Lene Victoria Jacobsen vividly remembers when swine-flu panic hit her northern town of Harstad in 2009.
“It felt as if a disaster were about to happen,” she says. “You got tears in your eyes thinking about it, this was something serious.”
She took her two young daughters to a local gym being used to provide mass inoculations against the H1N1 strain, where they received injections of the Pandemrix vaccine.
That’s when Jacobsen’s trouble started. Just six months old at the time, her youngest daughter Sofie developed narcolepsy, a chronic sleep disorder.
“She falls asleep everywhere, even on the toilet,” Jacobsen says. Full story...
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“It felt as if a disaster were about to happen,” she says. “You got tears in your eyes thinking about it, this was something serious.”
She took her two young daughters to a local gym being used to provide mass inoculations against the H1N1 strain, where they received injections of the Pandemrix vaccine.
That’s when Jacobsen’s trouble started. Just six months old at the time, her youngest daughter Sofie developed narcolepsy, a chronic sleep disorder.
“She falls asleep everywhere, even on the toilet,” Jacobsen says. Full story...
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- Narcolepsy cases rising in Sweden after swine flu vaccine ...
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