gardasil
A teenage girl died hours after being sent home from hospital diagnosed with a stomach bug.

Shazel Zaman, 13, received a cervical cancer jab five days earlier after which she started vomiting and suffering from dizziness and a severe headache. As her symptoms got worse she was taken to Bury's Fairfield Hospital.

Doctors told the teenager's family that they believed she might have a stomach bug and told them to bring her back to hospital if her condition worsened, the Manchester Evening News reported. An hour later she was found unconscious with no pulse at her home in Bury. She was declared dead in hospital around four hours later.

Shazel's family claims that a doctor dismissed that her condition was linked to the HPV vaccine jab and said she "came across as a lazy child" before sending her home. Pennine Acute NHS Trust, which runs the hospital, has now launched an investigation into the standard of care Shazel received at the hospital.

Shazel's family believe her death is linked directly to her having the vaccine.

Her sister, Maham Hussain, 19, told the Manchester Evening News: "She had the injection on the Wednesday. On Friday she was complaining of a sore arm - no swelling just redness.

"On the Saturday she complained of a severe headache, and by the evening she was throwing up. Come Sunday she was very pale, and my aunt took her to Fairfield.

"Whilst she was there she was in and out of consciousness. My aunt had to get a wheelchair for her.
Shazel Zaman, death linked HPV vaccine
Shazel Zaman
"She had a blood test, and her heart rate checked, and everything was said to be normal.
"She was asked to provide a urine test and when my aunt took her to the toilet she fell to the floor, she was so drowsy.

"My aunt took her back to the doctor and that's when the doctor made the comment that Shazel 'came across as a lazy child'."

Shazel's aunt, Saimah Naseem, who took her to Fairfield, said: "I was shocked. That was a horrible thing to say. One of the nurses also made the comment 'she's fine'."

The teenager was given her second course of the HPV vaccine at Derby High School in Bury on April 13. She died on April 17.

Shahad's sister added: "I was at home when Shazel returned. She was in a really bad state. As soon as she came home my aunt put her to bed.

"My aunt gave her water so she wouldn't dehydrate. My aunt and grandmother kept checking on her.

"An hour later she went blue. She had no pulse. The paramedics were here in seven minutes but she was not responding.

"At hospital it was just the machines that were keeping her alive."
The family said that following her death she underwent a CT scan and then paid £670 for an MRI scan at Oldham Royal Hospital.

Both tests were inconclusive and an autopsy has now been carried out. Results will not be available for several months.

"The family strongly believe that there is a link between her death and the vaccination," Ms Hussain told the Manchester newspaper:

"Before that she was perfectly normal, and active. Our own GP was really shocked that she had passed away. The reason we are speaking out is to raise awareness of what might happen.

"I don't think the hospital took her seriously. If they had done more tests they could have picked something up."


Comment: Unfortunately, this type of response from medical authorities is fairly common. Often those who develop symptoms after the administration of HPV vaccines are told their problems are coincidental, and therefore they delay potentially life-saving treatments which could be provided if investigations took place, accurate diagnoses made and treatment protocols designed and implemented.


In a letter to the child's mother, Rob Barrow, Assistant Directorate Manager at Pennine Acute NHS Trust said: "In line with national and Trust policy, we will be undertaking an investigation looking at the care and treatment of your daughter whilst under the care of the Trust."

He added: "I know there are questions you may wish to raise to be considered as part of the investigation."

In a statement Gill Harris, Chief Nurse at The Pennine Acute Hospitals NHS Trust, said: "Our thoughts are with the family and we offer them our sincere condolences for their tragic loss. We have started a full clinical review to examine the circumstances surrounding Shazel Zaman's death to understand what happened following her attendance at our A&E department in April. We intend to share the findings from our review with the family, with the Coroner's office, as well as with our own staff."

Deputy Bury Coroner, Lisa Hashmi has also commenced an investigation but will assess evidence before deciding whether to have a full inquest if she deems Shazel's death "unnatural".

"More than three million girls have been vaccinated so far in the UK with HPV vaccine, and tens of millions more have been vaccinated globally. As with all vaccines, safety remains under continual review, and HPV vaccine has a very good safety record," a spokesman for the Medicines and Healthcare Regulatory Agency told the Manchester Evening News.


Comment: Many scientists, doctors and researchers are now condemning the vaccine due to the strong evidence that they can produce severe and life-threatening harm. While the FDA, the CDC and the pharmaceutical / medical establishment all deny that there have been serious, life-altering adverse events associated with Gardasil, the fact is that compared with the mandated vaccines which are given with greater frequency, Gardasil still has the most adverse events reported to the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS) of any vaccine.


"We are aware of the tragic death of a young girl, and our thoughts are with her family. As with any serious adverse events, we will establish the facts, but there has been no suggestion from safety monitoring so far that the vaccine has been responsible for any deaths."

Since 2008, girls aged 12 and 13 in the UK have been routinely given a vaccination for the human papilloma virus (HPV) as part of the NHS childhood vaccination programme. The vaccine protects from cervical and throat cancers as well as genital warts.


Comment: The lead designer of the Gardasil vaccine trials is now warning parents against the vaccines, saying that they are essentially useless: "the benefit to public health is nothing, there is no reduction in cervical cancers, they are just postponed, unless the protection lasts for at least 15 years, and over 70% of all sexually active females of all ages are vaccinated."

See also: Propaganda alert: CDC claims 'vaccine sharply reduced HPV in teenage girls'


According to Cancer Research UK, cervical cancer is the second most common cancer in women under the age of 35. In the UK, 2,900 women a year are diagnosed with cervical cancer, that's around eight women every day.