Study linking autism and vaccination an "elaborate fraud"

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Study linking autism and vaccination an "elaborate fraud"

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In a development which should shock no one...
Retracted autism study an 'elaborate fraud,' British journal finds
By the CNN Wire Staff
January 5, 2011 8:14 p.m. EST

(CNN) -- A now-retracted British study that linked autism to childhood vaccines was an "elaborate fraud" that has done long-lasting damage to public health, a leading medical publication reported Wednesday.

An investigation published by the British medical journal BMJ concludes the study's author, Dr. Andrew Wakefield, misrepresented or altered the medical histories of all 12 of the patients whose cases formed the basis of the 1998 study -- and that there was "no doubt" Wakefield was responsible.

"It's one thing to have a bad study, a study full of error, and for the authors then to admit that they made errors," Fiona Godlee, BMJ's editor-in-chief, told CNN. "But in this case, we have a very different picture of what seems to be a deliberate attempt to create an impression that there was a link by falsifying the data."

Britain stripped Wakefield of his medical license in May. "Meanwhile, the damage to public health continues, fueled by unbalanced media reporting and an ineffective response from government, researchers, journals and the medical profession," BMJ states in an editorial accompanying the work.

Speaking to CNN's "Anderson Cooper 360," Wakefield said his work has been "grossly distorted" and that he was the target of "a ruthless, pragmatic attempt to crush any attempt to investigate valid vaccine safety concerns."

The now-discredited paper panicked many parents and led to a sharp drop in the number of children getting the vaccine that prevents measles, mumps and rubella. Vaccination rates dropped sharply in Britain after its publication, falling as low as 80% by 2004. Measles cases have gone up sharply in the ensuing years.

In the United States, more cases of measles were reported in 2008 than in any other year since 1997, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. More than 90% of those infected had not been vaccinated or their vaccination status was unknown, the CDC reported.

"But perhaps as important as the scare's effect on infectious disease is the energy, emotion and money that have been diverted away from efforts to understand the real causes of autism and how to help children and families who live with it," the BMJ editorial states.

Wakefield has been unable to reproduce his results in the face of criticism, and other researchers have been unable to match them. Most of his co-authors withdrew their names from the study in 2004 after learning he had had been paid by a law firm that intended to sue vaccine manufacturers -- a serious conflict of interest he failed to disclose. After years on controversy, the Lancet, the prestigious journal that originally published the research, retracted Wakefield's paper last February.

The series of articles launched Wednesday are investigative journalism, not results of a clinical study. The writer, Brian Deer, said Wakefield "chiseled" the data before him, "falsifying medical histories of children and essentially concocting a picture, which was the picture he was contracted to find by lawyers hoping to sue vaccine manufacturers and to create a vaccine scare."

According to BMJ, Wakefield received more than 435,000 pounds ($674,000) from the lawyers. Godlee said the study shows that of the 12 cases Wakefield examined in his paper, five showed developmental problems before receiving the MMR vaccine and three never had autism.

"It's always hard to explain fraud and where it affects people to lie in science," Godlee said. "But it does seem a financial motive was underlying this, both in terms of payments by lawyers and through legal aid grants that he received but also through financial schemes that he hoped would benefit him through diagnostic and other tests for autism and MMR-related issues."

But Wakefield told CNN that claims of a link between the MMR vaccine and autism "came from the parents, not me," and that his paper had "nothing to do with the litigation."

Read autism coverage on "The Chart" blog.

"These children were seen on the basis of their clinical symptoms, for their clinical need, and they were seen by expert clinicians and their disease diagnosed by them, not by me," he said.

Wakefield dismissed Deer as "a hit man who has been brought into take me down" by pharmaceutical interests. Deer has signed a disclosure form stating that he has no financial interest in the business.

Dr. Max Wiznitzer, a pediatric neurologist at Rainbow Babies & Children's Hospital in Cleveland, said the reporting "represents Wakefield as a person where the ends justified the means." But he said the latest news may have little effect on those families who still blame vaccines for their children's conditions.

"Unfortunately, his core group of supporters is not going to let the facts dissuade their beliefs that MMR causes autism," Wiznitzer said. "They need to be open-minded and examine the information as everybody else."

Wakefield's defenders include David Kirby, a journalist who has written extensively on autism. He told CNN that Wakefield not only has denied falsifying data, he has said he had no way to do so.

"I have known him for a number of years. He does not strike me as a charlatan or a liar," Kirby said. If the BMJ allegations are true, then Wakefield "did a terrible thing" -- but he added, "I personally find it hard to believe that he did that."
Absolutely, disgustingly shameful. Vaccinations have been skipped, herd immunity is compromised, and people have died because of the hysteria prompted by this asshole's lies and deceit.

Also, evidence mounts in favor of the banning of the legal profession.
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Re: Study linking autism and vaccination an "elaborate fraud

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The sad part about this is that it doesn't seem to be changing minds here. I saw that MMR numbers in Britain are rising again; it seems like people are starting to "get it" again. But here in the USA, they are still falling. And, what's worse, you are getting these pockets of unvaccinated individuals leading to problems. People seem to be glued to the likes of Dr Sears here and don't care about anything else. And look where he got us:

-he writes his "Vaccine Book" and has his blog where he upholds that the MMR could be dangerous, says you should delay until 4+, says you only need one dose, etc
-one of his patients travels to switzerland and contracts measles
-his patient comes to the his office because of the illness and spreads it to unvaccinated people in the waiting room
-it spreads to an unvaccinated 10 month old who ends up in the hospital for a week

http://justthevax.blogspot.com/2010/12/ ... -this.html

The number of moms stopping vaccination in my moms group is rising, and all of them just claim Brian Deer is "out to get" Wakefield when they comment on articles like this. *sigh*.
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Re: Study linking autism and vaccination an "elaborate fraud

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This was posted in SLAM earlier. I humbly suggest to a mod to merge the threads.
According to BMJ, Wakefield received more than 435,000 pounds ($674,000) from the lawyers. Godlee said the study shows that of the 12 cases Wakefield examined in his paper, five showed developmental problems before receiving the MMR vaccine and three never had autism.
I knew he was paid by a law firm, but $674 000 USD. :wtf: I hope (figure of speech only) that it covers the potential earnings he would have made if he hadn't been struck off the medical board for the rest of his working life <sarcasm>. Because I think it most probably doesn't, and another case of short term greed overcoming long term gain. Unfortunately Wakefield isn't the only one who came off second best from his actions, and those people who suffered from contracting preventable diseases and those who died because of lack of immunisation easily paid more than Wakefield did. Fuck him.
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Re: Study linking autism and vaccination an "elaborate fraud

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For the record: The Jenny McCarthy Body Count. 622 preventable deaths and climbing.
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Re: Study linking autism and vaccination an "elaborate fraud

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It seems to me that this problem is one which requires a command solution, especially here in America, where people love to latch on to a quack/fraud instead of real medicine because a quack is usually better at playing the "Everyman" card, and when he starts to come under fire they label him as an independent thinker being persecuted by the "intellectual elite".

Perhaps something to the degree of putting these parents in a legal Catch-22. Say, requiring all kids to be vaccinated to go to school, and requiring all kids to be placed in public school. If a conflict develops, don't allow any fucking "understandings," and start levying truancy fines on the parents for the refusal to send their kids to school - and when they say they don't refuse but it's the school that won't admit them, turn a deaf ear. The law only cares about the fact that a kid should be in school and is not.


It's not a very nice thing to do, but it's the best solution I can think of without "interfering in a parents right to choose medicine for their child." The theory is "we can't make you, but we can make you wish you had." I wouldn't be very workable, but I'm struggling to see an alternative that gets more vaccinations performed.
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Re: Study linking autism and vaccination an "elaborate fraud

Post by Stark »

Frankly, its as much the fault of horrible media reporting as this guys fraud - if the original report wasn't pushed at mothers so heavily with little or no response from any other position, the retard parent brigade wouldn't have decided it was such a giant issue. It was sensational - OMG TWH AUTISMZ - and so it got time on the air and print. He could have lied as much as he wanted if Womens Day hadn't decided to tell people how amazingly important it was and never bother to understand or comment in anything else.
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Re: Study linking autism and vaccination an "elaborate fraud

Post by Isolder74 »

Another article on the subject.

Link
Article Calls Study Linking Vaccines to Autism a Fraud

By Deborah Huso Jan 6th 2011 1:34PM

Autism Vaccine Study Fraud

Was the first study linking vaccines to autism a fraud?

That's what a British journalist is calling it in a new article published in the medical journal, BMJ.

Journalist Brian Deer says that five of the 12 children involved in Dr. Andrew Wakefield's 1998 study indicating that the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine may cause autism actually had documented developmental problems prior to getting the vaccine. Wakefield (pictured left) reported they did not.

Deer also found that all the cases were somehow misrepresented when he compared data from medical records and the children's parents.

Wakefield's paper has been renounced by 10 of its 13 authors and removed from the Lancet medical journal, where it was originally published. A British panel is weighing whether to strip Wakefield and two of his colleagues from the right to practice medicine in Britain.

In an accompanying editorial, BMJ editor Fiona Godlee and colleagues called Wakefield's study "an elaborate fraud." They said Wakefield's work in other journals should be examined to see if it should be retracted, the AP reported.

Despite this, the controversy rages on. Parents of autistic children, including actress Jenny McCarthy, are some of Wakefield's staunchest supporters. And Wakefield himself stands by the study.

The result: Immunization rates for measles, mumps, and rubella have dipped substantially worldwide and measles, once nearly eradicated in the U.S., is back here and abroad.

"I am in favor of safe vaccination practices," says Mark Blaxill, author of The Age of Autism: Mercury, Medicine, and a Manmade Epidemic and the father of an autistic child. Blaxill told AOL Health that vaccinations could be safe if the studies were actually controlled.

"We have been running uncontrolled experiments on children," he says. "We are in uncharted territory with respect to vaccine safety. In some cases, the government has conceded that a brain injury that included Autism was caused by vaccines. People are overlooking important evidence."

Peter Nilsson, the father of an autistic child in San Diego, strongly believes that vaccines do play a role in the onset of autism. "I know a lot of families who have had experiences with vaccines," he told AOL Health. "The child is healthy, they get a vaccination or MMR, and they come out and they're different. It's unfortunate that kids have to go through this."

According to the National Autism Survey: Evaluating the Satisfaction With the US Government's Investment and Approach To Investigating Causes of Autism by Beth Clay, 58.3 percent of survey subjects were not satisfied at all with the research regarding any potential relationship between autism and vaccines conducted by or funded by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The survey also found that 90.3 percent of respondents want to see studies comparing vaccinated and unvaccinated individuals to determine if there is a difference in the rates of autism and other medical conditions.

Dr. Neal Halsey, pediatrician and director of the Institute for Vaccine Safety at the Bloomberg School of Public Health and the Johns Hopkins Children Center, told AOL Health vaccines are safe.

More on Autism

* Too Many Connections in Brain May Explain Autism Learning Disability
* New MRI Test May Be Best at Detecting Autism

"The most important message is for parents to get vaccinations for their children," he says. According to Halsey, there is a very small chance that complications will arise from vaccines.

"Vaccines are one of the most preventative resources against neurological problems," he adds.

As for McCarthy, her organization, Generation Rescue, posted this statement on its website regarding Deer's article:

"For years, the media has mischaracterized Wakefield's work as implicating the MMR vaccine in the autism epidemic. This was never true, as Wakefield himself wrote in the conclusion to his paper
I love how much the anti-vaccines are backpedaling on this. The big truth of the matter is the study on which they were basing everything on was done with the people making it on purpose misrepresenting information. I note how that most of the supposed connections to the vaccines included cases that already showed sign of already developing Autism even before they took the vaccines in the first place.

The ones making this study act more like the supposed evil conspirators of the Conspiracy Theorist's fantasies do. This entire study appears to have been made to be part of a preconceived political agenda.
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