Autism: Why the Debate Rages
By Sharyl Attkisson, the
Capitol Hill Correspondent for CBS News.
Why is anyone even still debating the possibility of a
link between vaccines and autism? After all, for years, many government health officials,
advisors and vaccine manufacturers have said there's no association.
Here are a number of reasons why the question remains
open: For this article, I will open up a topic for discussion; Denise and Cooper
will provide the answers/opinions provided by Sharyl Attkisson, CBS News - Capitol
Hill Correspondent.
While government scientists,
advisors and pharmaceutical companies have been responsible for infinite lifesaving
and life improving medical advances, they are not infallible.
It's the same group that originally
thought it was safe to use x-ray machines in shoe stores, gave pregnant women Thalidomide
for morning sickness and once allowed mercury in medicines. They assured us Vioxx
and Duract were safe painkillers, prescribed Rezulin for diabetics and then denied
any of them were responsible for patient deaths. If we never questioned that group,
we might not have discovered that Fen-phen and the dietary supplement Ephedra are
not safe weight loss products that antidepressants in kids can lead to suicide and
Viagra can cause blindness. The list goes on.
When it comes to vaccines, the same group failed to predict that the 1990's rotavirus
(diarrhea) vaccine would have to be pulled from the market after infant deaths.
They encouraged use of the oral polio vaccine (eventually discontinued after it
gave too many children polio). And they allowed the use of a mercury neurotoxin
preservative in childhood vaccines, only to admit later that they hadn't thought
to calculate the cumulative amount kids were getting as more and more vaccines were
added to the childhood immunization schedule.
Recent history demonstrates that too often, government health officials, mainstream
doctors and pharmaceutical companies aren't on the leading edge of alerting us to
health risks; they're bringing up the rear. Patients feel left to fend for themselves,
seeking independent research and opinions on their own. They and their dogged, relentless
determination have often been the catalyst that eventually brings medical dangers
to the forefront.
Government scientists, advisors and vaccine manufacturers often take an all-or-nothing
approach to vaccinations.
Government officials and infectious
disease experts I've spoken with are fearful that if vaccine side effects are better
publicized, or if a link between vaccines and autism and ADD were made, the public
would overreact and lose faith in the entire vaccination program. The result, they're
afraid, would be parents refusing to give their children any vaccines, leading to
new, deadly epidemics of preventable diseases. That indeed would be a disaster.
However, their fears have resulted in something I call an all-or-nothing approach:
they tend to promote nearly all vaccines for nearly all children as equally necessary
and equally safe. Yet at the same time, if asked, they agree not all vaccines are
equally safe, equally beneficial, equally necessary and equally tolerated by each
individual child.
Through the Internet and other resources, parents are now able to find research
on vaccines and read it for themselves. They compare the government's all-or-nothing
approach to the research and become skeptical that the government is presenting
the whole picture on vaccine safety generally.
Government officials and
mainstream scientists who dispel any vaccine/autism/ADD link have ties to vaccine
makers.
There's so much overlap among
pharmaceutical companies, government scientists and advisors that the information
they provide at least has the appearance of a conflict of interest. Government scientists
and advisors often do not mention their connections to the vaccine industry when
they provide opinions on the vaccine/autism/ADD issue.
One of the best examples of this is the landmark autism/vaccine study published
in Pediatrics. Early in his study, the lead author, CDC's Dr. Thomas Verstraeten,
found statistically significant associations between the amount of mercury (thimerosal)
exposure kids got from their childhood vaccines, and a wide range of brain disorders.
However, the published version of the study (the one the authors say is accurate)
found no evidence of a link to autism. Not disclosed was that Dr. Verstraeten had
left CDC midstream during the study and had gone to work for Glaxo, a vaccine manufacturer.
That failure to disclose was criticized in a later publication of Pediatrics, but
it got little mainstream attention. Also getting little attention was a letter from
well-respected scientists, also in Pediatrics, who echoed what parents of autistic
children had been saying for months: they questioned the use and exclusion of certain
data from Dr. Verstraeten's study that eventually reduced the statistical ties between
vaccines and neuro-disorders.
University and government researchers and advisors often do research for vaccine
companies, help develop vaccines (even profit from them), and/or are paid to consult
for them. Often, these researchers do not disclose their industry ties when they
publicly dispel the notion of a link between autism or ADD and vaccines.
Lastly, the CDC is inextricably tied to vaccine makers through contracts and other
business and financial relationships that open the door for the possibility of conflicts.
Non-profits entities that
dispel any vaccine/autism/ADD link have ties to vaccine makers.
Non-profits that promote vaccinations
have ties to vaccine makers that they often do not disclose when giving their opinions
on vaccine safety. One example is "Every Child By Two." This group contacted CBS
News several years ago in an unsuccessful attempt to prevent one of our stories
about the vaccine safety from airing. In forms filed for the IRS, the non-profit
lists an official from vaccine maker Wyeth Pharmaceuticals as its Treasurer. It
lists vaccine maker Chiron as a paid client.
Another example of a non-profit tied to the industry is "The Vaccine Fund." Its
President from 2000-2005 was Jacques-Francois Martin, formerly CEO of vaccine maker
Sanofi-Pasteur, CEO of vaccine maker Chiron, and President of the International
Federation of the Pharmaceutical Manufacturers' Association. While at The Vaccine
Fund, his salary was paid by a company that says it "has developed particular strength
in the vaccine industry and vaccine development."
The dual role of the CDC
undermines the appearance of fairness.
There is a perceived, if not
real, conflict of interest with the government's Centers for Disease Control (CDC)
heavily promoting vaccines, but also responsible for monitoring adverse events.
At least two respected medical journals, the "American Journal of Public Health"
and "Pediatrics" have published letters or articles recommending "greater independence
in vaccine safety assessments" apart from "the highly successful program to promote
immunizations." In short, the CDC's bread and butter is achieving high vaccination
rates. But that role is in conflict with the agency's responsibility to fully research
and disclose adverse events that could, in theory, bring down vaccination rates.
There is no definitive
research proving a link between vaccines and autism or ADD, but there is also no
definitive research ruling it out.
Something rarely reported
is that while there's no definitive study linking vaccines to autism or ADD, there
is also no study definitively disproving a link. And there's a substantial body
of peer-reviewed, published science from places like Columbia, Yale and Northeastern
suggesting a link, or pointing to the need for further study.
Many credible voices deny a link. But many other credible voices support the idea
of a link. One example of the latter is George Wayne Lucier, formerly a senior official
at the National Institutes of Health in Environmental Toxicology, an NIH advisor,
member of the National Academy of Sciences Committee on Toxicity Testing and a scientific
advisor for EPA who concludes "...it is highly probably that use of thimerosal as
a preservative has caused developmental disorders, including autism, in some children."
A lengthy Congressional investigation also concluded that the autism epidemic is
likely linked to vaccinations.
Those who say autism and
ADD are not linked to vaccines do not know what is causing the epidemics.
The most frightening part
of the autism/ADD epidemics is that if, indeed, they're unrelated to vaccinations,
that our best, brightest public health experts still have no idea what is causing
it. Excluding ADD, one out of every 150 American children are now being diagnosed
with autism.
Vaccinations have provided lifesaving miracles in public health. However, it's undisputed
that they are also responsible for many serious adverse events including brain disorders
and, rarely, deaths. Trying to maximize the potential benefits of vaccines and minimize
the harm shouldn't be seen as a threat to the nation's inoculation program, it's
merely a logical step forward.
One scientist who testified for the plaintiff this week in The Vaccine Court said
there's a way to test children for a hidden hole in their immune make-up that makes
them susceptible to bad immune reactions from vaccinations. He said that, ideally,
every child should undergo such a test before its first vaccinations. But he also
said the test is very expensive and so "not worth it." Many parents might disagree.
If they knew such a test was available, they'd find a way to pay for it. But such
information has to be disseminated to the public before a first step can even be
considered.
Mainstream medicine initially said that mothers who weren’t affectionate enough
with their children caused autism. If that doesn't teach us that we should always
seek further knowledge and not necessarily accept what's spoon-fed to us by certain
experts...then nothing will.