Posted By: gerrylWhat annoys me about the anti-vaccine group is that if our kids weren't vaccinated, the measles would be even more widespread. If their kid got as ill as kids used to before the vaccinations, I think they would reconsider. Blindness, and death were not unusual. There were many ghastly illnesses that have been almost eradicated because of the numerous vaccinations that have been developed.
Posted By: susan1014One of the local pediatricians wrote a compelling essay on this recently, I think in Motherhood (the free local magazine).
Posted By: metaphysicianwhy rush to give them one shortly after birth for a disease transmitted only by sex or IV drug use ? Doesn't make sense to me, and this comes from someone who participated in the original testing program for it.
Posted By: malphigianThey caught it from either another family member or someone else who comes in contact with the child. Because the disease can be transmitted by casual contact, and because many people who are infected with hepatitis B virus don't know that they have it, it is virtually impossible to be "careful enough" to avoid this infection.
Posted By: lurker
The identical twin studies show that autism is heavily determined by genes. Why then is it so much more prevalent? Well, that's the big question. Duplication of those genes in the course of reproduction is possible. I think we really don't know. I've always considered the MMR vaccine controversy to be an enormous distraction
Posted By: malphigianBumping this old thread because there's been some big recent news.
The only study to ever show any correlation between autism and the MMR vaccine was one published in 1998 by Dr. Andrew Wakefield.
It turns out Dr. Wakefieldmay have fixed his data. This is aside from the fact that the study was already weak since it was based on a sample size of12.
If this turns out to be true, I hope they figure out a way to put him in jail.
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Autism, measles vaccine link further debunked
New research coincides with a surge of the disease in unvaccinated children
The Associated Press
updated 8:00 p.m. ET, Wed., Sept. 3, 2008
WASHINGTON - New research further debunks any link between measles vaccine and autism, work that comes as the nation is experiencing a surge in measles cases fueled by children left unvaccinated.
Years of research with the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine, better known as MMR, have concluded that it doesnt cause autism. Still, some parents fears persist, in part because of one 1998 British study that linked the vaccine with a subgroup of autistic children who also have serious gastrointestinal problems. That study reported that measles virus was lingering in the childrens bowels.
Only now have researchers rigorously retested that finding, taking samples of youngsters intestines to hunt for signs of virus with the most modern genetic technology. There is no evidence that MMR plays any role, the international team which included researchers who first raised the issue reported Wednesday.
Although in fact there was evidence that this vaccine was safe in the bulk of the population, it had not been previously assessed with respect to kids with autism and GI complaints, said Dr. W. Ian Lipkin of Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, who led the work published in PLoS One, the online journal of the Public Library of Science.
We are confident there is no link between MMR and autism, Lipkin said.
Added co-author Dr. Larry Pickering of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention: I feel very certain that it is a safe vaccine.
Significant spike in U.S. measles cases
Measles, a highly infectious virus best known for its red skin rash, once routinely sickened thousands of children a year and killed hundreds, until childhood vaccinations made it a rarity in this country. But so far this year, the U.S. has counted 131 measles cases, the most in a decade. Most patients were unvaccinated. Some were infants too young for their first MMR shot, but nearly half involved children whose parents rejected vaccination, the CDC reported last month.
No one knows just how many autism patients also suffer gastrointestinal disorders, pain that they may not be able to communicate. But Lipkin said that by some estimates, up to a quarter may be affected.
The MMR fear was that the vaccines weakened measles virus somehow lodged in and inflamed intestines, allowing waste products to escape and reach the central nervous system, Lipkin said. So his team had two questions: Does measles virus really persist in children with both disorders and not other youngsters? And did vaccination precede the GI complaints which in turn preceded autism?
Researchers studied 25 children with both autism and GI disorders, and another 13 children with the same GI disorders but no neurologic problems. The youngsters the average age was 5 all were undergoing colonoscopies for their GI conditions anyway, allowing tissue samples to be tested for genetic traces of measles virus. All had been vaccinated at younger ages.
The tests uncovered traces of measles genetic material in the bowels of one boy with autism and one boy without autism. That doesnt prove virus never temporarily lodged in more children, but it contradicts the earlier study that raised concern.
Nor was there a relationship with vaccine timing: Just five of the 25 autistic children had MMR precede GI complaints that in turn preceded autism symptoms.
Researchers consulted some prominent vaccine critics in designing the study. California advocate Rick Rollens praised the work but said it didnt eliminate other vaccine concerns that deserve similar study. Meanwhile, he said it should draw much-needed attention to the suffering of patients like his son, who has both autism and GI disorders.
No longer can mainstream medicine ignore the parents claims of significant GI distress, he said.
© 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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