Guest guest Posted July 20, 2001 Report Share Posted July 20, 2001 From: " ilena rose " <ilena@...> Sent: Friday, July 20, 2001 11:16 AM Subject: Fears Raised Over Preservative In Vaccines > http://www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/333/21291/328506.html > > > Fears Raised Over Preservative In Vaccines > July 17, 2001 > > BOSTON (Boston Globe) -- Lyn Redwood, a registered nurse, thought she was > doing the right thing when she took her healthy son, Will, to get > vaccinated for measles and other childhood diseases. But soon afterward, > she saw a change in her 1-year-old. > > " He lost speech, " the Atlanta resident said of her son, now 7. " He lost " > the ability to make " eye contact. " > > It was only after her son was diagnosed with a form of autism that she > found a Food and Drug Administration study warning that a preservative used > in some vaccines may have exposed children to levels of mercury higher than > recommended under federal guidelines. A check of her son's vaccine records > confirmed her fears: The vaccines contained the toxic ingredient, called > thimerosal. > > " My son had 125 times the allowable exposure in one day, " she said, > referring to the maximum daily dosage for mercury exposure recommended by > the Environmental Protection Agency. > > Redwood was one of more than a dozen parents of autistic children from > around the country who yesterday urged a committee from the Institute of > Medicine to oppose the use of any mercury compound as a preservative in > vaccines. The panel, a branch of the National Academy of Science, gathered > at the Hotel in Cambridge to hear scientific testimony on the link > between mercury in vaccines and neurological problems in children. > > Dangerous side effects from children's vaccines have long been a sensitive > subject for public health officials - and a parent's nightmare. While > vaccinations are responsible for the virtual elimination of such crippling > diseases as polio, in rare cases vaccinations themselves can cause severe, > even life-threatening reactions. > > The form of mercury in vaccines and other medical products, thimerosal, has > been used as a preservative since the 1930s. Though mercury has long been > known to be a neurotoxin, vaccine makers and federal officials alike argued > that it was harmless in the small doses found in vaccines. > > However, mercury in vaccines has been an issue of growing debate in recent > years as anecdotal evidence increasingly shows that some children develop > autism after receiving vaccinations for mumps, measles, and rubella as well > as hepatitis B. Though its causes are not well understood, the effects of > autism are quite clear: Sufferers have great difficulty in social > interactions and some can't even speak. > > As a result, children's vaccines became part of the broader controversy > over mercury pollution in the environment. Because mercury is so toxic, > governments have pledged to virtually eliminate mercury emissions from > power plants and other sources, and states have warned children and young > women to limit consumption of freshwater fish because of their mercury > content. > > Against that backdrop, the US Public Health Service has recommended that > the use of thimerosal should be " reduced or eliminated from vaccines as > soon as possible to minimize the exposure of infants and young children to > mercury, " said Dr. Bernard Schwetz, the agency's acting principal deputy > commissioner. > > In addition, the Centers for Disease Control and the National Institutes of > Health have formed a scientific committee to study the health effects of > thimerosal more closely and recommend what more should be done to limit > exposure. > > " Parents research the best car seat to put their children in, " said > Redwood, president of the Coalition for Sensible Action for Ending > Mercury-Induced Neurological Disorders. " I want parents to know that they > have to research vaccines, too. " > > Over the past year, the FDA has approved several thimerosal-free forms of > childhood vaccines, including a hepatitis B vaccine. In March, for example, > the FDA approved a low-thimerosal version of Tripedia, a vaccine against > diphtheria, tetanus toxoids, and acellular pertussis. > > " Now, all routinely recommended pediatric vaccines will be available as > either completely thimerosal-free or without any significant amounts of > thimerosal, " Schwetz said at the time. > > But many other products contain the preservative - including children's > nasal drops, ear drops, and flu vaccines, said Dr. Jane M. El-Dahr, head of > the Pediatric Allergy, Immunity, and Rheumatology Section at Tulane > University Health Science Center, who was a speaker at yesterday's hearing. > > " These products are sitting on the shelves " in drugstores, El-Dahr said. > > Sallie Bernard, executive director of Safe Minds, said that although the > FDA moved in the right direction by phasing out thimerosal in children's > vaccines, parents still need to beware, because it will take up to a year > for current stocks of vaccines with mercury to be used up. > > She also said that a strong statement from the committee can have > far-reaching application. " It's still in tetanus shots, " she said of > thimerosal. " It's still in many vaccines given to the elderly, to > children, " groups that are at greatest risk of developing neurological > problems. > > Most of the doctors and scientists who spoke at the hearing presented > evidence that showed at least a correlation between vaccines containing > mercury and the incidence of neurological disease. But since the sample of > autistic children in most of the studies was so small, and because of a > general lack of data, most specialists recommended more tests to > conclusively determine a scientific link. > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.