This is interesting. There have been slightly over 11,000 new cases of cervical cancer per year for the past years among the total female population in the US. Not quite 4,000 die from it each year.
There have been over 9,000 adverse reactions from the vaccine, ONLY AMONG THOSE WHO HAVE RECEIVED IT. That's not even 9,000 among the total adult female population of the United States; that's just among those who've had the vaccine.
Totally unacceptable when PAP tests are so effective in detecting abnormalities well before they become cancer.
If the CDC and other medical organizations pushed for PAP testing like they're pushing for this vaccine, we'd likely see a bigger drop in new cervical cancer cases and deaths than with the vaccine with virtually none of the risk.
Those are 9000 reports - not actual adverse events. The reports are mostly pain, nausea, fainting, redness at the site of the injection. All of which makes the reports less than placebo.
This is a good vaccine. Made by recombinant DNA, using bacteria - not human fetal tissues like the chicken pox and measles vaccines. It’s not given at birth like the Hepatitis B vaccine - even though that virus is only transmitted by blood and body fluids.