We’ve detailed the questionable medical advice of Newsmax-promoted doctor Russell Blaylock, not the least of which is fearmongering about vaccines.
With the current concern about non-vaccinated Americans contributing to a measles outbreak, Newsmax TV gave Blaylock a platform to peddle more fear about vaccines, as described in a Feb. 3 Newsmax article by Bill Hoffmann:
Childhood vaccinations for viruses like measles and chicken pox should not be mandatory and, in fact, may cause serious health problems, says board certified neurosurgeon Dr. Russell Blaylock, editor of The Blaylock Wellness Report.
“Absolutely not. It takes away one of the fundamental rights of people, individuals and families and certainly parents — and that is the protection of their children,” Blaylock said Tuesday on “The Steve Malzberg Show” on Newsmax TV.“You should not have the right to force my child to receive a vaccine when I think that that could cause severe damage to my child.
[…]
“There’s compelling scientific evidence that vaccines are not as safe as they’re being proposed. In fact, there [can be] significant, serious problems, including death, seizures, encephalitis and severe brain damage. This is well documented in medical literature.”“If you could demonstrate that vaccines never caused serious neurological damage or caused serious health issues, then fine, that’s one thing.
“But they can’t demonstrate that and what we’re seeing is a dramatic increase in autoimmune diseases since they’ve added so many vaccines to the vaccine schedule. Those include increases in neurological damage and impairment in learning, memory and speech.
“So we’re seeing a dramatic increase in all of these disorders as the number of vaccines increased,” he said.
Hoffmann didn’t mention that Blaylock has defended Andrew Wakefield, the British doctor who penned the notorious, now-retracted study linking vaccines and autism.
In an article on the website of Dr. Joseph Mercola — a anti-vaxxer and peddler of health supplements who has been sanctioned by the FDA for overstating their effectiveness — Blaylock claimed that criticism of Wakefield is “unjustified” and that he was “singled out” because of “bias in academia and government regulatory agencies.”
One plus for Newsmax, though: Hoffmann disclosed Newsmax’s business relationship with Blaylock in his article.