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    Festival Of Idiots #3 - Andrew Wakefield, Vaccines And Autism
    By Josh Witten | February 10th 2009 11:13 PM | 6 comments | Print | E-mail | Track Comments
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    ANDREW WAKEFIELD
    Thanks to recent events, there was only one choice for this week's idiot: Andrew Wakefield.

    Wakefield burst on to the scene in 1998 with a paper in The Lancet (since disavowed by all the other authors and the journal) linking the MMR vaccine with autism and irritable bowel syndrome. The only problems with his results were that no one else could independently replicate them, he was paid by a lawyer looking to sue for "vaccine-induced autism" (11 of 12 cases in the original study were litigants against drug companies), and he was trying to patent a new, "safer" MMR vaccine. Accordingly, Wakefield was slapped around by the General Medical Andrew Wakefield (The Sunday Times)Council for scientific misconduct, including unnecessary invasive medical procedures on young children, leading to the hospitalization of two children.

    In the past week, investigative reporter Brian Deer has presented evidence not only of conflicts of interest, but that Wakefield faked his results.

    The sins of anti-vaccination are many:







    • MMR vaccination rate down to 75% (from 93%) below herd immunity levels







    • 1348 measles cases in the UK in 2008 (up from 56 in 1998)







    • 11 measles cases in Victoria, Australia so far in 2009 (more than 2006&2007 combined)







    • 22 measles cases in Switzerland so far in 2009







    • Death of a 12 year old in Geneva from measles-induced encephalitis







    • Death of an unvaccinated 7 month old infant in Minnesota from Haemophilus influenzae type b







    • and many more. . .















    Wakefield styles himself as an intellectual martyr, a Galileo if you will. I hear that Galileo was a bit of an ass, but heliocentrism doesn't have a body count in small children.

    Comments

    Becky Jungbauer
    Damn, you stole my thunder. I was going to write about this idiot. Then again, experts in the field are idiots for having believed this guy in the first place.
    Hank
    There are a lot of scared parents out there so I sympathize with the search for answers ... so in that sense I am glad and sad; glad because we want charlatans to stop scaring people without cause and somewhat sad because that means the mystery of autism is even more daunting than before and there is no easy answer/scapegoat.
    Jim Myres

    Josh - I wish every news cast would shout this from every media outlet.  I have a son who has autism - I would love to blame someone or something - but shit happens.   Those of us with special needs kids do grasp-at-straws but this is one that should be avoided - those parents that blame vaccines for causing autism are putting other children at risk by raising the fear level in parents.  

    Thanks

    Jim Myres 

    jtwitten
    Jim - I trust that you have seen that US Courts have ruled that vaccines do not cause autism in three cases, which is a fantastic, and scientifically accurate, precedent to set. 

    My own passion for this subject comes from two directions.  When I was younger, I occasionally babysat for the autistic child of two dedicated parents.  Not only does this misinformation make it harder for parents to decide on how to help their child, it also creates the potential for guilt by saying that the condition is the result of something they allowed to happen.  Second, my own family was hit hard by polio in my father's generation.  Unlike many people of my generation, I have lived with the an understanding of how important vaccinations really are to our quality of life.

    I wish you and your son all the best.
    To be fair, I was misled by the name of the blog. When I saw “science" and "blogging” I was hoping to see some original and creative critical thought applied to the topic of autism. Instead, it is just a bunch of pretend scientists repeating tired old stereotypes and prejudices. I could get that from my family.

    Some scientists now believe that the wide genetic diversity of autism has similar roots in organic-phosphate-based DNA damage, most likely during the 1960s. You would think someone would discuss this finding, rather than continuing to reinterpret the questionable results of a CDC study from 2001.

    Some scientists now believe that the similar symptoms seen in divergent types of autism are related to the way the brain treats a very limited set of proteins during a very limited set of developmental stages. This is a bombshell finding that has implications not only for treating autism, but for some completely unrelated disorders such as borderline personality disorder.

    Instead, I am subjected to irrelevant diatribes abut Jenny McCarthy and Jim Carey, and manifestos that declare me a bad parent because my son only got two mumps vaccines instead of three. I wish I could express to you how much you are hurting your own cause with your ill-informed insults. You remind me of door-to-door preachers trying to save my soul who turn out to know less about the Bible than I do.

    In both cases: Your faith that I am wrong does not convince me.

    Wakefield claimed a link to Inflammatory Bowel disease not Irritable Bowel syndrome.

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