Anonymous ID: bc9018 May 25, 2024, 5:49 a.m. No.20912457   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>20912367

LIST OF VACCINES DEVELOPED BY YEAR, AND NOW THEY WANT TO GIVE THE W.H.O POWER TO MANDATE VACCINES AND DEFINE WHAT A PANDEMIC IS AND CALLED !!

>>20902487

Which one? 😎

Vaccine History: Developments by Year

https://www.chop.edu/centers-programs/vaccine-education-center/vaccine-history/developments-by-year

The 1970s — vaccine success

During the 1970s, one vaccine was eliminated. Because of successful eradication efforts, the smallpox vaccine was no longer recommended for use after 1972. While vaccine research continued, new vaccines were not introduced during the 1970s.

Late 1970s | Recommended Vaccines

Diphtheria*

Tetanus*

Pertussis*

Polio (OPV)

Measles**

Mumps**

Rubella**

  • Given in combination as DTP

** Given in combination as MMR

Vaccine development in the 1980s — hepatitis B and Haemophilus influenzae type b

The vaccine for Haemophilus influenzae type b was licensed in 1985 and placed on the recommended schedule in 1989. When the schedule was published again in 1994, the hepatitis B vaccine had been added.

The hepatitis B vaccine was not new, as it had been licensed in 1981 and recommended for high-risk groups such as infants whose mothers were hepatitis B surface antigen positive, healthcare workers, intravenous drug users, homosexual men and people with multiple sexual partners. However, immunization of these groups didn't effectively stop transmission of hepatitis B virus. That’s because about one-third of patients with acute disease were not in identifiable risk groups. The change of recommendation to immunize all infants in 1991 was the result of these failed attempts to control hepatitis B by only immunizing high-risk groups. Following this r

recommendation, hepatitis B disease was virtually eliminated in children less than 18 years of age in the United States.

1985 - 1994 | Recommended Vaccines

Diphtheria*

Tetanus*

Pertussis*

Measles**

Mumps**

Rubella**

Polio (OPV)

Hib

1994 - 1995 | Recommended Vaccines

Diphtheria*

Tetanus*

Pertussis*

Measles**

Mumps**

Rubella**

Polio (OPV)

Hib

Hepatitis B

  • Given in combination as DTP

** Given in combination as MMR

Annual updates to the immunization schedule — 1995 to 2010

As more vaccines became available, an annual update to the schedule was important because of changes that providers needed to know, such as detailed information about who should receive each vaccine, age(s) of receipt, number of doses, time between doses, or use of combination vaccines. New vaccines were also added.

Important changes to the schedule between 1995 and 2010 included:

new vaccines: Varicella (chickenpox - 1996), rotavirus (1998-1999; 2006, 2008); hepatitis A (2000); pneumococcal vaccine (2001)

Additional recommendations for existing vaccines: influenza (2002); hepatitis A (2006)

New versions of existing vaccines: acellular pertussis vaccine (DTaP ,1997); intranasal influenza (2004)

Discontinuation of vaccine: Oral polio vaccine (2000)

2000 | Recommended Vaccines

Diphtheria*

Tetanus*

Pertussis*

Measles**

Mumps**

Rubella**

Polio (IPV)

Hib

Hepatitis B

Varicella

Hepatitis A

2005 | Recommended Vaccines

Diphtheria*

Tetanus*

Pertussis*

Measles**

Mumps**

Rubella**

Polio (IPV)

Hib

Hepatitis B

Varicella

Hepatitis A

Pneumococcal

Influenza

2010 | Recommended Vaccines

Diphtheria*

Tetanus*

Pertussis*

Measles**

Mumps**

Rubella**

Polio (IPV)

Hib

Hepatitis B

Varicella

Hepatitis A

Pneumococcal

Influenza

Rotavirus

  • Given in combination as DTaP

** Given in combination as MMR

The schedule from 2011 to Present

Annual updates to both the childhood and adult immunization schedules offer guidance to healthcare providers in the form of new recommendations, changes to existing recommendations, or clarifications to assist with interpretation of the schedule in certain circumstances. The schedules are reviewed by committees of experts from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the American Academy of Pediatrics, and the American Academy of Family Physicians.

Important changes to the schedule:

New vaccines: meningococcal serogroup B vaccine (2014); COVID-19 (2021-2022)†

Additional recommendations for existing vaccines: HPV (2011 to routinely vaccinate males), intranasal influenza vaccine (2018 again recommended)

Discontinuation of vaccine: intranasal influenza vaccine (2016)

†COVID-19 vaccines were recommended during the pandemic for increasingly younger age groups starting in late 2020. They were recommended for 5- to 11-year-olds in 2021, but they were not recommended for those younger than 5 years of age until 2022. COVID-19 vaccine was not added to the immunization schedule until 2023.

2020 | Recommended Vaccines

Diphtheria*

Tetanus*

Pertussis*

Measles**

Mumps**

Rubella**

Polio (IPV)

Hib

Hepatitis B

Varicella

Hepatitis A

Pneumococcal

Influenza

Rotavirus

  • Given in combination as DTaP

** Given in combination as MMR

Anonymous ID: bc9018 May 25, 2024, 8:22 a.m. No.20912873   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>20912860

>One day, a day of days, government and it’s agencies will speak objective truth to citizens.

right about now.

anything they say is lies or gaslighting.

fuck the gubermint.

give them nothing but the finger and ridicule.

Anonymous ID: bc9018 May 25, 2024, 8:49 a.m. No.20912987   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2996 >>3003

>>20912955

can you go and be a concernfag somewhere else.

There is no going back.

they system of control is over.

staying attached to any part of your old life is over.

you are free but you do not realize it.

Stockholm syndrome is a thing.

let it burn to the ground