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Helen
Branswell for the Canadian Press
CP - When Dr. Noni MacDonald starts talking
about the debate over whether childhood vaccinations
cause autism, her words are steeped in anger.
She thinks the public ought to be angry, too.
The source of the emotion? The years of time,
effort and research funding that has been spent
disproving a piece of British research that last
week was repudiated by most of the team responsible
for it.
MacDonald and others have nothing but praise for
the scientists who
had the courage to formally declare their work
did not prove a link between
the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine (called
the MMR) and rising rates of
autism.
But she sure does begrudge the resources that
1998 article - and more
importantly, the interpretation placed on it by
lead author Dr. Andrew
Wakefield - diverted from other areas of autism
research.
"The amount of money that the academic research
community has
committed to proving that MMR and autism are not
related did not go towards
finding out how we can help autism - and that
money should have gone there," says MacDonald,
a professor of pediatrics and microbiology at
Dalhousie University in Halifax.
"It hijacked the agenda for people that had
a particular axe to
grind. They didn't have good science behind them
and yet, they were given the credibility as if
they did. And that, then, distracted people from
research
that needed to get done with those dollars."
Leading autism researcher Jeanette Holden agrees
Wakefield's
publication has had a huge impact on the field
- one that persists despite
the retraction.
"A lot has gone into this," says Holden,
a geneticist at Queen's
University in Kingston, Ont., and head of a Canadian
Institutes of Health
Research-funded project involving 60 researchers
across Canada and the
United States.
Posing questions, challenging dogma - this is
the essence of
research.
And critics of Wakefield's actions are quick to
insist they would never want
to stifle that kind of activity.
"You want challenges all the time. You want
to rethink. Nothing is
sacred. But you need to do this with a good, firm
foundation," MacDonald
says.
But bad science can skew the agenda, forcing others
to move in to mop
up the mess, soaking up scarce resources in the
process.
"Should that be up to other scientists to
have to prove a point when
someone is going around claiming something? Well,
in actual fact, no, it
shouldn't be up to us. It should be the people
who have the hypotheses,"
says Holden.
Still, in the highly politicized world of academic
research, it can
also lead advocacy groups - a major source of
research funding - down a side
road, tempting those who need access to the funds
to take the detour with
them.
What happened with the MMR debate has happened
before. MacDonald
notes that in the late 1980s, a theory emerged
that the combined diphtheria,
polio and tetanus shot might play a role in sudden
infant death syndrome.
The idea was eventually proved groundless. Later
research showed
having babies sleep on their backs dramatically
reduced SIDS deaths.
"We spent a lot of money showing that it
wasn't (linked), instead of
trying to figure out how to stop and decrease
sudden infant death syndrome,"
says MacDonald, who is also co-editor of Pediatrics
and Child Health, the
journal of the Canadian Pediatrics Society.
"I think we would have got to the back-to-sleep
thing probably five,
10 years earlier here if we hadn't got distracted
by this. And I don't know
how many lives we would have saved."
But while MacDonald sees these pursuits as expensive
dead ends, some
in the autism community don't share her vision.
Lisa Simmermon doesn't believe the retraction
of the Wakefield study,
or the rigorous trials that disproved the claim,
represent the final answer
on the issue.
Rather than resenting lost research resources,
Simmerman - president
of Autism Society Canada - insists more money
ought to be spent looking into
the alleged link between the MMR shot and autism.
The society doesn't believe vaccinations caused
autism in all
children who have the condition, Simmermon says.
But it doesn't rule out the
possibility that in a small proportion of vulnerable
children, getting the
vaccination may tip the balance.
"The bottom line is there are issues that
have been raised and they
affect people's decision-making about their own
children," Simmermon
insists.
"For the sake of everybody, we need to try
to find out what the real
answers are. That's not a waste of resources."
© Copyright 2004 The Canadian Press
Dr Wakefield: His Side of The Story
Many of you will know that Dr Andrew Wakefield,
who pioneered
research into a link between autism and the MMR
vaccine, was strongly
attacked in the London Sunday Times the other
week, as reported in the
previous E-News. In particular he was criticised
for receiving funds from a
legal aid charity that was representing parents
of children who were
possibly injured by the vaccine. His statement
follows in full. Please
circulate it as widely as you can.
"Serious allegations have been made against
me and my colleagues in
relation to the provision of clinical care for
children with autism and
bowel disease, and the subsequent reporting of
their disease. These
allegations have been made by journalist Brian
Deer who has expressed, in
front of witnesses, his aim of destroying me.
All but one of the allegations, which are grossly
defamatory, have
been shown to be baseless. One allegation remains
against me personally.
That is, that I did not disclose to the Lancet
that a minority of the 12
children in the 1998 Lancet report were also part
of a quite separate study
that was funded in part by the Legal Aid Board.
It is the Lancet's opinion but not mine that such
a disclosure should
have been made since it may have been perceived
as a conflict of interest.
This is despite that fact that the funding was
provided for a separate
scientific study.
It needs to be made clear that the funds from
the Legal Aid Board
were not used for the 1998 Lancet study, and therefore
I perceived that no
financial conflict of interest existed.
The Lancet defines a conflict of interest as anything
that might
embarrass the author if it were to be revealed
later. I am not embarrassed
since it is a matter of fact that there was no
conflict of interest. I am,
however, dismayed at the way these facts have
been misrepresented.
Whether or not the children's parents were pursuing,
or intended to
pursue litigation against the vaccine manufacturers,
had no bearing on any
clinical decision in relation to these children,
or their inclusion in the
Lancet 1998 report.
It is a matter of fact that there was no conflict
of interest at any
time in relation to the medical referral of these
children, their clinical
investigation and care, and the subsequent reporting
of their disease in the
Lancet.
As far as the 1998 Lancet report is concerned,
it is a matter of fact
that we found and reported inflammation in the
intestines of these children.
The grant of £55,000 was paid not me but
to the Royal Free Hospital
Special Trustees for my research group to conduct
studies on behalf of the
Legal Aid Board. These research funds were properly
administered through
the Royal Free Hospital Special Trustees.
The Legal Aid research grant to my group was used
exclusively for the
purpose of conducting an examination of any possible
connection between the component viruses of the
MMR - particularly measles virus - and the bowel
disease in these children. This is entirely in
line with other studies that
have been funded by the Legal Aid Board (latterly
the Legal Services
Commission) and reported in the BMJ. If and when
this work is finally
published, due acknowledgement will be made of
all sources of funding.
It is unfortunate that, following full disclosure
of these facts to the editor of the Lancet, he
stated that in retrospect he would not have published
facts pertinent to the parent's perceived association
with MMR vaccine in the 1998 Lancet report. Such
a position has major implications or the scientific
investigation of injuries that might be caused
by drugs or vaccines, such as Gulf War Syndrome
and autism, where possible victims may be seeking
medical help and also legal redress.
Health Secretary John Reid has called for a public
enquiry. I welcome this since I have already called
for a public enquiry that addresses the whole
issue in relation vaccines and autism.
It has been proposed that my role in this matter
should be
investigated by the General Medical Council (GMC).
I not only welcome this,
I insist on it and I will be making contact with
the GMC personally, in the
forthcoming week.
This whole unpleasant episode has been conflated
to provide those
opposed to addressing genuine concerns about vaccine
safety with an
opportunity of attacking me - an attack that is
out of all proportion to the
facts of the matter.
I stand by everything that I have done in relation
to the care,
investigation and reporting of the disease that
I and my colleagues have
discovered in these desperately ill children.
My family and I have suffered many setbacks as
a direct consequence
of this work. As a family, we consider that our
problems are nothing
compared with the suffering of these children
and their families. For the
sake of these children, this work will continue."
E-Mail zwack.peter@uqam.ca
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