In the UK, teenage girls are being given HPV Vaccines to prevent cervical cancer and the 700 deaths it causes each year. Instead of focusing on the good of the vaccine, the Daily Mail publishes an article to scare parents. From the very begging of the article, the paper asserts--as fact--that the vaccine is causing major side effects, stressing the most attention grabbing reactions.

Concerns over safety of cervical cancer vaccine after 1,300 girls experience adverse side-effects

More than 1,300 schoolgirls have experienced adverse reactions to the controversial cervical cancer jab.
Doctors have reported that girls aged just 12 and 13 have suffered paralysis, convulsions and sight problems after being given the vaccine.
The Natural News echos the Daily Mirror in article from two days ago:
http://www.naturalnews.com/026293.html1300 Girls Harmed by HPV Vaccines in UK; Bizarre Side Effects Like Paralysis and Epilepsy
More than 1,300 girls in the United Kingdom have experienced negative reactions to the government-mandated Cervarix vaccine for the human papillomavirus (HPV), according to adverse events reports collected from doctors by the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA).
But according to the MHRA, the group that released these numbers, most of the reported side-effects were minor and short-lived and the more serious side-effects may not have even been caused by the vaccine. The MHRA said that some of the reactions "were due to the injection process and not the vaccine itself." And other more severe reactions "may have been coincidental events." And the organization is correct: just because someone suffers from an ailment, doesn't mean it was caused by the vaccine. These reports don't isolate cause and effect, a fact newspapers should stress to their readers.
Even if all the alleged reactions were caused by the vaccine, the harm is still outweighed by the benefits of the vaccine--the prevention of 700 deaths a year.