Workspace for Charlotte_Cleverley-Bisman article.

Article plan

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From skimming a number of the below, it looks like a reasonable plan for the article to be:

 Lead                                            (Photo)
 Table of Contents
 Early life (up to 7 months, will have to be short!) family, background
 Meningitis: necessary background, focusing on this strain in New Zealand
 Onset on Cleverley-Bisman                       (Possible photo if article long enough)
   Junior: how they were at first two faces, then J's death underscoring that C-B's survival was not at all guaranteed
 NZ Meningitis campaign: with Perry Bisman's vocal participation
 Cleverley-Bisman's recovery and subsequent life (Photo with artificial limbs)

Article development

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Meningococcal disease in New Zealand

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In 2004, New Zealand was in the thirteenth year of an epidemic of meningococcal disease, a bacterial infection which can cause meningitis and blood poisoning. Most Western countries have fewer than three cases for every 100,000 people each year, with New Zealand averaging 1.5 before the epidemic started in 1991; in 2001, the worst year of the epidemic in New Zealand, the rate hit 17. 5400 New Zealanders had caught the disease, 220 had died, and 1080 had suffered serious disabilities, such as limb amputations or brain damage. Eight out of 10 victims were under 20 and half were under 5 years of age. The internationally low proportion of deaths from the disease had been credited to wide publicity of the disease and its symptoms. In June 2004, Charlotte Cleverley-Bisman became the face of the epidemic.[1]

Onset

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The morning of June 17, 2004, Cleverley-Bisman vomited and was unhappy, but the parents took it as anticipated teething pains. By mid-morning she developed a small blemish on her neck, and her mother rushed her to Waiheke Ostend Medical Centre, where staff diagnosed meningitis. In ten minutes she was covered with small spots. She was injected with penicillin, and rushed to Starship Children's Health by helicopter. Half an hour after the first spots were noticed, she was blistered, swollen, and purple over her entire body, with her extremities blackening. She was not expected to survive, and needed to be resuscitated twice during her first half hour at Starship. She was connected to life support systems which fed her, transfused blood and drugs, and assisted her breathing.[2][3]

The second day, Starship doctors said that if she lived at all, Cleverley-Bisman would need to have at least both legs and most of her left hand amputated, to save her life from gangrene. During the three weeks while doctors waited for demarcation between dead and living flesh to become clearer, her catheters became clogged several times and needed to be replaced with additional surgery. By the end of June, it was clear that all four limbs would need to be amputated.[2] This was done on July 2, amputating both legs and left arm "optimistically", through the knee joints, rather than above them, hoping to preserve the growth plates at the end of the long bones, which would allow for better use of prosthetics later in life.[4][3]

Cleverley-Bisman's parents helped the case to be publicised nationwide to raise parents' awareness of the speed of the disease, and to highlight the need for a vaccine.[1] Charitable donors gave money to defray their expenses, beginning with NZ$1000 from the Jassy Dean Trust, set up after another girl died from meningococcal disease.[4]

Junior Uluvula

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On July 8, 2004, nine-month-old Sakiusa "Junior" Uluvula, from Mangere, had his right hand, right foot, half his left foot and the tip of his nose amputated at Starship Children's Health. His twin brother Nasoni had escaped infection, despite always being with Sakiusa. After the disease struck, the twins looked nothing alike. The Uluvulas were of Pacific Island ancestry, mother Tima Uluvula having moved to New Zealand from Fiji 17 years before.[5] Meningococcal disease affected Maori at twice the rate and Pacific Islanders at four times the rate of New Zealand residents of European descent.[1]

For a month, Uluvula joined Cleverley-Bisman as the national face of the epidemic.[1] The Cleverley-Bisman and Uluvula families supported each other emotionally, and in spreading awareness of the disease.[5] The babies were reported on together.[6] But while Cleverley-Bisman grew stronger, Uluvula lost function in his kidneys, and fought fever and infection.[5][6] Both babies lost more of their limbs to surgery, Uluvula losing both legs, and Cleverley-Bisman losing her right leg and right arm above the joints.[7] Uluvula died at midnight on 19 July, 2004.[8][9][10]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d "Tracking down a killer disease", by Martin Johnston, New Zealand Herald, July 11, 2004. Retrieved 2007-09-05.
  2. ^ a b "Family's diary of a nightmare", Perry Bisman, published by the New Zealand Herald, 28 June, 2004. Retrieved 2007-08-09.
  3. ^ a b "The story of 'Baby' Charlotte - a meningococcal survivor", as told by her father, Perry Bisman. Official site. Retrieved 2007-08-09.
  4. ^ a b "Baby Charlotte's limbs amputated in marathon operation", by Rebecca Walsh, New Zealand Herald, July 03, 2004. Retrieved 2007-09-05. Cite error: The named reference "NZHerald20040703" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  5. ^ a b c "Another baby loses limbs to killer disease", By Juliet Rowan and Rebecca Walsh, New Zealand Herald, July 09, 2004. Retrieved 2007-09-05.
  6. ^ a b "Babies endure more surgery", by Rebecca Walsh and Renee Kiriona, New Zealand Herald, July 10, 2004. Retrieved 2007-09-05.
  7. ^ "Two babies battling disease face more surgery", by Stuart Dye, New Zealand Herald, July 14, 2004. Retrieved 2007-09-05.
  8. ^ "Meningococcal baby dies in hospital", New Zealand Herald, July 19, 2004. Retrieved 2007-09-05.
  9. ^ "Junior at peace, says mother", by Alan Perrot, New Zealand Herald, July 20, 2004. Retrieved 2007-09-05.
  10. ^ "Meningitis stole Junior from his family", by Tima Uluvula, mother. Hosted by Kids Friendly New Zealand. Retrieved 2007-09-05.

Sources

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Immunisation Awareness Society

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Norwegian-made documentary airing on TVNZ's Sunday programme this weekend. The hour-long documentary raises concerns over the safety of the Norwegian vaccine on which the New Zealand vaccine is based. It claims there are severe side effects, including chronic fatigue syndrome, which causes pain, muscle weakness and loss of brain function, and myelitis, which causes paralysis of nerves. Immunisation Awareness Society spokeswoman Sue Claridge said ... "Parents were unaware that they were providing their children with a highly experimental vaccine."... the trials in Norway proved there was a link between the use of the vaccine and chronic fatigue syndrome. Free meningococcal B immunisations were introduced in 2004 and are available to people aged between six weeks and 19 years.

The Ministry of Health says the high rate of sickness at schools is unrelated to meningococcal B vaccination. Trials before the vaccine programme began found that common side effects included fever, vomiting and diarrhoea in young children, and headache and general malaise in adults and children.

New Zealand has one of the world's highest rates of meningococcal-B and the Health Ministry has launched a nationwide programme aiming to vaccinate 90 per cent of people under 20.The school-based immunisation programme began in Waikato this week. "The Ministry of Health has spent over $200 million on the campaign," In the United States and Singapore, where children had to have immunisation against diseases such as measles, diphtheria and hepatitis B, children had to show proof of their immunisation before they could attend school. The meningococcal-B vaccine protected the person who had been vaccinated but did not appear to stop them carrying the bug and passing it on to someone else. no plans to make vaccination compulsory.

Immunisation Awareness Society and the Vaccination Alternatives Society are questioning the safety of the MeNZB vaccine. In a $200 million project, the Government aims to vaccinate 90 per cent of New Zealand's 1.1 million people under the age of 20. Those in Counties Manukau and Auckland City suburbs at higher risk of the disease were the first to receive the vaccine, starting in July.Severe allergic reactions, nerve damage and chronic fatigue syndrome were reported by some adults or adolescents given the Norwegian vaccine which is the "parent" of the New Zealand vaccine. But these side-effects were rare, occurring in no more than one in 10,000 patients. Side-effects linked to the New Zealand meningococcal B vaccine include: Swelling at the injection site in up to 34 per cent of patients. Irritability in 49 per cent of infants and 41 per cent of toddlers. Headache in nearly a quarter of children and adults. Convulsion linked to high fever "very rarely" - in less than one in 10,000 patients. This kind of convulsion is generally considered harmless.

12:00AM Tuesday July 13, 2004, By REBECCA WALSH Sue Claridge, principal researcher and spokeswoman for the Immunisation Awareness Society, said there was a "climate of fear"There's a very small percentage of people, 0.009 per cent of New Zealanders, get meningococcal disease each year. Of those the ministry says 4 per cent die. That's a really, really small percentage of people." Since the epidemic began in 1991, the disease has made more than 5400 people sick and killed 220.Ms Claridge said the $200 million being pumped into the nationwide vaccination programme would be better used addressing risk factors such as overcrowded housing, poverty and nutrition.

2004

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Meningococcal Disease

June

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July

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Junior

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In yesterday's Herald, Sue Claridge from the Immunisation Awareness Society, said there was a "climate of fear" and many parents felt vaccination was their only way to fight the disease. ...dismissed the argument that the $200 million being spent on immunisation would be better used addressing poverty, overcrowded housing and nutrition. "We do not live in an overcrowded house, are not poverty-stricken and Charlotte was a perfectly healthy European baby girl whose diet included mother's milk, vitamin supplements, fruit and she had never had a sniffle in her life."

August

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video from TVNZ

Fall

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to her mouth with both artificial hands. Among those at the birthday celebration was Tima Uluvula, who lost her son Junior to meningococcal disease soon after Charlotte became ill. The two families have become good friends . Mr Bisman ... urged parents to get their children vaccinated; low turn-out for the meningococcal vaccine; grateful for the support they had received, including building work on their home.

2005

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Meningococcal B Immunisation Programme director Jane O’Hallahan said the advertising of therapeutic products was governed by Advertising Standards Authority codes and Medicines Act requirements. The advertising guidelines prohibit advertisements for therapeutic products from playing on people’s fears "without justifiable reason" and from suggesting that failing to the use the product will have "harmful consequences".

meningococcal B last winter, will speak at: 12.30pm on May 11 at Community House, Motueka, 3.30pm on May 11 at the Wesley Centre, Richmond 9.30am on May 12 at Fairfield House, Nelson 1.00pm on May 12 at St Andrew's Church, Blenheim.Mr Bisman strongly supports the MeNZB™ vaccine

largest immunisation programme ever undertaken in New Zealand.

Running time: 1 x 60 minutes Year of Production: 2005 Produced by: Greenstone Pictures

??

2006

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she survived, and without brain damage.

Several months after the programme began, journalist Barbara Sumner Burstyn and researcher Ron Law - formerly a medical laboratory scientist who professes a "low regard for the medical profession" after years of reading medical literature - began criticising the ministry campaign in a series of magazine and internet articles and public meetings.Law says it was a campaign of fear based falsely on the number of all cases, not just the epidemic strain. The $222 million "to try to prevent at most a handful of deaths a year" would have been better spent on improving housing.He is proud to have dissuaded "10 to 15 per cent" of parents from having their children vaccinated and says he was never paid, "other than petrol money".

The ministry's director of public health, Dr Jane O'Hallahan, says 1 to 3 per cent were dissuaded and many of these later signed up. She says that level of indecision added a new burden for the campaign's front-line nurses. The public were badly served by the Sumner Burstyn/Laws views gaining a half share of some media coverage, when "99.9 per cent" of doctors supported the campaign.

The Government is claiming success for the campaign, both in vaccine uptake and in beating back the epidemic. The target was to vaccinate 90 per cent of those aged 6 weeks to 19 years. So far 80 per cent have had three doses. The rates are lower for 18 and 19-year-olds - and for Maori aged 1 to 4, who at 73 per cent are nearly 10 points behind the non-Maori-non-Pacific rate.

O'Hallahan says the most common reported bad reaction to the vaccine was a slight fever. One or two cases of severe allergic reactions were reported, a lower rate than for other vaccines. No deaths have been linked to the vaccine.

The key statistics the ministry relies on in asserting that the vaccine is killing - but has not yet killed - the epidemic are the reduction in epidemic strain cases in the Auckland-Northland region in the target age group: 84 in the year before mass vaccination started compared with 20 the year after. A 76 per cent reduction. Among Maori it is 90 per cent.

Law says the ministry graphs prove his point, that the epidemic was going away by itself. The ministry argues that, based on the Norwegian experience, the epidemic could have lasted another 15 years and that the pre-vaccination reduction in cases from 2001's peak might have been another cyclical trough.

2007

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