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HPV vaccines and cancer prevention, science versus activism

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journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-15, 12:06 authored by Lucija Tomljenovic, Roslyn Wilyman, Eva Vanamee, Christopher A Shaw
The rationale behind current worldwide human papilloma virus (HPV) vaccination programs starts from two basic premises, 1) that HPV vaccines will prevent cervical cancers and save lives and, 2) have no risk of serious side effects. Therefore, efforts should be made to get as many pre-adolescent girls vaccinated in order to decrease the burden of cervical cancer. Careful analysis of HPV vaccine pre- and post-licensure data shows however that both of these premises are at odds with factual evidence and are largely derived from significant misinterpretation of available data

History

Citation

Tomljenovic, L., Wilyman, R. Judith., Vanamee, E. and Shaw, C. A. (2013). HPV vaccines and cancer prevention, science versus activism. Infectious Agents and Cancer, 8 (6 / February), 1-3.

Journal title

Infectious Agents and Cancer

Volume

8

Issue

1

Pagination

6

Language

English

RIS ID

81632

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