Doctrinal debate on the role of the vaccine against anthrax in progress in the areas of biodefense precipitated the initiation of the Ministry of Defence of the vaccination program mandatory anthrax vaccine. An article in the Washington Post captured the controversy, saying that "military leaders were initially skeptical about the need for immunization against anthrax." (Coliandris. 2008)The statement showed a reversed political process "from the top to Instead of trying to staff a question from the bottom up ", adding the cause of program problems.
The only previous use of mass vaccination of the 1950s occurred in the 1990s, when more than 150,000 troops have received inoculations during the first Gulf War, with many later reports diseases of unknown origins. 5 A decade later, George W. Bush acknowledged the problems associated with the vaccine against anthrax and Gulf War Syndrome. Officials ordered a review of the program early in 2001. A note of presidential adviser Karl Rove, the deputy defense secretary Paul Wolfowitz, 6 resulted in recommendations of the defense secretaries Dr. David Chu and Edward Aldridge to Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld. 7 The defense officials call the program to stop mass compulsory and continuous use of the vaccine to only a "minimum" level. They recommended the purchase of equipment for detecting biological and antibiotics to protect soldiers "in the absence of a vaccine against anthrax."
Safety and efficacy
The audit reports have cited additional studies of the Pentagon acknowledged that up to 35 percent of soldiers have had adverse reactions to vaccines against anthrax, and that 6 percent of recipients reported serious complications following vaccination. The study caused the military authorities to change prior to low side effects, changing the warnings on the label approved. Despite the changes, ...