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Monday, July 10, 2006 |
Autism, mercury, and politics
By Robert Kennedy Jr. |
July 1, 2005 - Boston Globe
MOUNTING EVIDENCE suggests that Thimerosal, a mercury-based
preservative in children's vaccines, may be responsible for the exponential
growth of autism, attention deficit disorder, speech delays, and other childhood
neurological disorders now epidemic in the United States.
Prior to 1989,
American infants generally received three vaccinations (polio,
measles-mumps-rubella, and diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis). In the early 1990s,
public health officials dramatically increased the number of
Thimerosal-containing vaccinations without considering the cumulative impact of
the mercury load on developing brains.
In a 1991 memo, Dr. Maurice
Hilleman, one of the fathers of Merck's vaccination programs, warned his bosses
that 6-month-old children administered the shots on schedule would suffer
mercury exposures 87 times the government safety standards. He recommended that
Thimerosal be discontinued and complained that the US Food and Drug
Administration, which has a notoriously close relationship with the
pharmaceutical industry, could not be counted on to take appropriate action as
its European counterparts had. Merck ignored Hilleman's warning, and for eight
years government officials added seven more shots for children containing
Thimerosal.
Mercury is a known brain poison, and autism rates began
rising dramatically in children who were administered the new vaccine regimens.
A decade ago the American Academy of Pediatrics estimated the autism rate among
American children to be 1 in 2,500. Today, the CDC places the rate at 1 in 166,
or 1 in 80 boys. Additionally, one in six children is now diagnosed with a
related neurological disorder.
In 2000, the CDC met with pharmaceutical
companies and the FDA in secret to review its findings linking Thimerosal with
the dramatic rise in neurological illnesses. According to transcripts,
participants were alarmed about the undeniable links between the Thimerosal and
widespread brain damage in children. Dr. Bill Weil told the group, ''You can
play with [the results] all you want. They are statistically significant." Dr.
Richard Johnston admitted he feared his grandchild getting a
Thimerosal-containing vaccine. But the group was most concerned with keeping the
findings secret. ''Consider this embargoed information," said Dr. Roger Bernier,
a senior director at the National Immunization Program, at the meeting's close.
The CDC now says it has ''lost" the data that supported the crucial study and
has persistently defied congressional requests and federal law requiring it to
open up the federal Vaccine Safety Database to scientists and the
public.
Numerous animal, DNA, epidemiological, and other studies point to
Thimerosal as a culprit in America's epidemic of neurological disorders.
Autistic children have been shown to have higher mercury loads than
nonautistics, and there have been reports of significant improvements in some
brain-injured children by removing mercury from their brains. Most of the
symptoms of autism are similar to the symptoms of mercury poisoning. Scientists
have been able to induce autism-like symptoms in mice by exposing them to
Thimerosal. A recent study by an FDA scientist, Dr. Jill James, found that many
autistic children are genetically deficient in their capacity to produce
glutathione, an antioxidant generated in the brain that helps remove mercury
from the body.
Government health agencies who green-lighted Thimerosal
have turned a blind eye to the hundreds of studies linking Thimerosal to a wide
range of neurological disorders and joined the pharmaceutical industry to gin up
a series of flawed European studies to exonerate Thimerosal. Those studies
examined children exposed to a tiny fraction of the Thimerosal given to American
kids and took advantage of the autism spike that resulted from deceptive
data-gathering in Scandinavia to argue that autism rates are unrelated to
Thimerosal use.
Drug makers wary of liability reduced Thimerosal in most
children's vaccines in recent years, but the preservative remains in flu shots,
tetanus boosters, and over-the-counter drugs. Mercury-laced vaccine stocks were
given to American children until the end of 2003.
Government officials
who continue to champion Thimerosal should recognize that this is not just a
theoretical exercise in bureaucratic face-saving. Their wrong-headed defense of
Thimerosal safety in the face of overwhelming science is discouraging testing of
promising treatments which may be effective. They are depriving vulnerable
populations from being identified to avoid Thimerosal. They also cannot escape
responsibility for their failure to warn international health agencies and
governments who, based upon American assurances, are now injecting the
developing world's children with this brain-killing chemical.
Robert
Kennedy Jr. is senior attorney for the Natural Resources Defense Council.
12:20:41 PM
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The famed British astrophysicist and best-selling author has turned
to Yahoo Answers, a new feature in which anyone can pose a question for
fellow Internet users to try to answer. By Friday afternoon, nearly
17,000 Yahoo Inc. users had responded to Hawking.Hawking's
question: "In a world that is in chaos politically, socially and
environmentally, how can the human race sustain another 100 years?" Hawking's groundbreaking research on black holes and the origins of
the universe has made him one of the best-known theoretical physicists
of his generation. Author of the global best-seller "A Brief History of
Time," Hawking is known for proposing that space and time have no
beginning and no end. Lately, he has been pondering the fate of humans.In
a speech June 13 in Hong Kong, Hawking said the survival of the human
race depends on its ability to find new homes elsewhere in the universe
because there's an increasing risk that a disaster will destroy Earth. He
said that if humans can avoid killing themselves in the next 100 years,
they should have space settlements that can continue without support
from Earth. Hawking is one of 10 celebrity questioners Yahoo solicited as part of its "Ask The Planet" campaign. Over the next week, Yahoo employees are expected to work with
Hawking to sift through the answers and select one or several to
highlight as best responses. Yahoo Answers, like an offering from
Google Inc. and one planned by Microsoft Corp., is among the services
aimed at tapping the collective intelligence. It's based on the premise
that humans as a group can do a better job at finding information than
machines or a single person can. Anyone can ask or answer a
question, regardless of expertise, though Yahoo will eventually
implement a rating system meant to elevate users with better
reputations, based on their past questions and answers.
10:51:15 AM
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© Copyright 2006 John Giacobbe.
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