The Hellenic  Center for Disease Prevention and Control said that a 70 years old woman did not catch 'HIV' by transfusion. An occasion to question the validity of the HIV test.


The recent case of a 70-year-old woman thought to 'have contracted HIV' by transfusion, created a big scare about the safety of the Greek blood supply. The public, and the media, were reassured when the Hellenic  Center for Disease Prevention and Control (KEELPNO) said that "all the batches of blood used were tested and none showed traces of HIV".

However, if they had found one of the donors to be 'positive', everybody would believe that it was an example of transmission by blood transfusion. That is what we call 'AIDS science', the fundamental part of what has been correctly called "The Gravest Show on Earth".

In that specific case, the 70 years old woman had received 11 transfusions. Anybody could test positive in that situation, it has nothing to do with 'HIV'. The scientific literature shows that transfusion is one of the dozens of factor that can cause a positive reaction with the 'HIV' test.

In fact, there are no scientific studies proving  that the 'HIV' tests are accurate. A US$ 25 000 award has been offered to find a study published in a peer reviewed medical journal that shows the validation of any HIV test by the direct isolation of HIV from the fresh, uncultured fluids or tissues of positive testing persons.

The whole 'AIDS' construction rests on those 'HIV' tests.

People are being scared from making love, some are taking toxic medication because they were found once positive for a test that has never been properly validated. In some countries, 'positive' pregnant mothers and their babies are forced to take the toxic medication.

A true world scandal.


For those who do not live in Greece, here are the latest news from the KEELPNO about the recent transfusion case:

Transfusions cleared

The Center for Disease Control and Prevention (KEELPNO) said yesterday that a 70-year-old woman thought to have contracted HIV, the virus that can lead to AIDS, at a hospital on Rhodes did not become infected with the virus during a blood transfusion. Scientists said that all the batches of blood used were tested and none showed traces of HIV. They did not provide any further information about how the woman may have contracted the virus, citing medical confidentiality.

Kathimerini, September 25 2008











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