- BIG NEWS:
- Hackers
- |
- Copenhagen 2009
- |
- Afghanistan
- |
- Health Care
- |
If you were informed that mercury in vaccines might double the risk of your son developing motor tics, increase his risk of "phonic tics" by nearly two-and-a-half times, and possibly cause speech, attention or behavioral problems in school, would you still allow him to be injected with the heavy metal -- which, by the way, is 100 times more neurotoxic than that lead coating on his Chinese toys?
And what if your government's most trusted public health agency, the CDC, announced it had funded a study that replicated the findings of a 2003 CDC analysis, which also detected an association between vaccine mercury and tics, and that researchers were now suggesting "the potential need for further studies" between thimerosal and the neurological disorder?
And what if the investigators also said they detected a small but statistically significant association between early thimerosal exposure and impaired "behavioral regulation" in boys?
Or what if they said that increased neonatal exposure (28 weeks or younger) was associated with "significantly lower scores in verbal IQ scores in girls," and "significantly poorer performance" in articulation tests among all children?
And what if the authors further noted that speech problems were also found in the 2003 CDC study, where they said thimerosal exposure was associated with "an increased risk of language delays" at one test site?
Finally, what if those same authors claimed that their findings "suggest a possible adverse association between neonatal exposure to mercury and language development?"
You might think that the government was getting ready to admit that injecting organic mercury into newborn babies was a dumb idea.
But you'd be wrong.
Instead, brace yourself for some gauzy, reassuring reports in the upcoming media cycle about a New England Journal of Medicine study on thimerosal and "neuropsychological outcomes," in which, we are to believe, the connection is nil.
"Our study," the authors concluded, "does not support a causal association between early exposure to mercury from thimerosal-containing vaccines (and) deficits in neuropsychological functioning at the age of 7 to 10 years." They did not look at autism, ADHD or other major disorders.
On a conference call this afternoon from Atlanta, CDC officials gushed that these data offered nothing but "very reassuring news" about vaccine safety.
The associations found were "small," the investigators wrote, "and almost equally divided between positive and negative effects." In other words, for every "bad" thing associated with thimerosal, there was a negating "good" thing, such as improved finger tapping, or higher IQ scores among boys.
Indeed, the authors reasoned that the "higher scores on the performance IQ tests in boys" who received the most thimerosal, "makes it difficult to draw general conclusions about possible effects of neonatal mercury exposure from vaccines on intellectual abilities."
(If they really mean that thimerosal increases IQ levels in males, then sign me up for a double-dose flu shot this year).
But there might be another explanation. "Children who had been exposed to higher levels of thimerosal were more likely to have mothers with higher IQ scores," noted the authors, who did adjust test scores for maternal IQ -- though it's unclear if their study size, (1,040 kids), was large enough to accurately conduct such a precise statistical correction.
The study had several more flaws, any of which may have served to bring down the relative risks of neurological outcomes associated with increased levels of mercury exposure.
For example, 70% of the families selected for the study declined to even participate, yielding an unusually low response rate of 30% (the ideal is 70%) and data "that may have been influenced by selection bias," the authors conceded.
Next, any child born below 5.5 pounds was excluded from the study, which doesn't make sense, given that an 8 pound baby injected with the hepatitis B vaccine at birth was exposed to 35 times the EPA daily safety level for mercury, (calculated by bodyweight) while a 4 pound infant was slammed with 70 times the EPA level.
The authors also failed to adjust for any treatments these children received for their conditions. All kids were enrolled in major HMOs, where they presumably were eligible for an array of physical, behavioral and/or pharmaceutical therapies. Remember, these children were vaccinated between 0-2 years, but evaluated at 7-10 years. By not accounting for potentially years of speech and other therapies, the investigators "may have ameliorated the potential negative effects of thimerosal exposure," they admitted, and "could have biased the results toward the null hypothesis."
Despite these statistical pressures to drive the numbers downward, the associated risk for tics among boys was a real standout.
Boys who received the highest amounts of thimerosal in the first seven months of life were determined by evaluators to be 2.19 times more likely to have motor tics at age 7-10 years, and 2.44 times more likely to have phonic tics, than boys with the lowest exposures.
Any relative risk between exposure and outcome that exceeds 2.0, incidentally, is considered to be proof of causation in US courts of law.
The researchers did not differentiate between "transient" tics, which go away within a year, and "chronic" tics, which can last a lifetime. Nor did they distinguish between "simple" and "complex" tics.
I know the temptation is strong to think, "Well, it's just tics." But I suggest consulting the literature, which paints a more disturbing picture, especially if it's your kid we are talking about.
The Encyclopedia of Mental Disorders defines "simple" motor tics as "brief, meaningless movements like eye blinking, facial grimacing, head jerks or shoulder shrugs," that usually last less than a second. It says that "complex" motor tics cause slower, longer, more intense movements, "like sustained looks, facial gestures, biting, banging, whirling or twisting around, or copropraxia (obscene gestures)."
On the phonic side, "simple" tics are called, "meaningless sounds or noises like throat clearing, coughing, sniffling, barking, or hissing." Complex phonic tics include, "syllables, words, phrases, and such statements as 'Shut up!' or 'Now you've done it!' The child's speech may be abnormal, with unusual rhythms, tones, accents or intensities."
There is also the "echo phenomenon," (so familiar to autism parents) characterized by "the immediate repetition of one's own or another's words." Coprolalia, meanwhile, is a tic "made up of obscene, inappropriate or aggressive words and statements."
Severe behavioral problems are sometimes associated with tics, as well, and "there is some evidence that temper tantrums, aggressiveness, and explosive behavior appear in preadolescence and intensify in adolescence."
Finally, many children with both phonic and motor tics are diagnosed with Tourette's disorder, which frequently causes "aggressiveness, self-harming behaviors, emotional immaturity, social withdrawal, physical complaints, conduct disorders, affective disorders, anxiety, panic attacks, stuttering, sleep disorders, migraine headaches, and inappropriate sexual behaviors," the Encyclopedia says.
(Interestingly, Tourette's disorder is three-to-four times more common in males than females, the same ratio as autism, ADD and ADHD).
Now, if "simple" tics include head jerks and barking; and "complex" tics can entail biting, banging and screaming obscenities; and if thimerosal can more than double the chance of tics in boys; then Atlanta, we have a very big problem.
It's perplexing that the CDC can report replicating a doubled risk for tics in boys, and an increased risk for speech disorders and attention and behavior problems in other kids, and still insist that this is all "very reassuring news."
I posed the question on the conference call today, and got nothing even resembling an answer (an opinion that was backed up by a producer from ABC News Nightline).
So I will ask it again here.
Given that the CDC has just reported that thimerosal might increase the risk for tics among boys, how is it possible, in addition, to publish the following two phrases within the same report?:
"The findings...suggest a possible adverse association between neonatal exposure to mercury and language development."
AND
"Our study does not support a causal association between early exposure to mercury...and deficits in neuropsychological functioning."
Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to
David Kirby, you and Dan Olmsted have kept this story current and opened the door for Jenny McCarthy and thousands of other not so blonde, not so well proportioned autism Moms (like this one) to finally get the word out on behalf of our kids.
I believe CDC did not include autism in the definition of neuropsych functioning in this report. And that's odd because my insurance company DENIES coverage for autism because it is a neuropsych diagnosis.
As always, thank you, friend.
Kim Stagliano
Huffington Post contributor
http://www .youtube.c om/watch?v =GQYISvsgq 6s
What about the study's noting that some children had better performance on some measures (fine motor coordination, attention, executive functioning)? Much more discussion lies ahead.....
Good Lord! Could the CDC get any more calculatingly fraudulent? I’ll bet money they can and they will as more parents become educated on vaccine safety (and lack thereof). It’s pathetic how the main stream media took this story hook-line and sinker making conclusions that vaccines don’t cause autism and thimerosal containing-vaccines should have never been banned or pulled from the market. (ABC) (never were banned or pulled) Is PHARMA and the CDC writing their scripts now?
Hi David,
and this is bs.
Very good analysis you have here. Thanks for not allowing the CDC to try and fool the American public again. I have one daughter, 14, with severe asd who has constant vocal and motor tics and just about everything else that you listed. My other daughter, 12, who is "neurotypical" has had speech/articulation issues since age 3. Subtract their average age and you get circa 1994, when thimerosal was in high fashion.
Why are these CDC studies so riddled with bizarre twists and turns? I think we all know the answer to that question and it has become "chronic." It is shameful and bordering on sociopathic. To quote a well known researcher, we need to call bs when we see it in research..
Teresa/Red
This study is a lot like concluding that lung cancer IS NOT CAUSED by smoking but forgetting to include smokers in the study!!
Great job CDC. And thanks to the former Merck employee for their hard work.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention continue to attempt to confound the American people and diffuse the evidence of injury our children have received in utero and post-natal by "vaccine mercury". I noticed we're not calling it by it's brand name anymore- Thimerosal? Why not? Are Eli Lilly's feelings getting hurt? CRY SHAME, America. Mother of 3 boys injured by Greed and Pride
Mercury- not good.
I've been working with animals and ther are similar concerns regarding the side effects of vaccines in long term health. Injection sites have higher incidences of cancerous cells and the developement of tumeros.
Tetanus has now been strung out to 10 yrs. or as needed for deep wounds.I think there is also studies regarding (animal) the auto immune system ( pancreatic insufficency)
I'm battling with the information myself- but i only have pets, not children
I have no idea what the series is for vaccines for kids- but perhps it can be held off, until they near school age ( preschool). It wouldn't be the first time the cure is worse than the illness.
Keep reading and keep us updated.
Funny thing is I recognized one of my habits ( Echo phenomena) I wondered why I did that.
Thank you Mr. Kirby for highlighting the dissembling of the CDC. No surprises here.
Our son is permanently disabled, age 15. He has an IQ of 40, barely speaks, and will never function independently. We are utterly devotd to getting justice, as we are certainly that he is mercury poisoned by Thimerosal, having received all of his immunizations from multi-dose vials. He is a statistical sample of ONE, providing us with a reality that cannot be skewed to produce the desired result, as is the work of the CDC.
We remain stalled in the Vaccine Trials, while our U.S. District Court case remains stayed.
I have always had faith in our system to provide justice, but given the years of cover-up and blatant self-interest on behalf of those whose duty is to protect us, I am just not so sure anymore.
We are not going away. As long as I have any breath left, we will seek out and find justice one way or another.
Sooner or later the American public will have had enough of this crap and take back their rights.
If you are so certain, then you must have proof. That will come in handy in court. Judges are sticklers for proof. So are scientists.
You do have proof, don't you?
"We are utterly devotd to getting justice, as we are certainly that he is mercury poisoned by Thimerosal, having received all of his immunizations from multi-dose vials."
Yes. We have proof. We are wholly confident that we can meet the standard of "preponderance of evidence" in U.S District Court where our case is "stayed" pending outocmes of the Vaccine Court Autism Omnibus Hearings.
I also have documents never revealed to the general public showing direct knowledge and willful circumvention of certain parties in order to defy California law.
It is interesting that there is a section of the patriot act that protects the manufacturer of thimerisol from civil lawsuits.
That in and of itself points to the fact that someone knows they are hurting our kids with this
Patriot Act isn't very damn Patriotic, is it?
Dick Armey inserted that. The law was repealed.
You must be logged in to comment. Log in or connect with