The Pharmaceutical Companies Have a Financial Incentive to Make Their Vaccines Injurious

Edward Hendrie Congress passed the National Vaccine Injury Act (NVIA) of 1986, which granted immunity to the pharmaceutical companies for injuries caused by the vaccines they manufactured. As explained by the U.S. Supreme Court in Bruesewitz v. Wyeth 1, the reason for that protection is that Congress deemed vaccines to be unavoidably unsafe, 2 thus no manufacturer would make a vaccine if they had to suffer the liability for injuries they would unavoidably cause. 3 Mary S. Holland explains the issue: “The success of the national vaccine program has come at a cost. Some children…