Iatrogenesis
Sickness produced by medical activity (dictionary.com)
Topical Steroid Withdrawal Syndrome aka Red Skin Syndrome
Topical steroid withdrawal syndrome in a mother and son: A case report – SAGE Open Medical Case Reports
Topical Steroid Withdrawal — Hero Moms Speak Out – Sept. 15, 2022 – CHD.tv
“What is TSW and how has it affected the lives of children and their families? In today’s ‘Doctors & Scientists,’ four moms tell their stories of topical steroid use and withdrawal and give a stark warning to other parents in the wake of medical abuse. Should we trust everything the medical establishment tells us, or should we question everything in order to protect our children’s lives and futures?”
Topical Steroid Withdrawal + Freedom From Pharmaceuticals – Feb. 16, 2024 video – CHD.tv
“Dr. Brian Hooker of ‘Doctors & Scientists’ reunites with this panel of moms whose kids have gone through intense suffering at the hands of topical steroids. In this episode, following up from their previous discussion, they update viewers on the healing process — from withdrawal to finding a sense of normalcy. Learn about the symptoms their kids experienced and alternative protocols they utilized by watching on CHD.TV!”
‘My skin felt like glass when I got hooked on steroids – I couldn’t sleep or wash hair’ – EXCLUSIVE: Josie North suffers from eczema and decided to seek help from a dermatologist who prescribed steroids – however that was a choice that would later cause her excruciating pain and agony
Topical Steroid Withdrawal (TSW) – Topical Steroid Withdrawal Syndrome (TSWS), also known as Topical Steroid Addiction (TSA) or Red Skin Syndrome (RSS), is a potentially debilitating condition that can arise from the use of topical steroids to treat a skin problem, such as eczema. – National Eczema Association
Preventable: Protecting Our Largest Organ – documentary – 1:39:47
International Topical Steroid Awareness Network – ITSAN
Steroid-Induced Rosacea
Steroid Dermatitis Resembling Rosacea: A Clinical Evaluation of 75 Patients – International Scholarly Research Notices
STEROID-INDUCED ROSACEA: A CLINICAL STUDY OF 200 PATIENTS – Indian Journal of Dermatology
Vaccinations
Do vaccines increase or decrease susceptibility to diseases other than those they protect against? – Vaccine 2024
“Contrary to the long-held belief that the effects of vaccines are specific for the disease they were created; compelling evidence has demonstrated that vaccines can exert positive or deleterious non-specific effects (NSEs). In this review, we compiled research reports from the last 40 years, which were found based on the PubMed search for the epidemiological and immunological studies on the non-specific effects (NSEs) of the most common human vaccines. Analysis of information showed that live vaccines induce positive NSEs, whereas non-live vaccines induce several negative NSEs, including increased female mortality associated with enhanced susceptibility to other infectious diseases, especially in developing countries. These negative NSEs are determined by the vaccination sequence, the antigen concentration in vaccines, the type of vaccine used (live vs. non-live), and also by repeated vaccination. We do not recommend stopping using non-live vaccines, as they have demonstrated to protect against their target disease, so the suggestion is that their detrimental NSEs can be minimized simply by changing the current vaccination sequence.”
My Son’s Sensory Processing Disorder Was Caused By the Hib Vaccine – JenniferMargulis.net
ECZEMA VACCINATUM – (Pediatrics 1958)
“Nine cases of eczema vaccinatum are presented, including two fatalities. Seven were caused by contact of a child with eczema with a recently vaccinated sibling. … Eczema vaccinatum is frequently iatrogenic and uniformly preventable.
The following steps are recommended for prophylaxis: 1) No child with atopic eczema or other skin disorder should be vaccinated. 2) No child should be vaccinated if any member of his family has eczema or other skin disorder. 3) Parents of children with eczema should be notified at the onset of the disease of the danger from vaccination contact. 4) If a sibling of a child with atopic eczema is vaccinated, he must be completely separated from that child for at least 21 days. 5) Forms used by state and local health departments for parents’ consent to vaccination should include an appropriate warning of the contraindications. 6) Eczema vaccinatum should be a reportable disease. 7) Patients recently vaccinated must be excluded from pediatric wards containing patients with atopic eczema, other diseases of the skin, burns or healing surgical incisions. 8) Vaccination may be recommended at 2 months of age, especially for babies from strongly allergic families.”