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Should Parents Worry About Vaccinating Their Children?
By JOHN STOSSEL, KRISTINA KENDALL and PATRICK McMENAMIN
When we worry, we worry the most about our children. Everyone wants to
keep them safe.
When politicians want us to fall in line, they always talk about
saving the children. And our feelings about kids have created very
intense emotions about vaccines. Some people say vaccines are
dangerous. Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said that they have "poisoned an
entire generation of American children."
Kennedy has added his voice to the chorus of angry parents who are
convinced that mercury in vaccines causes harm to children.
"It's causing IQ loss, mental retardation, speech delay, language
delay, ADD, hyperactivity," he said.
Worrying About Vaccinations
Barbara Loe Fisher, who heads the Vaccine Information Center, goes on
television to alert parents about the dangers of vaccines.
On the "Today Show," she said, "We need to find out why so many of our
highly vaccinated children are so sick."
The biggest worry today is autism. Before kids received so many
vaccines, says Fisher, "you didn't see autistic children. Autism was
so rare. Most people had never heard of it."
And the protestors blame the vaccines.
'Vaccines Don't Cause Autism'
Dr Paul Offit is the chief of infectious diseases at Children's
Hospital of Philadelphia. He's also in the vaccine business. He
developed and patented the rotavirus vaccine.
"I think that it's perfectly reasonable to be skeptical about anything
you put into your body, including vaccines," said Offit. "And vaccines
do have side effects. But vaccines don't cause autism."
Offit can say that with confidence because the National Academy of
Sciences recently reviewed the science. They concluded that 19 major
studies, tracking thousands of kids, all show no link between vaccines
and autism.
"The question has been raised, it's been answered," said Offit.
"Vaccines don't cause autism."
Then why are so many kids being diagnosed with autism? Because kids we
once said had other conditions are now being called autistic.
As researchers from the March of Dimes put it, "improvements in
detection and changes in diagnosis account for the observed increase
in autism." Their data on autism rates in California showed that the
increase in autism diagnoses almost exactly matched a decline in cases
of retardation: autism prevalence increased by 9.1 cases per 10,000
children, while mental retardation dropped by 9.3 per 10,000.
"People that we once called quirky or geeky or nerdy are now called
autistic," said Offit. "Because when you give that label of say,
autistic spectrum disorder, you allow that child then to qualify for
services which otherwise they wouldn't be qualified to get."
Not a New Concern
Two decades ago, "20/20" did a report which said that the whooping
cough vaccine may lead to permanent neurological disorder and Sudden
Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS).
Personal injury lawyer Allen McDowell said vaccine makers were
victimizing kids, and more than 20 years later, he still says the
vaccine makers put money before safety.
"There's no dispute about that. They were making so much money off the
old vaccine they didn't really have any incentive to improve it."
McDowell made money too. The lawyer won lots of lawsuits.
"I made -- a good chunk of money," he said.
The vaccine makers did revise the whooping cough vaccine and the new
version was approved by the FDA in 1991.
"The old (whooping cough) vaccine was probably our most reactogenic
vaccine, which is to say that it had the highest rate of side
effects," says Offit. "I mean, it could cause seizures with fever --
although it didn't cause epilepsy, meaning the permanent seizures
--[but] it certainly could trigger seizures…it caused pain and
tenderness at the site of injection…it caused floppy baby syndrome, a
so-called 'hypo-tonic, hypo-response' syndrome. It caused persistent,
inconsolable crying. And so, there was always an interest in trying to
make that vaccine safer. But the science had to catch up to that."
Those serious side effects were temporary, not the permanent
conditions for which lawyers often sued vaccine makers. In fact,
comprehensive studies also reviewed by the National Academy of
Sciences did not find that the old vaccine caused SIDS or permanent
brain damage.
The Benefits of Vaccinations
Lost in this debate is the disease the vaccine prevents. Whooping
cough racks a baby's body with violent fits of coughing. In its most
extreme form, it kills. But after "20/20'"s vaccine report, many
parents told their doctors, "I'm scared of your vaccine."
I asked Dr. Richard Saphir, my children's pediatrician, what he
thought of that program.
"It was certainly alarmist," he said.
In fact, when my daughter Lauren got a fever after one of the
vaccines, he decided not to give her the final shot, and a short time
afterward, she got whooping cough.
Dr. Saphir said that the fact that I was a "20/20" correspondent made
him even more anxious about giving my daughter the vaccine.
My daughter recovered from her whooping cough. She was surprised to
hear that our reporting could confuse parents and influence doctors.
"Parents go in and force their physicians to agree to not give the
vaccines even though the physicians say, you're making a stupid
decision?" she asked. "Then you guys are doing a really bad thing."
Parent Suzanne Walther agrees. On internet sites, Walther read so many
horror stories about vaccines, that so she postponed vaccinating her
daughter, Mary Catherine.
"Some of the vaccine stories said that if I had my child vaccinated
they were going to die of SIDS," she said. "I'm very protective of my
children, I don't want to do something to them that might cause them
harm."
But not vaccinating caused harm. Mary Catherine got very sick with
spinal meningitis.
"Our pediatrician put us in an ambulance to go to Vanderbilt Hospital
immediately," said Walther. "It is a deadly disease. There's a huge
risk of deafness, blindness, it's very painful."
Resurgence of Old Diseases
Mary Catherine recovered, but she's one of many kids who are coming
down with diseases doctors once thought were nearly eradicated, like
mumps, measles, and whooping cough.
These diseases are coming back because pockets of frightened parents
won't vaccinate their kids, some, after they search for information
and end up on websites like Barbara Loe Fisher's. I asked Fisher about
how sites like hers scare parents.
"You're really the vaccines' scare center. When you scare people
stupid, and they don't get vaccinated, that spreads nasty diseases," I
said.
"I don't think I've scared anybody stupid. We do not tell people to
vaccinate or not vaccinate," she replied.
Fisher says she can't say whether vaccines are "good or bad."
"You can't say vaccines are good, vaccines haven't done more good than
harm?" I asked?
"It's a complex issue," she said.
The Fear Factor
McDowell is now thinking about filing new lawsuits saying vaccine
companies caused autism. I told him I thought he was an opportunistic
hustler, preying on worried parents. McDowell disagreed.
"That's not the way I look at it. I look at it that I'm doing a
service for the public in these immunizations."
He said of the whopping cough vaccine that, "if there hadn't been the
litigation, they'd still be using the same old vaccine and causing a
lot more serious problems."
Nonsense, says Offit. Lawyers didn't make the whooping cough vaccine
better. "Science is always a process of evolution, and I think we had
to get to the point in science where we could make the kind of
purified products at commercial level that, that we couldn't do
before," Offit said. The lawsuits "are a great example of just what
can happen when, when lawyers go crazy…I think there's a certain
profiteering that comes with, with fear."
So I told McDowell I thought he was part of the Fear Industrial
Complex, scaring people and making money off of it. After a long
pause, he said, "True."
Source: ABC News