-Caveat Lector-

This article from NYTimes.com
has been sent to you by [EMAIL PROTECTED]



The Not-So-Crackpot Autism Theory

November 10, 2002
By ARTHUR ALLEN






Neal Halsey's life was dedicated to promoting vaccination.
In June 1999, the Johns Hopkins pediatrician and scholar
had completed a decade of service on the influential
committees that decide which inoculations will be jabbed
into the arms and thighs and buttocks of eight million
American children each year. At the urging of Halsey and
others, the number of vaccines mandated for children under
2 in the 90's soared to 20, from 8. Kids were healthier for
it, according to him. These simple, safe injections against
hepatitis B and germs like haemophilus bacteria would help
thousands grow up free of diseases like meningitis and
liver cancer.

Halsey's view, however, was not shared by a small but vocal
faction of parents who questioned whether all these shots
did more harm than good. While many of the childhood
infections that vaccines were designed to prevent -- among
them diphtheria, mumps, chickenpox and polio -- seemed to
be either antique or innocuous, serious chronic diseases
like asthma, juvenile diabetes and autism were on the rise.
And on the Internet, especially, a growing number of
self-styled health activists blamed vaccines for these
increases.

Like all medical interventions, vaccines sometimes cause
adverse reactions. But unlike pills, vaccines come packaged
with high expectations, which make them particularly
vulnerable to public criticism. Vaccines don't cure people,
and they are administered to healthy children, which gives
them few opportunities for good press. When they work,
nothing happens. When vaccinated children become ill, their
parents are grief-stricken and often enraged, even if
vaccines aren't proved to be at fault. All of this puts
public-health advocates like Halsey on the defensive. Most
attacks on vaccines, they say, are based on hysteria, bad
science and dubious politics.

Halsey, 57, has green eyes, a white beard that makes him
look like a ship's captain and an air of careful authority.
As chairman of the American Academy of Pediatrics committee
on infectious diseases from 1995 through June 1999, he
often appeared in the media administering calm reassurance.
''Many of the allegations against vaccines,'' Halsey said
in one interview, ''are based on unproven hypotheses and
causal associations with little evidence.''

And then suddenly in June 1999, during a visit to the Food
and Drug Administration, a squall appeared on the horizon
of Halsey's confidence. Halsey attended a meeting to
discuss thimerosal, a mercury-containing preservative that
at the time was being used in several vaccines -- including
the hepatitis B shot that Halsey had fought so hard to have
administered to American babies. By the time the dust
kicked up in that meeting had settled, Halsey would be
forced to reckon with the hypothesis that thimerosal had
damaged the brains of immunized infants and may have
contributed to the unexplained explosion in the number of
cases of autism being diagnosed in children.

That Halsey was willing even to entertain this possibility
enraged some of his fellow vaccinologists, who couldn't
fathom how a doctor who had spent so much energy
dismantling the arguments of people who attacked vaccines
could now be changing sides. But to Halsey's mind, his
actions were perfectly consistent: he was simply working
from the data. And the numbers deeply troubled him. ''From
the beginning, I saw thimerosal as something different,''
he says. ''It was the first strong evidence of a causal
association with neurological impairment. I was very
concerned.''


The investigation into mercury vaccines was instigated in
1997 by Representative Frank Pallone Jr., a New Jersey
Democrat whose district includes a string of shore towns
where mercury in fish is one of many environmental
concerns. Pallone, who had been pressing the government to
re-evaluate its overall guidelines on mercury toxicity,
attached an amendment to an F.D.A. bill requiring the
agency to inventory all mercury contained in licensed drugs
and vaccines.

The job of adding up the amount of mercury in vaccines and
assessing its risk fell to Robert Ball, an F.D.A.
scientist, and two F.D.A. pediatricians, Leslie Ball,
Robert's wife, and R. Douglas Pratt. Thimerosal, which is
50 percent ethyl mercury by weight, had been used as a
vaccine preservative since the 1930's in the
diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis shot, known as D.T.P., and it
was later added to some vaccines for hepatitis B and
haemophilus bacteria, which by the early 1990's had become
routine immunizations for infants.

The F.D.A. team's conclusions were frightening. Vaccines
added under Halsey's watch had tripled the dose of mercury
that infants got in their first few months of life. As many
as 30 million American children may have been exposed to
mercury in excess of Environmental Protection Agency
guidelines -- levels of mercury that, in theory, could have
killed enough brain cells to scramble thinking or hex
behavior.

''My first reaction was simply disbelief, which was the
reaction of almost everybody involved in vaccines,'' Halsey
says. ''In most vaccine containers, thimerosal is listed as
a mercury derivative, a hundredth of a percent. And what I
believed, and what everybody else believed, was that it was
truly a trace, a biologically insignificant amount. My
honest belief is that if the labels had had the mercury
content in micrograms, this would have been uncovered years
ago. But the fact is, no one did the calculation.''

Making matters worse, the latest science on mercury damage
suggested that even small amounts of organic mercury could
do harm to the fetal brain. Some of the federal safety
guidelines on mercury were relaxed in the 90's, even as the
amount of mercury that children received in vaccines
increased. The more Halsey learned about these mercury
studies, the more he worried.

''My first concern was that it would harm the credibility
of the immunization program,'' he says. ''But gradually it
came home to me that maybe there was some real risk to the
children.'' Mercury was turning out to be like lead, which
had been studied extensively in the homes of the Baltimore
poor during Halsey's tenure at Hopkins. ''As they got more
sophisticated at testing for lead, the safe level marched
down and down, and they continued to find subtle
neurological impairment,'' Halsey says. ''And that's almost
exactly what happened with mercury.''

Halsey was beginning to think that it would be prudent to
limit thimerosal-containing vaccines and urge pediatricians
to use thimerosal-free shots when possible. But his
decision inflamed some of his peers. After all, although
the thimerosal data was worrisome to Halsey, the available
science offered no clear proof that the preservative posed
a genuine danger to children when given in parts per
million. Moreover, it wasn't clear that there were enough
thimerosal-free vaccines available for diseases like
pertussis and hepatitis B. Should an unproven fear justify
the cessation of a procedure that protected children from
proven dangers?

Halsey looked into the matter further and found only
complexity. In the medical literature, most cases of acute
mercury poisoning result from doses hundreds or thousands
of times higher than what infants received with
thimerosal-laden vaccines. And although the thimerosal
levels in vaccines exceeded the E.P.A.'s guidelines for
methyl mercury, thimerosal contained ethyl mercury, a
compound that behaves somewhat differently in the body. The
E.P.A. based its guidelines on a series of studies of 917
children born in 1987 in the Faeroe Islands, a windswept
North Atlantic archipelago, to women who ate
methyl-mercury-tainted whale meat. The Faeroes children,
whose umbilical cord blood averaged four times the E.P.A.'s
daily ''safe'' dose -- which was 0.1 micrograms per kilo --
exhibited small but measurable neurological deficits seven
years later. They had slower reaction times and diminished
attention spans and their word choice and memorization were
less keen than those of their classmates who had been
exposed to less mercury, according to Philippe Grandjean, a
Danish researcher who leads the continuing Faeroes study
and teaches at Boston University.

During most of the 90's, many American 6-month-olds
received a total of 187.5 micrograms of ethyl mercury
through vaccination. While the Faeroes children were
exposed to mercury as developing fetuses, and therefore
were more vulnerable than the vaccinated American infants,
the American babies included about 60,000 each year who had
already been exposed to high mercury levels because their
mothers had eaten a lot of contaminated fish. What's more,
hundreds of thousands of Rh-negative pregnant women and
their unborn Rh-positive babies received additional
thimerosal each year through injections designed to keep
the mothers' immune systems from attacking the fetuses.

The Faeroes studies, though they dealt with methyl mercury,
unnerved Halsey. Other researchers were troubled, too.
George Lucier, a toxicologist who led a 1998 White House
review of mercury's dangers, went so far as to say it was
''very likely'' that thimerosal had damaged some children.
There was precious little data to back up that precise
suspicion -- and little to dismiss it -- because of the
lack of toxicology research on ethyl mercury.

On July 7, 1999, at Halsey's urging, the American Academy
of Pediatrics and the Public Health Service released a
statement urging vaccine manufacturers to remove thimerosal
as quickly as possible and advising pediatricians to
postpone giving most newborns the birth dose of the
hepatitis B vaccine. The decision, which helped to create
vaccine shortages and led some babies to become infected
with hepatitis B, outraged some senior vaccine experts.
Walter Orenstein, director of the National Immunization
Program at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
would charge that the rush to remove thimerosal-containing
vaccines was ''precipitous.'' Stanley Plotkin, a renowned
vaccine developer, said that it was fruitless to try to
soothe vaccination critics. ''If antivaccinationists did
not have mercury, they would have another issue,'' he said
at one meeting. ''One cannot prevent them from making hay
regardless of whether the sun is shining or not.''

In Halsey's view, however, thimerosal wasn't simply a bone
for rabid vaccine opponents to gnaw on. In the middle of
that hectic summer he took a vacation in Maine. Canoeing on
a lake, he came across posters that advised fishermen to
''protect your children -- release your catch.'' Halsey
took that message to heart. If the government was warning
people against eating fish with mercury, he asked his
colleagues, ''does it make sense to allow it to be injected
into infants?''

Although other vaccinologists criticized Halsey, many of
his colleagues rallied around him. ''Neal put kids ahead of
the vaccination program, which was gutsy,'' says Lynn
Goldman, a former E.P.A. official who has been on the
Hopkins faculty since 1999 and worked with Halsey on
thimerosal. ''It would have been easier for him to line up
on the other side.''

Few scientists believe that the spike in autism could have
been caused solely by the thimerosal in vaccines, but in
October 2001, a vaccine-safety committee at the starchy
Institute of Medicine confirmed that it was ''biologically
plausible'' -- though by no means proved -- that thimerosal
could be related to neurodevelopmental delays in some
children. The committee recommended that thimerosal be
removed from vaccines and called for extensive research to
determine any damage it had caused.

Halsey's fellow researchers were right about one thing.
Antivaccine advocates immediately seized upon the
thimerosal theory, and Halsey became something of an
unwilling hero to the vaccine-safety advocates with whom he
had so often sparred. In fact, thousands of parents with
autistic children have responded to the Institute of
Medicine report by filing lawsuits. Michael Williams, who
has won millions in toxic tort settlements from
pharmaceutical companies, was among the first lawyers to
sue vaccine manufacturers, on behalf of William Mead, a
4-year-old Portland, Ore., boy with autism. Williams also
filed a separate class-action lawsuit with William's
healthy older sister, Eleanor, as lead plaintiff, demanding
that vaccine makers also pay for studies to determine
thimerosal's effects on millions of children who might have
lower I.Q.'s or other less obvious signs of mercury
poisoning. Past studies have shown that mercury's effects
vary tremendously from person to person, presumably because
of genetic differences in the body's capacity to protect
delicate organs from it.

''In order to win the Eleanor lawsuit you need to establish
liability, but I don't think that is going to be that
hard,'' Williams said in a recent chat in his Portland
office. ''Organic mercury is a very serious neurotoxin.''

Williams embodies the vaccine establishment's worst fear
about Halsey's course of action -- which is that taking the
precautionary step of eliminating thimerosal would be read
as an admission of fault. ''The agenda was set by the
lawyers and the antivaccine activists,'' a source close to
a number of manufacturers complained to me. ''The
scientists responded to it scientifically, and that put
them behind the eight ball right away. You had Neal Halsey
running around saying: 'We've got to do something! We've
got to show we're concerned!'''

Paul Offit, a vaccinologist at the Children's Hospital of
Philadelphia, takes it a step further. ''In some instances
I think full disclosure can be harmful,'' he says. ''Is it
safe to say there is zero risk with thimerosal, when it is
remotely possible that one child would get sick? Well,
since we say that mercury is a neurotoxin, we have to do
everything we can to get rid of it. But I would argue that
removing thimerosal didn't make vaccines safer -- it only
made them perceptibly safer.''

For Halsey, thimerosal injury is a possibility that must be
addressed -- but by science, not by the courts. The
scientific agenda, however, is already deeply politicized.
>From the start, the C.D.C.'s efforts to examine the
possibility of thimerosal damage became snarled in
acrimony. Critics of the vaccination system don't trust the
C.D.C., which monitors evidence of adverse reactions to
vaccines through the Vaccine Safety Datalink, a
computerized set of 7.5 million medical records. Safe
Minds, an advocacy group of parents who believe that their
autistic children were damaged by thimerosal, has used the
Freedom of Information Act to obtain documents showing that
as early as December 1999 the C.D.C. had reason to believe
that thimerosal caused developmental delays in some
children. It was far from conclusive evidence, but vaccine
critics charged that the C.D.C. tried to play it down. One
of those critics was Dan Burton, a Republican congressman
from Indiana, who says he firmly believes that his
grandson's autism is a result of vaccines. ''I'm so ticked
off about my grandson, and to think that the public-health
people have been circling the wagons to cover up the
facts!'' Burton fumed at a June hearing. ''Why, it just
makes me want to vomit!''

What comes through in an examination of the documents
uncovered by Safe Minds is less a coverup than an
impression of scientists anxiously watching over their
shoulders as they work. One document, for example, records
comments made by Robert Brent, a Philadelphia pediatrician
who served as a consultant for the thimerosal study. ''The
medical-legal findings in this study, causal or not, are
horrendous,'' Brent said. ''If an allegation was made that
a child's neurobehavioral findings were caused by
thimerosal-containing vaccines, you could readily find a
junk scientist who would support the claim with a
reasonable degree of certainty. But you will not find a
scientist with any integrity who would say the reverse with
the data that is available. . . . So we are in a bad
position from the standpoint of defending any lawsuits if
they were initiated.''

More research is in the works. The C.D.C. is setting up a
study of neurodevelopmental effects based in part on the
Faeroe Islands model. The N.I.H. is financing studies of
thimerosal metabolism in animals and children. (An early
University of Rochester study was reassuring: it indicated
that children eliminate thimerosal much more quickly than
expected.)

Clearly, a lot is riding on this research, and pressure is
being brought to bear on both sides. Can the vaccine
authorities accept a positive answer? Can the vaccine
opponents accept a negative one? ''No one wants to think
that harm might have been done,'' Halsey says. ''I don't
want to think harm might have been done.''


American children still receive up to 20 vaccines in the
first two years of life. The first symptoms of autism often
appear between the ages of 12 and 24 months. Most autism
experts say that the two facts are coincidental, but as a
major California study recently confirmed, autism is being
diagnosed in numbers far higher than ever before,
suggesting that a nongenetic cause may be partly to blame.
In some children, the behavioral traits of autism present
themselves along with physical problems like sensory
dysfunction and motor disorders that have rough correlates
in the mercury-poisoning literature. For some parents,
thimerosal provides a grand unifying theory that squarely
points the finger at the government and vaccine makers.

During much of the 20th-century, children suffered from an
ailment called pink disease, which caused peeling skin on
the extremities as well as regressive behavior. In 1948, a
keen-eyed Cincinnati pediatrician named Josef Warkany
noticed a common risk factor in these children: they had
all been given teething powders containing calomel, a
mercury derivative. Only about 1 in 500 children whose
parents gave them calomel got pink disease -- suggesting
that a constitutional vulnerability to mercury was part of
the clinical picture. Soon after the powders were taken off
the market, pink disease disappeared.

Autism is a global phenomenon that was first reported in
America in 1943, long before the potential dangers of
thimerosal vaccines were raised. Removing the preservative
won't -- even in the best case -- eliminate the illness.
But scientists estimate that the current rate of autism in
its various forms might be as high as 1 in 500. If the
autism trend begins to recede now that thimerosal has been
removed, it could certainly suggest a cause. If it does
decline, we might have Neal Halsey to thank. If it doesn't,
his colleagues in the vaccine establishment may blame him
for stoking an irrational protest from the public.

Halsey, who still heads the Hopkins Institute for Vaccine
Safety, which he was a founder of in 1997, is on the fence.
''I don't believe the evidence is convincing now that there
has definitely been harm done by thimerosal,'' he says,
absently stroking his balding head. But to keep the vaccine
program on a steady keel, Halsey says, the public-health
authorities simply must follow through with the studies and
face the consequences without flinching. If there is
damage, he says, ''there should be some kind of
compensation, though I don't know how.'' He pauses, and
sighs. ''I empathize with families of children with these
disorders. How are you going to put dollar values on
that?''




Arthur Allen lives in Washington and is working on a
history of vaccination.

http://www.nytimes.com/2002/11/10/magazine/10AUTISM.html?ex=1037902798&ei=1&en=ecf935f4be1ad4c3



HOW TO ADVERTISE
---------------------------------
For information on advertising in e-mail newsletters
or other creative advertising opportunities with The
New York Times on the Web, please contact
[EMAIL PROTECTED] or visit our online media
kit at http://www.nytimes.com/adinfo

For general information about NYTimes.com, write to
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Copyright 2002 The New York Times Company

<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/";>www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html
 <A HREF="http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html";>Archives of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>

http://archive.jab.org/ctrl@;listserv.aol.com/
 <A HREF="http://archive.jab.org/ctrl@;listserv.aol.com/">ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to