Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Huge Amount of Birth Defects in Washington State - CDC/U.S. Government says "No reason, just Coincidence" This is Outrageous - They Still Won't Admit to Fukushima Radiation!



To me, this proves the Lies and Cover ups of the CDC and U.S. government.

There have been a huge amount of birth defects in Yakima, Washington State over the last 3 years and the CDC won't release the full amount of them.

The only reason this is public, is because a health official released this.  So where else in Washington State is there birth defects that is not being made public?  Just how many are happening in the State as a whole?

They say there is "no reason" except it is all simply coincidence.  The first reason that should  be considered is Fukushima radiation, which is the most reasonable and explainable.  But the U.S. government doesn't dare acknowledge the radiation we are and have gotten from Fukushima.


This is one of those infuriating articles and completely exposes the CDC and U.S. government to their constant coverups of real causes.  They are covering up Fukushima radiation.  You will notice not one mention of it is in the article from NBC or the CDC.  NBC doesn't even question if radiation could be the cause.

This is why "We the People" are on our own in getting Truth out and what is going on so people are aware.

Edit to add - Hanford - the largest nuclear dump in the world that leaks nuclear waste is close to this area.  So it is not just Fukushima radiation, obviously.  Yet the state officials and the CDC believe it is all just a coincidence.  Even if they do testing, they would not admit the defects were from Hanford.  

Important Portions from article:

There’s no secret, state and CDC officials said, and they noted that small clusters of birth defects often turn out to be nothing more than sad coincidence.

“No statistically significant differences were identified between cases and controls, and a clear cause of the elevated prevalence of anencephaly was not determined,” the CDC wrote.

A group of birth defects can appear to be related, when it’s actually just coincidence, Kucik added. “I think that there is a lot of frustration when dealing with these type of cluster investigations because they end up without a lot of answers,” he added.

Ashley-Koch, the Duke professor, acknowledged that CDC and state officials faced a tough task. It's difficult tracing back through previous pregnancies and trying to find a common cause for birth defects, particularly when not all of defects are the same. Still, she suggested that the investigation may have been a “cursory approach.”


Sara Barron, the nurse who discovered the problem, thinks that health officials could — and should — do more.
“I definitely believe something is going on,” she said. “There was something. Maybe it just hit once and blew through, God willing. If there are still cases going on, we need to know.”
CDC and state officials refused to tell NBC News how many new cases they’d received in 2013, saying they plan a full report later this spring. Stahre had previously said they’d received “a few more cases” after the original investigation.

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