Dr. Andrew Wakefield Busted By Disciplinary Panel.

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Big Orange
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Dr. Andrew Wakefield Busted By Disciplinary Panel.

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Dr. Andrew Wakefield, a man who bended the truth about the link between the MMR jab and autism, has been caught out for medical malpractice:
MMR row doctor 'abused position of trust'
Thursday, 28 January 2010

The doctor who sparked the MMR controversy "showed a callous disregard" for the suffering of children and "abused his position of trust", a disciplinary panel ruled today. Dr Andrew Wakefield's conduct brought the medical profession "into disrepute" after he took blood samples from youngsters at his son's birthday party in return for payments of £5. The doctor, who was absent from today's General Medical Council (GMC) hearing, faces being struck off the medical register.

The panel decided the allegations against him could amount to serious professional misconduct, which will be decided at a later date. Panel chairman Dr Surendra Kumar was heckled by distraught parents who support Dr Wakefield as he delivered the verdicts. One woman shouted: "These doctors have not failed our children. You are outrageous." She called the panel of experts "b*******" and accused the GMC of being a "kangaroo court". Another shouted: "This is a set-up." The GMC also found today that Dr Wakefield "failed in his duties as a responsible consultant" and went against the interests of children in his care in conducting research. He further acted dishonestly and was misleading and irresponsible in the way he described a study which was later published in The Lancet medical journal, the GMC said. In the late 1990s, Dr Wakefield and two other doctors said they believed they had uncovered a link between the MMR jab, bowel disease and autism. The research sparked a massive drop in the number of children given the triple jab for measles, mumps and rubella.

The hearing has sat for 148 days over a two-and-a-half year period. A total of 36 witnesses gave evidence at the hearing, which has reportedly cost more than £1 million. A defiant Dr Wakefield said he was dismayed at the panel's decision. He told reporters: "I am extremely disappointed by the outcome of today's proceedings. "The allegations against me and against my colleagues are both unfounded and unjust - I repeated unfounded and unjust - and I invite anyone to examine the contents of these proceedings and come to their own conclusion." He said on a personal note he was "dismayed" that two of his colleagues had been "dragged through this process". He went on: "It remains for me to thank the parents whose commitment and loyalty has been extraordinary.

"I want to reassure them that science will continue in earnest." He also thanked his family, supporters and legal team for their "enormous help". Dr Wakefield was not at the hearing as the panel's decision was announced. But later he emerged from the central London GMC offices to make the statement, surrounded by supporters who waved placards and chanted: "For he's a jolly good fellow." The GMC said the doctor took blood samples from youngsters at his son's birthday party in the late 1990s and then laughed about it during a US presentation in March 1999.

Dr Kumar said of Dr Wakefield's case: "Despite your explanation that you did not consider it unethical to obtain blood in this way, the panel found that it was unethical and that you did not have ethical approval for such an undertaking. "It also found that you caused blood to be taken in an inappropriate social setting and you showed a callous disregard for the distress and pain you knew or ought to have known the children involved might suffer. "You abused your position of trust as a medical practitioner." Dr Kumar said Dr Wakefield's conduct at the US seminar "was such as to bring the medical profession into disrepute". The panel said his conduct was unethical and that Dr Wakefield did not have ethical approval. Dr Wakefield was an honorary consultant in experimental gastroenterology at the Royal Free Hospital in London at the time of his research. He and two colleagues involved in the research, professors John Walker-Smith and Simon Murch, who are also being investigated by the GMC, deny all the charges against them.

The panel also ruled today that Dr Wakefield submitted an application for funding from the Legal Aid Board but failed to disclose that some of the costs would have been met by the NHS anyway. A charity which supports MMR warned there could be a new outbreak of rubella if uptake of the vaccine falls. The disease can cause babies to be born deaf and blind if their mothers are exposed to it during pregnancy. Joff McGill, information and research director for Sense, the national deaf-blind and rubella association, said: "This story is about more than Dr Wakefield, but the millions of children who have not been vaccinated since his theories first emerged. "We need to get the message to all parents that to protect your children and others against rubella it is critical we stop the disease circulating.

"The only way to do this is by ensuring we have a comprehensive MMR vaccination programme for all children. "The MMR vaccination remains the best and safest way to ensure we protect our children from the possible effects of these terrible diseases." In respect of children involved in The Lancet research, Dr Wakefield, whose contract prevented him from carrying out clinical research on youngsters, was found not to have acted in their best clinical interests. He ordered some youngsters to undergo unnecessary colonoscopies, barium meals, blood and urine tests and brain scans.

Some of the tests were carried out by Profs Walker-Smith and Murch. The GMC said the children did not meet the criteria for inclusion in the research and that the doctors did not have ethical approval to investigate them. The GMC panel said Dr Wakefield's actions in relation to the Legal Aid money were "dishonest" and that he knew that some or most of the funds would not be used for the reasons he had set out. However, it said he did not use the money for his personal gain and it was spent on research. The GMC also said Dr Wakefield's conduct in relation to how The Lancet research was presented was dishonest and irresponsible. Dr Wakefield and Profs Walker-Smith and Murch will now be the subject of further investigation. The panel found that the conduct of all three was sufficient to lead to a possible guilty verdict of serious professional misconduct. A decision on that aspect, and any sanctions, is not expected for a matter of months.
The Independent (BBC clip included)

Also here's an essay on the sordid affair here; the crooked fuck received handsome bribes from a team of lawyers (allegedly representing a rival company) and because him dirtying the water around MMR, the cases of serious illness amongst infants and young children has shot up (blood on his hands).
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Re: Dr. Andrew Wakefield Busted By Disciplinary Panel.

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I just love how the anti-vaxers and the autism quackery groups all love Wakefield and will continue to despite this ruling. It makes me chuckle how they are so quite to scream "EVIL PHARMA!" and accuse any study found to discredit their cause as having all these biases. What would they say to a doctor with such a ruling against him participating in vaccine research? yet they celebrate anything coming out of Wakefield or Thoughtful House (where he now works in the USA)
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Re: Dr. Andrew Wakefield Busted By Disciplinary Panel.

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Unfortunately this will just convince the anti-vaccers that Big Pharma is out to suppress Wakefield for blowing the whistle. I recently read that MMR vaccination rates have been recovering from his bogus study in the UK for sometime, though. Hopefully this little movement he started is on the way out.
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Re: Dr. Andrew Wakefield Busted By Disciplinary Panel.

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This calls for drinks.

Where's that old-style pepsi with the real sugar..
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Re: Dr. Andrew Wakefield Busted By Disciplinary Panel.

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And, to mark the event...

A measles outbreak on Long Island, imported by international travel to Ireland:

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,584144,00.html
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Re: Dr. Andrew Wakefield Busted By Disciplinary Panel.

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To top this all off -- the Lancet has retracted the article:
Source
(CNN) -- The medical journal The Lancet on Tuesday retracted a controversial 1998 paper that linked the measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccine to autism.

The 12-year-old study linked autism with the MMR vaccine. The research subsequently had been discredited.

Last week, the study's lead author, Dr. Andrew Wakefield, was found to have acted unethically in conducting the research.

The General Medical Council, which oversees doctors in Britain, said that "there was a biased selection of patients in The Lancet paper" and that his "conduct in this regard was dishonest and irresponsible."

The panel found that Wakefield subjected some children in the study to various invasive medical procedures such as colonoscopies and MRI scans. He also paid children for blood samples for research purposes at his son's birthday party, an act that "showed a callous disregard" for the "distress and pain" of the children, the panel said.

Following the council's findings last week, The Lancet retracted the study and released this statement.

"It has become clear that several elements of the 1998 paper by Wakefield et al. are incorrect, contrary to the findings of an earlier investigation. In particular, the claims in the original paper that children were 'consecutively referred' and that investigations were 'approved' by the local ethics committee have been proven to be false. Therefore we fully retract this paper from the published record."

Has autism touched your life? Share your stories, thoughts on vaccination study
Dr. Andrew Wakefield was found to have acted unethically in conducting autism research.
Dr. Andrew Wakefield was found to have acted unethically in conducting autism research.

Since its publication, Wakefield's study has attracted many critics, who argued that the work had been so flawed it should not be regarded as scientific.

Wakefield theorized that the measles vaccine caused gastrointestinal problems, and that those GI problems led to autism. In his view, the virus used in the vaccine grew in the intestinal tract, leading the bowel to become porous because of inflammation. Then material seeped from the bowel into the blood, Wakefield's theory said, affecting the nervous system and causing autism.

But later research discredited this theory.

A September 2008 study replicated key parts of Wakefield's original paper and found no evidence that the vaccine had a connection to either autism or GI disorders. The study, conducted at Columbia University, Massachusetts General Hospital and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, also found no relationship between the timing of the vaccine and children getting GI disorders or autism.

The Wakefield study also became part of the evidence that parents cited who did not vaccinate their children.

"The story became credible because it was published in The Lancet," Alison Singer, president of the Autism Science Foundation, said Tuesday. "It was in The Lancet, and we really rely on these medical journals."

Singer, the mother of a child with autism, added, "That study did a lot of harm. People became afraid of vaccinations -- this is the Wakefield legacy -- this unscientifically grounded fear of vaccinations that result in children dying from vaccine preventable diseases."

Retractions are rare in medical journals and usually occur as a result of fraud or plagiarism, said Marcia Angell, a former editor of The New England Journal of Medicine.

"It is a major event when there is a retraction like this," she said. "It sounds like there was a misleading design of the study ... patients not randomly chosen. There were ethical violations."
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Re: Dr. Andrew Wakefield Busted By Disciplinary Panel.

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SirNitram wrote:This calls for drinks.

Where's that old-style pepsi with the real sugar..
Go to Canada. Over there it is just regular Pepsi with the same packaging here. :)
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Re: Dr. Andrew Wakefield Busted By Disciplinary Panel.

Post by open_sketchbook »

I wrote my English essay last semester on this guy. Good to see him getting his comeuppance.
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