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"CBI" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message news:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > > > "Rich Shewmaker" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message > news:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > > > > > > > > > > She had never shown symptoms, but analysis of two blood samples > stored > > > > > in the military's 30-million-sample repository showed that she had > > > > > abnormalities associated with lupus as far back as 1998. > > > > > > > > > Yes, one does wonder why the army physical did not pick up the > > "abnormalities associated with lupus" in 1998 when the specimens were > > processed. I wonder if this death will lead to changes in the labwork done > > on incoming recruits. > > It says she had never had any symptoms. Are there any other unusual diseases > you would like to routinely screen for in healthy asymptomatic recruits? > > She was brewing lupus for some time before the shots. I don't see how anyone > can tell i the vaccines triggered it or if it was just a coincidence. Even > if the abnormalities were known, or if she was known to have full blown > lupus, it wouldn't have changed the decision to vaccinate her. Disagree. If it was known she had even latent lupus, she would have been discharged and not vaccinated. However, you do raise a good question: How far should medical screening go when one is in the military? How much givernment prying and snooping into one's medical history should there be? How far should the medical testing go?
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