Guest guest Posted June 12, 2007 Report Share Posted June 12, 2007 Yesterday I followed CNN Newsroom for Hearing coverage. Aside from the specific coverage of the hearings, there were approximately 5 pharmaceutical advertisements each hour, so I didn't have high hopes... Most offensive in their coverage was the statement; " parent's want a piece of " the billion dollar comnpensation fund. Grrr. here's the e-mail I shot off to them at 10:00 am PST: I find your coverage of the NVIC Vaccine hearings offensive in both tone and content. As the representative of a petitioner (my child who is severely affected by autism), I am not, as you so flippantly say " trying to get a piece of " the vaccine injury fund. I am quite concerned about the safety of the vaccine program and as such I believe that the burden of watching out for the health of our most vulnerable citizens will only be protected in a system which offers transparency accountability and which is willing to adhere to both the spirit and the letter of the law when mistakes have been made. The failure of the CDC, NIH and the FDA to notice the increasing amounts of mercury based preservative Thimerosal in the mandated vaccine schedule in the 1990's might have been yesterdays news had the agencies accepted responsibility, immediately remedied the oversight and provided appropriate compensation to the victims. Their failure to follow these commonly accepted practices suggests duplicity based upon their closely held (if not incestuous) relationship with the pharmaceutical industry. The legal case for the claimants (vaccine injured children- represented by parents) is actually quite strong in terms of published peer-reviewed laboratory-based based medical research. The respondents offer a handful of warmed-over epidemiological studies which by the government's (NIEH) own reviews are weak at best. If you are unable to report on these hearings without apparent bias, you might consider saving the paid advertising for pharmaceutical products for a different time slot, as it will be difficult to claim bias-free coverage. Please consider coverage of the issues from the perspective of the claimants-as I'm sure you will be inundated by comments such as this and will have no difficulty finding appropriate spokespersons anywhere in the country. I will be expecting on-air acknowledgement of the valid concerns shared by hundreds of thousands of viewers who have been affected in some way by the 1 in 150 children born in the '90s who have been diagnosed with autism. C. Cary, PsyD San Diego, CA Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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