a cardboard viewing tube coated with fluorescent metal salt) and the X-ray tubes, and unwittingly exposing himself to poisonous radiation for hours on end.

    In May 1896, Edison, along with Dally, went to the National Electric Light Association exhibition in New York City to demonstrate his fluoroscope. Hundreds lined up for the opportunity to stand before a fluorescent screen, then peer into the scope to see their own bones. The potential medical benefits were immediately apparent to anyone who saw the display.

    Dally returned to Edison’s X-ray room in West Orange and continued to test, refine and experiment over the next few years. By 1900, he began to show lesions and degenerative skin conditions on his hands and face. His hair began to fall out, then his eyebrows and eyelashes, too. Soon his face was heavily wrinkled, and his left hand was especially swollen and painful. Like a faithful mucker committed to science, Dally found what he thought was the solution to prevent further damage to his left hand: He began using his right hand instead. The result might have been predictable. At night, he slept with both hands in water to alleviate the burning. Like many researchers at the time, Dally assumed he’d heal with rest and time away from the tubes. Edison saw the tumors in Dallys body, from the xrays. His arm had to be amputated becwuse of it. Dally later died from cancer from his radiation injuries. Edison gave up on xrays, uranium, radionuclides. He had read about experiments, with that from Madame Curie. He became the first antinuclear activist. He said that when someone talked about xrays or curie, the hairs on the back of his neck stood up.

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