In the end it was fraud. A scientific fiction was perpetrated against
society and vigorously promoted producing uncounted individuals who modified
their behavior at some danger to themselves and to others.
I have always been generally
dismissive of the autism claim, not because I actually looked at the science,
but the science claimed was at best a likely statistical fluke rather than a
real effect and would take huge expense to eliminate. Besides, where was the biological logic
behind these claims?
It really was a stretch.
My own interest came from working
at one time with autistic children and knowing enough to be skeptical of a
simple causation. The best suspect is a
prenatal developmental issue that the growing brain is unable to correct
naturally. The genesis is unknown and it
strikes across the population.
Retracted autism study an 'elaborate fraud,' British journal finds
By the CNN Wire Staff
January 5, 2011 8:14 p.m. EST
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
NEW: Dr. Andrew Wakefield says his work has been "grossly
distorted"
British journal BMJ accuses Wakefield
of faking data for his 1998 paper
"The damage to public health continues" as a result of the
autism-vaccine claim
The study was retracted and Wakefield
lost his license in 2010
Editor's note: Watch Anderson
Cooper's interview with the author of the discredited study, Dr. Andrew
Wakefield, on "AC360°" at
10 p.m. ET tonight.
(CNN) -- A now-retracted British study that linked autism to
childhood vaccines was an "elaborate fraud" that has done long-lasting
damage to public health, a leading medical publication reported Wednesday.
An investigation published by the British medical journal BMJ concludes
the study's author, Dr. Andrew Wakefield, misrepresented or altered the medical
histories of all 12 of the patients whose cases formed the basis of the 1998
study -- and that there was "no doubt" Wakefield was responsible.
"It's one thing to have a bad study, a study full of error, and
for the authors then to admit that they made errors," Fiona Godlee, BMJ's
editor-in-chief, told CNN. "But in this case, we have a very different
picture of what seems to be a deliberate attempt to create an impression that
there was a link by falsifying the data."
plainer: Autism and vaccines
Speaking to CNN's "Anderson Cooper
360," Wakefield
said his work has been "grossly distorted" and that he was the target
of "a ruthless, pragmatic attempt to crush any attempt to investigate
valid vaccine safety concerns."
The now-discredited paper panicked many parents and led to a sharp drop
in the number of children getting the vaccine that prevents measles, mumps and
rubella. Vaccination rates dropped sharply in Britain after its publication,
falling as low as 80% by 2004. Measles cases have gone up sharply in the
ensuing years.
In the United States ,
more cases of measles were reported in 2008 than in any other year since 1997,
according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. More than 90% of
those infected had not been vaccinated or their vaccination status was unknown,
the CDC reported.
"But perhaps as important as the scare's effect on infectious
disease is the energy, emotion and money that have been diverted away from
efforts to understand the real causes of autism and how to help children and
families who live with it," the BMJ editorial states.
Wakefield has been unable to reproduce his results in the face of
criticism, and other researchers have been unable to match them. Most of his
co-authors withdrew their names from the study in 2004 after learning he had
had been paid by a law firm that intended to sue vaccine manufacturers -- a serious
conflict of interest he failed to disclose. After years on controversy, the
Lancet, the prestigious journal that originally published the research,
retracted Wakefield 's
paper last February.
The series of articles launched Wednesday are investigative journalism,
not results of a clinical study. The writer, Brian Deer, said Wakefield "chiseled" the data
before him, "falsifying medical histories of children and essentially
concocting a picture, which was the picture he was contracted to find by
lawyers hoping to sue vaccine manufacturers and to create a vaccine
scare."
According to BMJ, Wakefield
received more than 435,000 pounds ($674,000) from the lawyers. Godlee said the
study shows that of the 12 cases Wakefield examined in his paper, five showed
developmental problems before receiving the MMR vaccine and three never had
autism.
"It's always hard to explain fraud and where it affects people to
lie in science," Godlee said. "But it does seem a financial motive
was underlying this, both in terms of payments by lawyers and through legal aid
grants that he received but also through financial schemes that he hoped would
benefit him through diagnostic and other tests for autism and MMR-related
issues."
But Wakefield
told CNN that claims of a link between the MMR vaccine and autism "came from
the parents, not me," and that his paper had "nothing to do with the
litigation."
"These children were seen on the basis of their clinical symptoms,
for their clinical need, and they were seen by expert clinicians and their
disease diagnosed by them, not by me," he said.
Dr. Max Wiznitzer, a pediatric neurologist at Rainbow Babies &
Children's Hospital in Cleveland, said the reporting "represents Wakefield as a person
where the ends justified the means." But he said the latest news may have
little effect on those families who still blame vaccines for their children's
conditions.
"Unfortunately, his core group of supporters is not going to let
the facts dissuade their beliefs that MMR causes autism," Wiznitzer said.
"They need to be open-minded and examine the information as everybody
else."
Wakefield's defenders include David Kirby, a journalist who has written
extensively on autism. He told CNN that Wakefield
not only has denied falsifying data, he has said he had no way to do so.
"I have known him for a number of years. He does not strike me as
a charlatan or a liar," Kirby said. If the BMJ allegations are true, then Wakefield "did a
terrible thing" -- but he added, "I personally find it hard to believe
that he did that."
1 comment:
I guess you believe that you can inject mercury and other foreign substances into children and there are no repercussions.
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