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By
Lidia Wasowicz for UPI
The continuing debate over whether vaccines
play a role in neurodevelopmental disorders is
more than academic, with children's health and
industry wealth hanging in the balance.
If the thimerosal theory -- which holds the mercury-based
compound once widely used in childhood vaccines
responsible for at least some cases of autism
and other problems -- starts to gain traction
in court, and vaccine makers and government agencies
are found liable for neurological damage to infants,
the cost to the $6 billion-a-year industry could
rival that of tobacco or asbestos litigation,
some analysts believe.
An estimated 40 million American children were
immunized in the 1990s, and, if current projections
hold true, roughly 240,000 might get an autism
diagnosis.
Thus far, more than 5,000 claims of thimerosal-related
harm to children have been filed by parents in
a special federal tribunal under the no-fault
National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program.
The plan was created by the government in 1988
to prevent drug companies from fleeing the market,
and endangering the immunization program, due
to climbing liability costs.
That figure compares to 2,438 reports submitted
in 2003 and 18 in 2001.
Since its inception, the program has paid more
than $1.5 billion on about 1,900 complaints.
Several hundred similar claims were brought against
vaccine makers, and others await trial in civil
courts, although no plaintiffs' awards have been
forthcoming thus far, said Charles Siegel, partner
in Waters and Kraus in Dallas, the first U.S.
law firm to file such a suit.
By now, the mercury-laced preservative has been
phased out of vaccines administered in the United
States to youngsters under 7. However, it still
resides in certain booster -- notably tetanus
and diphtheria -- and about half of flu shots.
The latter are advised for pregnant women and
babies as young as six months under new, broadened
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines,
which stress the amount of mercury present falls
well within levels the federal government considers
safe.
The agency has declined to recommend that doctors
select thimerosal-free shots for mothers-to-be
and babies.
The only supplier for children younger than 2
-- Sanofi Pasteur -- has increased its capacity
to make vaccines devoid of mercury, but because
the government has expressed no preference, some
of the capacity has gone unused, thimerosal opponents
point out.
Largely at parents' goading to follow the lead
of Japan and Europe, at least seven states --
California, New York, Illinois, Iowa, Missouri,
Delaware and Washington -- have banned thimerosal
from infant vaccines.
At least a dozen others have pending legislation
to do so.
To critics' amazement and annoyance, pediatricians
have vigorously protested such moves, viewing
them as unnecessary, misguided, misleading and
potentially dangerous if they frighten parents
into refusing to immunize their children against
diseases that once decimated young populations.
As these developments would suggest, rather than
assuage apprehensions, the government's call in
1999 for removing thimerosal from childhood shots
divvied up extra doses of doubt.
If the compound was so blameless, why would the
government request and the pharmaceutical companies
acquiesce to its banishment, albeit a partial
one, critics asked.
And why, as the vaccine schedule expanded, did
no one total up the new amounts of mercury children
would receive as a result, an exercise in simple
arithmetic that could have precluded the overdose
the 1999 report unearthed, they wondered.
Their fears were fueled by such disquieting reports
as an analysis of scientific literature on mercury
toxicity led by Sallie Bernard, executive director
of the parent-founded, thimerosal-opposing group
SafeMinds (Sensible Action for Ending Mercury-Induced
Neurological Disorders).
She and colleagues drew an alarming parallel of
more than 100 characteristics and symptoms shared
by autism and mercury poisoning.
Could it be that a toddler's social withdrawal,
loss of speech, averted eye contact, insomnia,
immune system upheavals, temper tantrums, seizures,
unusual attachment to objects and routines and
inexplicable repetitive behaviors, such as walking
on tiptoes or flapping of hands, in fact resulted
from the very strategies intended to protect him
from harm, many parents and some physicians began
to inquire.
Instead of wallowing in worry, thimerosal doubters
set out to demand further analysis and action.
They made full use of the newfound tools of the
Digital Age.
With instant worldwide communication at every
computer user's fingertips, the messages of misgiving
have spread speedily and widely.
They include diverse lists of suspects, from food
allergies, pesticides and heavy metals to viral
infections, antibiotics and other prescription
drugs and, most emphatically, vaccines.
The vast majority of professionals -- including
a veritable who's who of geneticists, epidemiologists,
pediatricians, toxicologists, neuroscientists
and statisticians -- and even many parents with
autistic children find no scientific support for
a causal link between vaccines and autism.
They have no doubt vaccines' potentially life-saving
benefits outweigh any possible risks and warn
of the danger of turning away from one of medicine's
modern-day marvels.
Even in developed countries, when vaccine scares
drive down the numbers of immunized children,
once-silenced diseases roar back to life.
In Great Britain, for example, in the wake of
the study implicating the MMR shot in autism,
children's inoculation rates fell from 92 percent
in
1995-1996 to 82 percent in 2002-2003, resulting
in a measles outbreak.
Likewise, a drop in vaccination against whooping
cough in 1974 was followed by an epidemic of more
than 100,000 cases and 36 deaths in 1978.
In Japan, a plunge in whooping-cough vaccinations
from 70 percent to 20-to-40 percent resulted in
a leap from 393 cases and no deaths in 1974 to
13,000 cases and 41 deaths in 1979.
When two infants died in 1975 after receiving
the pertussis shot, public fear soared, and the
rates of Japanese children getting the inoculation
sank to 40 percent. The following year the deadly
disease went on a three-year rampage that killed
more than 100 people and sickened 13,000 others.
U.S. health officials also express alarm over
a raft of what they deem to be unproven, costly
and potentially harmful treatments -- including
strict diets, supplements and an increasingly
popular heavy-metal-detoxifying technique called
chelation -- that are being sold for thousands
of dollars as a cure for mercury poisoning.
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