Beware of the walking disease carriers: Recently vaccinated children highly likely to spread vaccine-strain virus to others

March 10th, 2016, by

If you want to keep your children free from measles, whooping cough or other “terrifying” illnesses currently hyped by the mainstream media, you might want to avoid getting close to vaccinated children.

What health officials are not telling you is that attenuated vaccines, like the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine, shed live viruses for weeks, or even months, following vaccination, thereby spreading vaccine-strain infections to others. Recently vaccinated children are thus walking disease carriers which could infect both vaccinated and unvaccinated children alike.

Kidney specialist Dr. Suzanne Humphries highlighted this fact during a lecture, saying that she had observed “several cases of measles outbreaks occurring in children who had just been vaccinated.”

“They looked at, with this DNA and genetic fingerprinting, what strains they were and it was the vaccine strain that they were infected with. So not only did they become sick from measles from the strain that they were vaccinated with, but they were contagious,” she added.

Canadian girl develops vaccine-strain measles infection after vaccination

The study referenced by Dr. Humphries focused on a child who tested positive for a contagious vaccine-strain of measles known as Schwarz, more than a week after vaccination. The child’s symptoms were initially thought to be rubella, and if it weren’t for proper testing, the diagnosis probably would have remained as such.

Several other studies have also documented cases of vaccine-induced infection with measles, including a two-year-old Canadian girl who, in late 2013, was found to have developed the earliest symptoms of vaccine-induced measles nearly 40 days after she has been vaccinated.

“Because we now have this added surveillance and new technology… we can distinguish between strains,” added Dr. Humphries.

“We used to think that measles, mumps, and rubella vaccines didn’t shed and didn’t cause disease. But now we’re finding that for all three of them, not only is the immune response not what we thought, but that for rubella and measles at least, those people are shedding virus.”

Recently vaccinated children spreading virus

During the height of the Disneyland measles outbreak, officials attributed the spread of the disease to unvaccinated children. However, the exact opposite is more likely true, as those recently vaccinated with MMR have been scientifically proven to carry around vaccine viruses and possibly spread them to others.

Healthy, unvaccinated children aren’t just carrying around measles infections like we’ve all been led to believe. The only people who would have the disease in their bodies would be the recently vaccinated, or, perhaps, those who recently traveled overseas and somehow brought it back without showing symptoms early on.

“[I]t is not likely that the mainstream media ‘TV doctors’ will even discuss this as they falsely vilify parents who choose not to administer the MMR vaccine to their children as the cause of these outbreaks,” explains Health Impact News.

Sources used:

NaturalNews.com

YouTube.com

Science.NaturalNews.com

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