Photo of: Jeremiah Abalaka

Dr. Jeremiah Abalaka This is Me

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Medicrest Specialist hospital

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This profile was automatically generated using 121 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...

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  1. 1. Caribbean Food Emporium - Medical Breakthroughs
    www.caribbeanfoodemporium.co.u - [Cached]

    Published on: 4/21/2006   Last Visited: 11/5/2007

    Jeremiah Abalaka, of the Medicrest Specialist Hospital in Gwagwalada, developed the 'cure' from the blood of HIV positive patients.

    He claims to have invented both a preventative vaccine, to stop people from becoming HIV positive, and a therapeutic vaccine, to cure those already infected. Abalaka, whose claims have been published in the scientific journal Vaccine, claims to have 'cured' 20 people who were formerly HIV positive. He then tested the vaccine on about 300 HIV-negative people and says none has yet developed the infection, as far as he knows.

    His work has caused huge controversy in Nigeria, causing wrangles between Abalaka and the Nigerian ministry of health. "I have successfully developed safe, preventive and curative vaccines against HIV," Abalaka told New Scientist.
  2. 2. The Philly Wire: The Cure
    www.phillywire.com/The_Cure.ht - [Cached]

    Published on: 2/28/2004   Last Visited: 5/21/2004

    972 HIV/AIDS: Why Cure Hasn't Been Found - Abalaka Managing Director of Abuja-based Medicrest Specialist hospital Dr. Jeremiah Abalaka, has said that the world has not been able to discover a cure for the HIV/AIDS scourge because all HIV preventive vaccines so far developed are designed to elicit anti-HIV antibody production. http://www.thisdayonline.com/news/20040229news10.h
    tml (AltaVista News)
  3. 3. Dilemma of AIDS Patients
    www.newswatchngr.com/editorial - [Cached]

    Published on: 2/16/2002   Last Visited: 2/18/2002

    In Nigeria , the preventive and curative vaccines developed by Jeremiah Abalaka, medical director of Medicrest Specialist Hospital , Gwagwalada near Abuja , were banned by the federal government. They were said to be "improperly tried or evaluated in humans before being advertised."

    Curiously, virtually all AIDS drugs imported into the country so far are guilty of that offence. Most of them were only tried on rats not humans before they found their way into Nigeria . Their clinical reports are clinical reports of rats and rabbits. Information on Lamivudine says it was orally administered to rats and rabbits "at 130 and 60 times, respectively, the usual adult dose…. Studies in pregnant rats and rabbits showed that lamivudine is transferred to the fetus through the placenta."

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