Guest guest Posted December 31, 2006 Report Share Posted December 31, 2006 The usual lies from Deer and all who are out to crucify Wakefield Hope to have a rebuttal soon. Evan is always right in there to trash Wakefield along with Deer Sheri >Latest from Deer.... > >http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2087-2524335,00.html > >The Sunday Times December 31, 2006 > > >MMR doctor given legal aid thousands > Deer > > > >ANDREW WAKEFIELD, the former surgeon whose campaign linking the MMR vaccine >with autism caused a collapse in immunisation rates, was paid more than >£400,000 by lawyers trying to prove that the vaccine was unsafe. > >The payments, unearthed by The Sunday Times, were part of £3.4m distributed >from the legal aid fund to doctors and scientists who had been recruited to >support a now failed lawsuit against vaccine manufacturers. > >Critics this weekend voiced amazement at the sums, which they said created a >clear conflict of interest and were the “financial engine” behind a >worldwide alarm over the triple measles, mumps and rubella shot. > >“These figures are astonishing,” said Dr Evan , Liberal Democrat MP >for Oxford West and Abingdon. > >“This lawsuit was an industry, and an industry peddling what turned out to >be a myth.” > >According to the figures, released under the Freedom of Information Act, >Wakefield was paid £435,643 in fees, plus £3,910 expenses. > >Wakefield’s work for the lawyers began two years before he published his now >notorious report in The Lancet medical journal in February 1998, proposing a >link between the vaccine and autism. > >This suggestion, followed by a campaign led by Wakefield, caused >immunisation rates to slump from 92% to 78.9%, although they have since >partly recovered. In March this year the first British child in 14 years >died from measles. > >Later The Lancet retracted Wakefield’s claim and apologised after a Sunday >Times investigation showed that his research had been backed with £55,000 >from lawyers, and that the children in the study used as evidence against >the vaccine were also claimants in the lawsuit. > >At the time Wakefield denied any conflict of interest and said that the >money went to his hospital, not to him personally. No disclosure was made, >however, of the vastly greater sums that he was receiving directly from the >lawyers. > >The bulk of the amount in the new figures, released by the Legal Services >Commission (LSC), covers an eight to 10-year period. All payments had to be >approved by the courts. > >Those who received money include numerous Wakefield associates, business >partners and employees who had acted as experts in the case. > >Five of his former colleagues at the Royal Free hospital, north London, >under whose aegis The Lancet paper was written, received a total of £183,000 >in fees, according to the LSC. > >Wakefield now runs a business in Austin, Texas, two of whose employees are >listed as receiving a total of £112,000 in fees, while a Florida physician, >who appointed the former surgeon as his “director of research”, was paid >£21,600, the figures show. > >All have appeared in media reports as apparently confirming Wakefield’s >claims. > >It is understood that the payments — for writing reports, attending meetings >and in some cases carrying out research — were made at hourly rates varying >between £120 and £200, or £1,000 a day. > >“There was a huge conflict of interest,” said Dr March, an animal >vaccine specialist who was among those recruited. “It bothered me quite a >lot because I thought, well, if I’m getting paid for doing this, then surely >it’s in my interest to keep it going as long as possible.” > >March, who the LSC allowed almost £90,000 to research an aspect of Wakefield >’s theories, broke ranks this weekend to denounce both the science of the >attack and the amount that the case had cost in lawyers’ and experts’ fees. > >“The ironic thing is they were always going on about how, you know, how we’ >ve hardly got any money compared with the other side, who are funded by >large pharmaceutical companies. And I’m thinking, judging by the amounts of >money you’re paying out, the other side must be living like millionaires,” >he said. > >Also among those named as being paid from the legal aid fund was a referee >for one of Wakefield’s papers, who was allowed £40,000. A private GP who >runs a single vaccines clinic received £6,000, the LSC says. > >Following The Sunday Times investigation, immunisation rates have risen and >the General Medical Council launched an inquiry. This is due to culminate in >a three-month hearing next summer, where Wakefield faces charges — which he >denies — of dishonesty over his research. > >The LSC is also unlikely to escape criticism. Three years ago the >commission, which administers a £2 billion budget to give poor people access >to justice, acknowledged that the attempt to make a case against MMR with >taxpayers’ money was “not effective or appropriate”. > >The total cost for the attack on the vaccine was £14,053,856, plus Vat. > >Following media campaigning, lawyers eventually registered 1,600 claimants >in the lawsuit. None received any money. > >This weekend Earl Howe, a Conservative party health spokesman, called for a >parliamentary inquiry. “It’s astonishing,” he said. “This is crying out for >select committee scrutiny.” > >Wakefield said in a statement that he had worked on the lawsuit for nine >years, charged at a recommended rate, and gave money to charity. > >“This work involved nights, weekends and much of my holidays, such that I >saw little of my family during this time,” he said. “I believed and still >believe in the just cause of the matter under investigation.” > > >Document 1 | Document 2 > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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