Vaccine-Autism
Link
Reported by MSNBC
"The afternoon after Kelly Kerns’ 2-month-old daughter Kaylee got
several vaccines was “living hell,” with the child screaming and arching her
back, her mother said. 'I kept telling myself everybody gets vaccinated —
this is OK,' she said. When Kaylee was 18 months old, her white-blonde hair
began falling out and she stopped talking. Meanwhile, Kerns had twin boys
— Andrew and Daniel. When they were 15 months old, they received three vaccines.
A week later, they stopped talking. All three children have since been diagnosed
as autistic."
--
MSNBC news article "Debate
over vaccines, autism won't die," 6/26/05
Dear friends,
Below is
one of the few media articles providing good coverage of the intensely debated vaccine-autism link which has implicated thimerosal, a mercury derivative. Scientific studies
(many of which were funded by industry) largely find no link, though according
to a revealing article in the Los
Angeles Times "more than 4,200 parents have filed
claims in the federal Vaccine Injury Compensation Program, alleging that their
children suffered autism or other neurological disorders from mercury in their
shots." The fact that until recently the mainstream media
has given such scant coverage to this crucial issue suggests a possible cover-up.
Vaccines
in the US are regulated by
the FDA, the same body that fired
whistleblowers who exposed critical dangers of genetically engineered
food and hired a former
biotech lawyer as a chief monitor and regulator of biotech industries.
You can help to call for greater transparency on this topic which is so critical
to the health of our children by educating your friends and colleagues and by spreading this important information.
Together, we can and will build a brighter future for ourselves, and for our
future generations.
With best
wishes,
Fred Burks for the WantToKnow.info
Team
Former language interpreter
for Presidents Bush and Clinton
P.S. For
one-paragraph summaries of over two dozen major media articles exploreing the vaccine-autism link, click here. Links
and short summaries of related media articles are also given at the end of this
article, including one with possible autism treatment.
http://msnbc.msn.com/id/8336821
- Page 1
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/8336821/page/2
- Page 2
Debate
over vaccines, autism won't die
Mercury in shots blamed for rise in brain disorder among children
Updated: 12:06
p.m. ET June 26, 2005
The Rev.
Lisa Sykes, pastor of Richmond's Christ United Methodist Church, believes
that her son Wesley, 9, developed autism from a mercury-based preservative
she received in a shot during pregnancy and he received in childhood vaccines.
Wesley Sykes
is in a rage. Dinner was late. His cup held water, not soda. Strangers had stolen
his mother’s attention all afternoon. It is too much for the 9-year-old autistic
child to bear. He begins to flap his arms and shriek, working himself into murderous
screams that shatter his suburban home and all hope of a normal life.
His mother, the Rev. Lisa Sykes, has her own rage, against the demon she
blames for Wesley’s condition. It is thimerosal, a mercury-based preservative
she received in a shot during pregnancy and he received in childhood vaccines.
To the Richmond,
Va., pastor, this is a just crusade. To most scientists, it’s a leap of faith.
The levels of mercury in vaccines — now and in the past — do not cause autism,
they repeatedly have declared. But not everyone is convinced. Seven years after
it began, the debate over vaccines and autism just won’t die.
No
answers for parents
In fact,
it appears to be finding new life. Several churches have started a grassroots
movement to rid vaccines of mercury. A new book on the issue is getting attention.
A Kennedy has entered the fray.
“I think this issue has persisted, despite a boatload of scientific evidence...because
there are no answers for parents of children with autism,” said Dr. Sharon
Humiston, a University of Rochester pediatrician with a foot in both worlds.
She once worked for the government’s National Immunization Program, and she
has a son whose autism she refuses to blame on vaccines.
Medical controversies
flourish when science is lacking. In this case, both sides have limited science
and each criticizes the other’s. Vested interests make it tough to know who
to believe. Many parents have filed lawsuits. Many scientists have ties to vaccine
makers or are selling their expertise in court cases. Government officials don’t
want people to turn away from vaccines, which have clearly benefitted public
health.
Both sides also
have credibility problems. Opponents initially accused the measles vaccine,
which never contained the preservative, of causing autism. The government defended
a troubled pertussis vaccine for more than a decade before switching to a safer
version. “There’s conflict on all sides,” said David Kirby, author of “Evidence
of Harm,” a book urging more research.
There are two
main questions: Did older vaccines, which contained more thimerosal than the
trace amounts in modern ones, raise the risk of autism? Are there risks today?
Flu vaccine sold in multidose vials still contains the preservative, and the
government urges flu shots for pregnant women and young children even though
not enough thimerosal-free ones are available, critics say.
Finding answers
is tough because autism, a little-understood developmental disorder, often is
diagnosed at the very ages when children get vaccines. The stories are remarkably
similar: A seemingly normal child gets a shot and days, weeks or months later,
withdraws from the world, stops speaking, becomes upset at random stimulation
such as a doorbell, and adopts compulsive behaviors like head-banging.
Parents blame vaccines, but “that doesn’t make it true, no matter how strongly
they believe it,” said Dr. Steve Goodman, a Johns Hopkins University biostatistician
who served on an Institute of Medicine panel convened last year to take an
independent look at the evidence, which it found unconvincing. “There doesn’t
continue to be scientific argument.”
Beliefs and
evidence are things that Sykes, pastor of Richmond’s Christ United Methodist
Church, understands. A soft-spoken, slender woman, she does not come off as
a radical. She has a degree from Princeton Theological Seminary. The daughter
of two CIA employees, she was brought up to trust the government. “I dare them
to call me hysterical,” she said. “I’m the last one who should be screaming
conspiracy.”
Her son was
a normal, active baby. A photo shows Wesley clutching an Elmo doll, his blue
eyes shining and aware. But in a later photo, taken after autism had set in,
Wesley stares vacantly next to his smiling brother. Through a local autism group,
Sykes heard a doctor was advising cod liver oil as a treatment. She gave it
to Wesley for three days, then tried an experiment on her son, who had stopped
responding even to screams. “Wesley,” she said. He looked up at her.
The pastor was
sold. She tracked down the doctor, Mary Megson, who tested Wesley’s blood
for minerals. Most were within a normal range. The line for mercury, however,
flowed off the chart. “That was my baptism into this issue,” Sykes said.
During pregnancy, she had been given a shot to prevent problems from occurring
because she and her baby had a mismatched blood factor. Now, she learned that
the vaccine contained thimerosal, which is half mercury. The additive was
also in most childhood vaccines, and had been used since the 1930s to prevent
bacterial contamination, especially in multidose vials.
Failure
to regulate industry?
By November
1997, Congress was getting complaints. It ordered the Food and Drug Administration
to review mercury in vaccines, drugs and food. The government and a doctor group
said there was no evidence of harm but that vaccine makers should move toward
eliminating thimerosal to be safe. It wasn’t until 1999 that vaccines
with only trace amounts of thimerosal started to be introduced.
By then, parents had organized. Barbara Loe Fisher, a Virginia mom who is
president of the National Vaccine Information Center, which had successfully
campaigned for the safer pertussis vaccine, was disturbed federal officials
didn’t order thimerosal out.
“I believe this
is a failure to regulate industry, no question,” she said. She believes a
theory supported by many, that a subset of kids can’t handle mercury because
of a genetic or other kind of predisposition. Some scientists say it might be
something else in the vaccines, such as aluminum, or a hyper-reaction to the
vaccine itself. There’s a 3 percent to 8 percent recurrence rate of autism in
families and the disorder is four times more common in boys — more suggestion
of a genetic link.
A suburban
Kansas City family’s experiences suggest such a link. The afternoon after Kelly
Kerns’ 2-month-old daughter Kaylee got several vaccines was “living hell,” with
the child screaming and arching her back, her mother said. “I kept telling myself
everybody gets vaccinated — this is OK,” she said. When Kaylee was 18
months old, her white-blonde hair began falling out and she stopped talking.
Meanwhile, Kerns had twin boys — Andrew and Daniel. When they were 15 months
old, they received three vaccines. A week later, they stopped talking. All three
children have since been diagnosed as autistic.
In June 2000,
government officials, scientists and vaccine makers held an invitation-only
meeting at a Georgia retreat to review safety data the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention had from several large HMOs. The CDC’s Dr. Tom Verstraeten presented
results of a crude analysis suggesting mercury might be linked to some problems
like language delays. As for autism, “we don’t see much of a trend except for
a slight, but not significant, increase for the highest exposure,” he said,
according to a transcript that vaccine opponents have posted on the Internet.
Pressed to
quantify risks, Verstraeten demurred, saying, “it is giving more accuracy to
this data than what they really have.” But he admits that when he reviewed others’
studies, he was “stunned” to see how plausible the argument of harm was, according
to the transcript. The Institute of Medicine in 2001 also found the theory “biologically
plausible” but said evidence was inadequate to accept or reject it. Verstraeten
ultimately published a medical journal article saying there was little evidence
of a link. That enraged U.S. Rep. Dave Weldon, a physician and Republican from
Florida, and U.S. Rep. Dan Burton, an Indiana Republican whose grandson has
autism.
Relying
on 'cigarette science'
Fights over
limits to damages that families could seek in lawsuits followed. They drew the
attention of Robert Kennedy Jr., a lawyer and environmentalist. “I kept getting
approached by these mothers of autistic kids who said the exposures from vaccines
dwarfs any exposure we’re getting from environmental mercury,” he said.
Kennedy,
who has pushed the issue on news shows and in an article in Rolling Stone magazine,
said that when he looked at the government’s evidence it was “laughably flawed.”
“It was clear to me that the reports they’re relying
on are cigarette science,”’ he said, referring to tobacco companies’
past arguments that there was no proof cigarettes caused cancer. [Click here for Kennedy's excellent essay on the topic]
Even if there
were a link, proving vaccines cause autism is another matter, said Dr. William
Schaffner, a Vanderbilt University professor and longtime government vaccine
adviser. There are scientific tests of causation: the problem appears soon after
the exposure; the link makes sense biologically; the risk rises as the dose
rises; the link is strong and consistent rather than weak or occasional; the
problem doesn’t occur without the exposure (a test rarely met). The final test:
the problem or risk falls if the exposure is discontinued. Studies from England,
where thimerosal was eliminated sooner than in the United States, indicate that
autism rates continue to rise, not decline, even without the preservative, he
said.
Also, he and other scientists point to the case against silicone breast implants,
involving years of court battles. Lawsuits alleged the implants caused fibromyalgia,
based on isolated cases. “Now all the epidemiology is against it and that
has quietly shifted away,” Schaffner said. “Scientific issues are not resolved
in the courtroom.”
Sykes has another
place in mind. “When the federal institution will not respond appropriately,
take it to the church,” she said.
More
battles, more tears
Two weeks ago,
she convinced the Virginia Conference of the United Methodist church — the largest
conference in United Methodism — to pass a resolution calling for the removal
of mercury from vaccines. It now heads to the Board of Global Ministries and
the Board of Church and Society of the United Methodist Church for consideration.
The same resolution passed Kerns’ East Kansas Conference of the Methodist Church
650-0 a few weeks ago. The Virginia Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church
of America has referred the measure to a committee. The Virlina District Church
of the Brethren, which serves parts of Virginia, West Virginia and North Carolina,
is drafting its own version.
Meanwhile at
Sykes’ home, the day that melted down with her son’s screams was turning into
night. Wesley has drifted off to sleep. The phone’s incessant ringing stops.
Sykes’ husband, Seth, returns home from work. Outside, all is quiet except for
the musical tinkling of a passing ice cream truck. Later, Wesley wakes up and
finishes his dinner. He cuddles with his dad in the recliner and watches TV
before going to bed. There will be more tantrums, more battles, more tears,
for Wesley and his mother. But for a rare moment, everything seems normal. There
is just sweet, blessed peace.
Note: Below are excerpts from and links to other revealing articles on
this topic. For
one-paragraph summaries of over two dozen major media articles exploreing the vaccine-autism link, click here.
Merck's
infant vaccine stirs new controversy
Los Angeles Times/Newsday,
March 8, 2005
http://www.nynewsday.com/news/health/ny-usglan084168623mar08,0,3713664.story
http://www.mercuryexposure.org/index.php?article_id=344
Merck
& Co. continued to supply infant vaccine containing a mercury preservative
for two years after declaring that it had eliminated the chemical. Thimerosal,
which is nearly 50 percent ethyl mercury, has largely been eliminated from
most routine childhood vaccines, although it is present in most flu shots.
More than 4,200 parents have filed claims in the federal Vaccine Injury Compensation
Program, alleging that their children suffered autism or other neurological
disorders from mercury in their shots.
Possible Mercury, Autism Connection
Found in Study
Los Angeles Times, March
17, 2005
http://www.latimes.com/news/science/la-sci-autism17mar17,1,1770760.story?coll=la-news-science
http://newsmine.org/archive/nature-health/health/toxic-mercury-in-environment-causing-autism.txt
Studying
individual school districts in Texas, the epidemiologists found that those
districts with the highest levels of mercury in the environment also had the
highest rates of special education students and autism diagnoses. There was a strong, direct relationship between mercury and autism levels.
The incidence of autism has grown dramatically over the last two decades,
from about one in every 2,000 children to as high as one in every 166. The
purported link between autism and mercury has been a subject of intense debate.
In the past it has centered primarily on the mercury-containing preservative
thimerosal, which was once widely used in vaccines. Many parents have
argued that thimerosal causes autism because their children seemed to develop
the neurological disorder shortly after they received childhood vaccinations.
The Age of Autism: The Amish
anomaly
April 18-19, 2005, Washington Times
http://www.washtimes.com/upi-breaking/20050321-115921-9566r.htm - Part 1
http://washingtontimes.com/UPI-breaking/20050417-052541-5549r.htm -
Part 2
Where
are the autistic Amish? Here in Lancaster County, heart of Pennsylvania Dutch
country, there should be well over 100 with some form of the disorder. I have
come here to find them, but so far my mission has failed, and the very few
I have identified raise some very interesting questions about some widely held
views on autism. The Amish have a religious exemption from vaccination.
So far, there is evidence of only three, all of them children, the oldest age
9 or 10. Julia is one of them. She...is adopted from China. She had most of
her vaccines given to her in the United States before we got her. [Of the other
one definitely had a vaccine, and the other's vaccine status is unknown.]
The mainstream scientific consensus says autism is a complex genetic disorder,
one that has been around for millennia at roughly the same prevalence. That
prevalence is now considered to be 1 in every 166 children born in the United
States.
A child's return from autism
May 25, 2005, San Francisco Chronicle
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2005/05/25/BAGU0CU2K71.DTL
A Lafayette couple,
certain that chelation therapy has helped their autistic son, stepped squarely
into the controversy surrounding the causes of autism and its treatment Tuesday
as they joined 150 other parents in launching an international support group
that will aggressively promote the treatment. The Handleys are now among
a small minority of parents -- who, believing that the autism was caused by
the mercury in thimerosal, a preservative that was routinely used in vaccines
until recently -- are treating their children with chelation therapy, a lotion
or pill that strips the body of heavy metals. It has been used for decades
to detoxify people contaminated in industrial accidents, but no studies have
proved whether it is an effective treatment for autism. For Jamie's parents,
the proof they need is in front of them: Jamie, now 3 years old and several
months into treatment, is plump and playing baseball. His smile has returned.
The Handleys said the new support group, Generation Rescue, and its Web site,
www.generationrescue.com, will
offer information on chelation therapy and connect parents with those who can
help.
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Vaccine Autism
Link
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