Chickenpox - Ignorance is not bliss.
Hilary Butler - Monday, October 20, 2014
Yesterday, TV3
treated New Zealand parents to a massive dose of ignorance with a story about a
boy called Boston, who had a nasty superinfection in chickenpox spots on his
back.
His mother is urging New Zealand parents to pay $50.00 so that their children
won’t suffer like her son did.
This story is a top class example of the elephant in the room ignored by
ignorant TV journalists today.
Boston’s complication has been known, for over two decades, to be a complication
of immune fragility - one cause of which is using PAMOL to reduce chickenpox
fevers.
Read this: (That blog addresses pamol generically, not specifically relating
to chickenpox, but maybe a blog on pamol and chickenpox will be my next job.)
Given that this boy got the chickenpox from his 3 year old sister, who plainly
did okay, why did the journalist not ask the doctors WHY the boy had trouble and
his sister did not?
The mother’s comment might have provided one blindingly obvious answer: “We
couldn’t control his temperature” Apparently this child just kept falling asleep
all the time. Which reminded me of another
TV3 documentary of Allan Smith where he wife commented that the
paracetamol knocked him out just about stone cold. Viruses, bacteria and
paracetamol are not a good mix and never have been. Not that most parents would
know, because doctors themselves appear to be ignorant about what is in their
own medical literature.
So, did Boston’s parents pile in pamol dose after pamol dose, and when that
didn't bring down his temperature, give yet more pamol????
I’m guessing – and it’s only a guess – that that is what those parents did, because
that’s what most parents do with fever.
Like I said, chickenpox is notorious for doing exactly what Boston’s chickenpox
did when anti-pyretics are used to control fever.
Why does pamol do that? Because PAMOL disables the arm of the immune
system which deals with the secondary bacterial infection which has set up in
the spots and THAT is why some children given fever reducers can land up
with Group A streptococcal infection complications.
And if Group A streptococcal infection is what this boy had, ….and if those
parents used constant pamol doses to try to reduce the fever, then PAMOL is
one reason why Boston landed up in trouble.
If that is the situation in this case, then the real story SHOULD have been to
warn parents NOT to use PAMOL for fever, during any infection. If that is not
the situation, then questions should have been asked about Boston's immune
system, because normal children do not respond to chickenpox this way. His
sister had no problems, so why did he?
The medical profession needs to educate all parents, that using pamol during any
infectious fever is child abuse because they know that pamol can increase the
duration, illness severity and the likelihood of dying from many infections.
For example, if that fever is related to any meningococcal infection, then pamol
increases the chance of Boston getting
the disease more seriously, and increases his chances of dying.
There will come a day when Pamol is banned as an over the counter medicine in
this country. It's already banned in many European countries. But that won’t
happen while Johnson and Johnson meticulously pulls the chains of the Ministry
of Health, so that J & J can extract the maximum dollar from Pamol for as long
as possible.
Until that time, there will be more Bostons in this world, simply because
doctors and hospitals refuse to educate parents about the immunological threat
posed by Pamol when used during any infectious fever.