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Science FAILURES and the history of medicine and vaccines Why the �status quo� is fatally
wrong
by: Ethan Huff
Many (if not all) of the most significant scientific breakthroughs that have occurred
throughout time did so because someone was brave enough to seek the truth at all costs,
even when it meant having to buck the norm and face ridicule � or worse.
There are many prominent examples of folks who faced ostracization, loss of career, and
even early death as a result of doing the right thing in their particular line of work,
and this reality is perhaps most evident in the field of medicine and vaccines specifically.
You�ve probably never heard of him, but Dr. Ignaz Semmelweis is one such individual
who paid the ultimate price for the simple act of identifying why so many mothers and
their children were dying at the obstetrics ward where he worked in Vienna, Austria, during
the early-to-mid nineteenth century.
Dr. Semmelweis was not only removed from his position and relegated as a �black sheep�
within the medical field, but he actually ended up dying before his time as a direct
consequence of his colleagues� indignation, which likely stemmed from jealousy.
Leading up to Dr. Semmelweis� ultimate demise, the mortality rate amongst Vienna�s obstetric
patients was unusually high.
Not only were birthing mothers getting mysteriously ill and dying in large numbers, but so were
their babies � especially when their doctors were males as opposed to females.
None of the tenured doctors in the field could figure out why this was the case, and rather
than try to find an answer they simply continued on with business as usual, harming and killing
many in the process.
Having a young and inquiring mind, Dr. Semmelweis naturally wanted to know more, figuring that
whatever he uncovered in the process would be welcomed with open arms by his more seasoned
counterparts.
But he couldn�t have been more wrong.
Dr. Semmelweis discovered that very few doctors were washing their hands in between dissecting
freshly-dead corpses � it turns out that many obstetricians during that time were also
morticians � and delivering babies, which subjected many of their patients, both mother
and child, to deadly infections.
But these doctors didn�t want to hear it.
Despite conducting rigorous experiments with forward-thinking obstetric physicians who
helped him prove that sanitation was the issue, Dr. Semmelweis was treated as if he was nothing
more than a quack.
After all, how could a young buck like Semmelweis possibly have greater insight than his fellow
doctors, many of whom had been in their practice since before Semmelweis was even born?
The arrogance and pride of this medical �elite� would quickly lead to Semmelweis� undoing.
��[I]nstead of being celebrated by his colleagues for his life-saving discovery (which
he repeated enough times to convince anybody with an open mind about the truth of the matter),
Dr. Semmelweis was ignored, denigrated and eventually driven out of town for being impertinent
enough to have pointed out that the esteemed physicians of his otherwise honorable profession
had been responsible for the deaths and sicknesses of the pregnant women in their care,� writes
Dr. Gary G. Kohls for the Centre for Research on Globalization.
�It took many years after Semmelweis�s death for medicine to recognize the importance
of his discovery and to give him the posthumous honor he deserved,� Dr. Kohls adds, noting
that the medical profession at large didn�t even recognize Semmelweis� discovery as
being important until long after he had passed.
Medical ignorance resulted in our nation�s first president dying needlessly
In other cases, it was actual sanctioned medical practices that turned out to be dangerously
flawed, such as with the infamous legacy of blood-letting.
It was once believed that by opening up patients� veins and letting out their blood that diseases
would somehow escape and be purged from the body.
As crazy as it might sound today, this was normal practice back in the day, and this
procedure is precisely what killed our nation�s first president, George Washington.
Washington�s personal physician, Dr. Benjamin Rush, was a well-respected and considered-to-be
highly credible doctor who knew everything there was to know about the medical profession
during this particular time in history.
Dr. Rush was also a fervent believer in blood-letting, which is what he attempted to use as �treatment�
for a serious health condition that had been afflicting Washington at the time.
Because he was considered to be an �expert,� nobody bothered to question Dr. Rush�s protocol,
even though it would ultimately result in Washington�s early death.
Even so, Dr. Rush would go on to be given the title of the �Father of American Psychiatry,�
and his likeness remains a prominent symbol of the American Psychiatry Association.
Fast-forward to today and we still see the same types of things happening with people
like Dr. Andrew Wakefield, whose controversial discoveries about the MMR vaccine for measles,
mumps, and rubella have called into question the safety of vaccines at large.
The medical profession can�t stand Dr. Wakefield or his work, and has done nothing but attempt
to tarnish his name both here and abroad � all but ruining his career, were it not for the
existence of the internet today to set the record straight (at least for those who are
interested in finding truth there).
�Dr. Wakefield and his 11 co-authors in the research group weren�t really trying
to make the point that the new syndrome they were researching was an iatrogenic (doctor-caused)
disorder, but that is how many of the perpetrators understood it,� adds Kohls, pointing out
the similarities between Dr. Wakefield�s fate and that of the late Dr. Semmelweis.
��[B]ecause Wakefield defended the study�s findings after it was peer-reviewed and then
published in The Lancet (and was then celebrated by the thousands of British parents whose
autistic spectrum-afflicted children had suffered similar vaccine-induced disorders), he was
hounded mercilessly by the pharmaceutical giant GSK, Rupert Murdoch yellow journalism
media empire (Murdoch�s son sat on the board of GSK) and ultimately the Big Pharma-complicit
medical establishment that combined to hound him out of his home country of England.�