Vaccination and Autism
NATIONAL VACCINE INFORMATION CENTER, Vienna, Virginia http://www.nvic.org
"Protecting the health and informed consent rights of children
since 1982."
The vaccinated should have nothing to fear from the unvaccinated if
the vaccines are effective in preventing disease. If vaccines are not
as effective in preventing disease as the pharmaceutical companies and
health officials say they are, then individuals take two risks with
vaccination: the risk the vaccine can cause a reaction resulting in
permanent injury or death and the risk the vaccine won't work. And one-size-fits-all
vaccine policies, which do not factor in genetic differences in adverse
responses to vaccination, end up targeting the genetically vulnerable
for sacrifice. When the real life experience of many people with vaccination
contradicts the doctrine blindly followed by physicians in denial, the
public trust is the ultimate casualty.
http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/0809vaccineoptout-ON.html
Our comment: It is unfortunate that so much damage is done to our children
through ignorant "scientific" medical procedures that include
vaccinations and amalgam fillings. We are most fortunate to have found
the therapy developed by Dr. Vickery - it clears these conditions universally
in very short time.
Opt-out Law for Childhood Vaccines Worries Doctors
By Katherine Cromer, Fort Worth Star-Telegram
Pamela Crouse says her son was a social, smiling infant.
He walked at 9 1/2 months. At 18 months, he could tell his mommy, "I
love
you."
Then he was vaccinated. He received five shots covering nine diseases.
It was two years before his mother heard him speak those words again.
"I got a different baby out of it," said Crouse, of Garland, Texas.
"It was
almost like someone turned a light off."
Crouse's son was later diagnosed with autism, a condition she blames on the
vaccines.
Because of lobbying by Crouse and others, it is now easier for Texas parents
to opt out of compulsory vaccinations for their children. Only a few
thousand have done so, but some experts are worried that as more parents
learn about the 2-year-old law, the number could rise - increasing the
likelihood that some childhood diseases will make a comeback.
"It is a horrible law," said Dr. Jeff Rogers, a general pediatrician
in Fort
Worth. "Legal does not always mean right."
As parents prepare for the start of the new school year, the law allows them
to cite "reasons of conscience" or medical or religious objections
if they
don't want their children immunized.
Texas is one of 18 states that allows parents this choice, but most school
districts don't inform parents about the exemption, saying the vaccines
increase public health and safety.
Crouse has not had her son vaccinated since he was "injured," as
she puts
it.
After the shots, she said, he screamed throughout the night. He stopped
making eye contact. Early speech regressed to garbled sounds. He walked
rigidly on his toes and flapped his arms. He banged his head on floors and
walls.
Spurred by her conviction that the vaccines were the culprit, Crouse
continues to advocate more parental control over children's health care -
despite doctors' warnings.
Before 2003, parents could opt out of vaccinations only for medical or
religious reasons. Otherwise, children without the proper immunizations were
not allowed to attend school.
"Most parents that had vaccination concerns took a religious exemption
and
lied about their religion," said Dawn Richardson, who founded Austin-based
PROVE, or Parents Requesting Open Vaccine Education, in 1997.
That changed with House Bill 2292, which passed during the 2003 legislative
session. It was a mammoth health care bill with a childhood-immunization
amendment tacked on.
The original amendment, by Sen. Craig Estes, R-Wichita Falls, would have
allowed parents a conscientious objection if a sibling had already suffered
an adverse reaction. But in committee, the language about siblings was
removed, leaving a broader exemption.
The amendment was included largely because of lobbying by Richardson and
other members of PROVE.
"These are parents that had done a tremendous amount of research,"
Richardson said. "I want to dispel the myth that these people are lazy
or
irresponsible."
The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends that
children entering school receive nine vaccines, plus the hepatitis A vaccine
in certain areas. If the children are entering day care, there are three
additional vaccines. State health departments typically follow the CDC's
recommendations.
To opt out of vaccinations, parents must contact the Texas Department of
State Health Services for a request form, and the completed form must be
filed with the child's school. Schools do not have the forms.
Statewide, 3,873 students were exempted from Sept. 1, 2004, to mid-July
2005.
For most school districts, that means just a handful of children. Last year
in the Grapevine-Colleyville school district, for example, one kindergarten
student and two seventh-graders were exempted from vaccinations.
"The number of requests that we get has remained steady," said Julie
Townsend, an epidemiologist with the Texas Department of State Health
Services. "It's too early to tell what the full impact will be."
Townsend said she would be concerned if a large number of parents requested
exemptions, particularly in one geographical area. It might be five years
before statistics show the effect of the law, she said.
Many health professionals say they don't need to wait five years. They
already know what will happen, said Dr. Mark Shelton, medical director of
infectious diseases at Cook Children's Medical Center in Fort Worth.
"Anytime people stop vaccinating, those diseases come back," he
said.
In the United Kingdom in 1977, skepticism about the need for the vaccine for
pertussis, or whooping cough, led to a decrease in immunizations. In 1982,
47,508 cases of pertussis were reported, the highest in 25 years, according
to the CDC.
In Dublin, Ireland, in 2000, when the measles-vaccination rate dropped to
70
percent, there were 355 cases of measles, and three children died.
>From 1989 to 1991, about 55,000 cases of measles and 132 deaths were
reported in the United States. Most cases were in pockets of unvaccinated
preschool children in urban areas, the CDC reported.
"That has been the worldwide problem with stopping vaccines before the
disease has been eradicated," Shelton said. "These are not trivial
diseases.
Children died of whooping cough this year - in Texas."
Rogers, the pediatrician, testified against PROVE during the 2003
legislative session. He and about 40 other doctors from Cook Children's rode
a bus to Austin for the hearings.
He calls the country's vaccination schedule "the greatest scientific
leap of
the past 100 years."
And even though his own daughter was diagnosed with autism six years ago,
at
age 3, Rogers holds the shots harmless.
"My daughter didn't get autism," he said. "She was born with
it. The studies
show that there is no connection between autism and the vaccines."
Rogers' daughter has received all of her vaccinations. And no shot has
worsened her condition or reversed improvements she has made, he said.
Some children should not get vaccines. Parents of children who have
compromised immune systems or who have had reactions to vaccines should
consult a doctor before the child receives that vaccine again, doctors say.
But in a healthy child's body, Rogers said, the immune system is strong
enough to battle at one time 10,000 antigens - which are foreign substances,
such as bacteria. Four vaccines given simultaneously introduce about 300
antigens, far fewer than the number that would put a child at risk, he said.
He gives this information to parents who question the necessity of vaccines.
He tells them about potential risks and about his personal experience.
If a mother is adamantly against vaccinating her child, Rogers said, he will
tell her to find another doctor.
"If you refuse the vaccinations, you have taken our greatest weapon for
helping your child," he said. "Ethically, I cannot take care of that
child
when I am handicapped.
"If that child contracts measles, how do I hold that child's hand as
they
die and say I've done everything I can?"
In 16 years with Cook Children's, Rogers has told five parents to leave his
practice for that reason.
Shelton said parents should educate themselves about the vaccines. But they
should trust that the shots are thoroughly tested and relatively safe, he
said.
Vaccines are typically 85 percent to 90 percent effective, leaving even
vaccinated children at risk for the illness. Even though an unvaccinated
child may seem to be in more danger, children whose shots are current can
still carry diseases and pass them on.
"There are risks from vaccines," Shelton said. "But these are
terrible
diseases. Relative to the diseases, they're not the same kind of risks.
"I think the Texas law is pretty selfish," he said. "We have
study after
study that demonstrate that accusations of groups like PROVE are not true.
The FDA doesn't put vaccines out there just because. These products are
lifesaving."
Richardson and Crouse disagree.
When searching for a reason for her son's illness, Crouse "was trying
to
prove it was anything but vaccines," she said.
"I believed in the system," she said. "But the more I tried,
the more I
found proof to the contrary."
Richardson accuses the medical community of inadequate testing of vaccines
and inadequate research into the long-term effects of administering multiple
vaccines.
And despite the insistence that vaccines are safe - by the CDC, the National
Institute of Child Health and Human Development, and the Food and Drug
Administration - a growing number of parents believe that thimerosal, a
preservative used in vaccines that contains mercury, causes autism.
According to the CDC, except for some flu vaccines, no vaccines used on
preschool children contain thimerosal as a preservative.
"Children are exposed to multitudes of environmental toxins, vaccines
included," Richardson said. "For some kids, it's the shot that breaks
the
camel's back."
That's what Crouse believes happened to her son.
"Parents are trained to trust," Crouse said. "I should have
educated myself
on this more. If I knew then what I know now about vaccines, I wouldn't have
given a one - not one."
Richardson and Crouse continue to advocate parental choice. They oppose any
effort to mandate vaccinations, and they are dismayed that most school
districts tell parents at registration that vaccinations are required and
rarely volunteer information about the right to be a "conscientious
exemptor."
School districts are not required to notify parents of the exemption law.
The Hurst-Euless-Bedford school district discloses the information only if
parents ask, said Pam Hernalsteen, lead nurse for the district. Last year,
99.65 percent of the district's students were vaccinated. Fewer than 20 of
the almost 20,000 district students were exempted.
H-E-B uses a computer system to track immunizations. Letters and sometimes
phone calls are used monthly to remind parents of coming vaccinations.
In Arlington schools, nurses track vaccinations and send parents notice of
coming immunization clinics sponsored by the county health department.
The district, however, does not send home information about the exemption.
"I let them come to us," said Sandy Rivers, supervisor of health
services
for Arlington schools. "We don't try to keep it a ecret. But we feel like
immunizations are for the health and safety of the masses. The more people
that are immunized, the safer we all are."
Rivers added that if there is an outbreak of a vaccine-preventable disease
at school, the parents of the unvaccinated children are notified and the
children must stay at home until the danger has passed.
Whether parents decide to immunize their children or not, Crouse said, they
should not blindly trust their doctors.
"Parents these days will look more into options on buying a new car than
they will into vaccines they're giving a child," Crouse said. "More
and
more, we're losing rights to choose what type of health care our children
have." -How to opt out
Parents who want to exempt a child from required vaccinations must contact
the Texas Department of State Health Services to get a form.
A request must include each child's full name and date of birth; parent or
guardian's complete return mailing address; and the number of forms needed.
Written requests may be faxed to (512) 458-7544 or mailed or hand-delivered
to Immunization Branch, Texas Department of State Health Services, 1100 W.
49th St., Austin, TX 78756.
The vaccine exemption affidavit must be signed, notarized and submitted
to the child's school. - The federal Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention suggests that children receive the following vaccinations
by age 5: hepatitis B; diphtheria; tetanus; pertussis; haemophilus influenzae
type b; polio; measles; mumps; rubella; varicella (chickenpox); pneumococcal
conjugate; influenza; hepatitis A (in selected populations)
For more information see:
www.909shot.com
www.vaccineinfo.net
|