WIN or Get Huge Savings!
|
Autism By Any Other Name Source: Huffington Post By Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. and David Kirby Date: 3/12/2009
On February 12, the federal "Vaccine Court" in Washington issued a sweeping ruling in three highly touted "test cases" against families who claimed that their childrens' autism had been caused by vaccines. The
Special
Masters in those three cases found that Petitioners failed to establish
causation between MMR vaccines, the mercury-laced vaccine preservative
thimerosal, and autism (the court decision, which is under appeal,
deferred any finding on a thimerosal-only theory of causation). The
rulings could have a significant precedential impact on some 5,000
families who opted to bring their cases in the Omnibus Autism
Proceedings (OAP) hoping that the vaccine court would officially hold
that the MMR vaccine or thimerosal had caused autism in their children.
The
New York Times joined the government Health Agency (HRSA) and its big
pharma allies hailing the decisions as proof that the scientific doubts
about vaccine safety had finally been "demolished." The US Department
of Health and Human services said the rulings should "help reassure
parents that vaccines do not cause autism." The Times, which has made
itself a blind mouthpiece for HRSA and a leading defender of vaccine
safety, joined crowing government and vaccine industry flacks
applauding the decisions like giddy cheerleaders, rooting for the same
court that many of these same voices viscously derided just one year
ago, after Hannah Poling won compensation for her vaccine induced
autism.
But last week, the parents of yet another child with
autism spectrum disorder (ASD) were awarded a lump sum of more than
$810,000 (plus an estimated $30-40,000 per year for autism services and
care) in compensation by the Court, which ruled that the
measels-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine had caused acute brain damage that
led to his autism spectrum disorder.
The family of 10-year-old
Bailey Banks won their case quietly and without fanfare in June of
2007, but the ruling has only now come to public attention. In the
remarkably clear and eloquent decision, Special Master Richard Abell
ruled that the Banks had successfully demonstrated that "the MMR
vaccine at issue actually caused the conditions from which Bailey
suffered and continues to suffer."
Bailey's diagnosis is
Pervasive Developmental Disorder -- Not Otherwise Specified (PDD-NOS)
which has been recognized as an autism spectrum disorder by CDC, HRSA
and the other federal health agencies since at least the 1990s.
In
his conclusion, Special Master Abell ruled that Petitioners had proven
that the MMR had directly caused a brain inflammation illness called
acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (ADEM) which, in turn, had caused
the autism spectrum disorder PDD-NOS in the child:
The Court
found that Bailey's ADEM was both caused-in-fact and proximately caused
by his vaccination. It is well-understood that the vaccination at issue
can cause ADEM, and the Court found, based upon a full reading and
hearing of the pertinent facts in this case, that it did actually cause
the ADEM. Furthermore, Bailey's ADEM was severe enough to cause
lasting, residual damage, and retarded his developmental progress,
which fits under the generalized heading of Pervasive Developmental
Delay, or PDD [an autism spectrum disorder]. The Court found that
Bailey would not have suffered this delay but for the administration of
the MMR vaccine, and that this chain of causation was... a proximate
sequence of cause and effect leading inexorably from vaccination to
Pervasive Developmental Delay.
The Bailey decision is not an
isolated ruling. We now know of at least two other successful ADEM
cases argued in Vaccine Court. More significantly, an explosive
investigation by CBS News has found that since 1988, the vaccine court
has awarded money judgments, often in the millions of dollars, to
thirteen hundred and twenty two families whose children suffered brain
damage from vaccines. In many of these cases, the government paid out
awards following a judicial finding that vaccine injury lead to the
child's autism spectrum disorder. In each of these cases, the
plaintiffs' attorneys made the same tactical decision made by Bailey
Bank's lawyer, electing to opt out of the highly charged Omnibus Autism
Proceedings and argue their autism cases in the regular vaccine court.
In many other successful cases, attorneys elected to steer clear of the
hot button autism issue altogether and seek recovery instead for the
underlying brain damage that caused their client's autism.
Medical
records associated with these proceedings clearly tell the tale. In
perhaps hundreds of these cases, the children have all the classic
symptoms of regressive autism; following vaccination a perfectly
healthy child experiences high fever, seizures, and other illnesses,
then gradually, over about three months, loses language, the ability to
make eye contact, becomes "over-focused" and engages in stereotypical
head banging and screaming and then suffers developmental delays
characteristic of autism. Many of these children had received the
autism diagnosis. Yet the radioactive word "autism" appears nowhere in
the decision.
Instead the vaccine court Special Masters rest
their judgments on their finding that the vaccines caused some
generalized brain injury, mainly Encephalopathy/encephalitis (brain
inflammation) or "seizure disorders" -- conditions known to cause
autism-like symptoms. A large number of the children who have won these
judgments have been separately diagnosed with autism. HRSA acknowledged
this fact in a recent letter, but told us it does not keep data on how
many of these children were autistic.
The Vaccine Court, in
other words, seems quite willing to award millions of dollars in
taxpayer funded compensation to vaccine-injured autistic children, so
long as they don't have to call the injury by the loaded term "autism."
That hazard is particularly acute for vaccine victims who appear before
the Omnibus Autism Proceedings (OAP). Since that body's decisions are
closely watched, published and accorded the weight of precedent, many
lawyers consider the burden of proof for petitioners to be impossibly
high before the OAP Panel. It was for this reason that Bailey's
attorney, Mark McLaren, elected to opt out of the OAP and try his case
separately, even though Bailey has been receiving autism-related
services in his home state and was eligible to file a case in the
Court's Omnibus Autism Proceedings (OAP).
McLaren told us he
wanted to avoid the added burden facing petitioners under the media
glare and precedential weight attending OAP panel trials. "We
considered [the OAP route] because [Bailey] is on the autistic spectrum
of disorders, but we thought we could try it separately and apart from
the Omnibus, and not as a test case," explained McLaren. "We thought
we'd have a better chance if we tried to on its own merit, away from
the spotlights and the precedent setting pressures that attend these
OAP test cases - and it worked."
Bob Krakow, a leading attorney
for vaccine damaged children told that many lawyers are now convinced
that filing a claim in the OAP is a losing proposition. "There's a
growing conviction that if you have a autistic client who has also been
diagnosed with encephalopathy/encephalitis or seizure disorder, you are
better off not mentioning the word "autism" if you want to win the
case." He recommended instead filing a non autism claim like "mental
retardation with seizure disorder" for an autistic client.
Although
the vaccine court is mandated to fairly serve the victims of vaccine
injuries, their primary purpose and raison d'etre is to protect the
vaccine program and vaccine makers. Damages are doled out from a
75-cent tax on every vaccine sold and not from the vaccine makers. "You
can understand why special masters, burdened with their duty to protect
vaccine programs, might be unwilling to make the direct causal link
between autism and vaccines," Krakow observed. "If you ask the big
question and answer it in the affirmative, there is a sense that it
will damage the vaccine program irreparably."
Vaccine Court
judges are equipped with a draconian armory of weapons deployable
against plaintiffs intent on proving the causal connection between
vaccines and autism. Jury trials are prohibited. Damages are capped;
awards for pain and suffering are strictly limited and punitive damages
banned altogether. Vaccine defenders have an army of Department of
Justice attorneys with virtually unlimited resources for expert
witnesses and other litigation costs. Plaintiffs, in contrast, must
fund the up front costs for experts on their own. In a cultural choice
that clearly favors defendants, vaccine court gives overwhelming weight
to written medical records which are often inaccurate -- over all other
forms of testimony and evidence. Observations by parents and other
caretakers are given little weight.
Worst of all -- plaintiffs
have no right to discovery either against the pharmaceutical industry
or the government. Since autism is a behavioral affliction rather than
a precisely defined biological injury -- epidemiological studies are
critical to establishing its causation. But the greatest source of
epidemiological data is the Vaccine Safety Datalink (VSD) -- the
government maintained medical records of hundreds of thousands of
vaccinated children -- which HHS has gone to great lengths to keep out
of the hands of plaintiffs' attorneys and independent scientists.
Unfortunately the vaccine court has judicially anointed this corrupt
concealment by consistently denying every motion by petitioners to view
the VSD. The raw data collected in the VSD would undoubtedly provide
the epidemiological evidence needed to understand the relationship
between vaccines and autism. The absence of such studies makes it easy
for judges to say to plaintiffs they have not met their burden of
proving causation.
Meanwhile, CDC has actively, openly and
systematically suppressed and defunded epidemiological studies that
might establish a causal link. CDC has ignored repeated pleadings that
it fund peer reviewed studies of unvaccinated American cohorts like the
Amish and home-schooled children. At the same time the agency has
worked overtime ginning up a series of fatally-flawed European studies
purporting to dispute the link. Even a cursory critical examination
reveals that the oft-cited Danish, English, and Italian studies are
rank tobacco science. Many of them were funded by CDC, a badly
compromised agency, performed by vaccine industry scientists, and
published in miserably conflicted journals.
Needless to say, the
existence of these phony studies, combined with the deliberate dearth
of epidemiological evidence makes it easy for the special masters to
dodge a politically explosive finding by holding that there is
"insufficient evidence."
And, speaking of tobacco, it's worth
recalling that for sixty years the tobacco industry successfully
defended a product that was killing one out of every five of its
customers against thousands of legal actions brought by its victims and
their families. Tobacco lawyers protected the cigarette companies by
arguing that there was no proven link between tobacco and lung cancer.
Bob Krakow sees many parallels. Big tobacco uses the same tactic of
manufacturing research that seems to dispute the connection to exploit
the burdens on plaintiffs to prove causation. Big tobacco prevailed for
six decades even without the help of supportive government agencies
deliberately suppressing real science and research. In that sense
vaccine victims must leap a much higher hurdle.
Despite the
perilous odds stacked against them in vaccine court, the evidence of a
vaccine/autism link is so strong that vaccine court judges and
government agencies have now recognized at least two theories of how
vaccines cause autism: the Vaccine-to-ADEM-to-ASD link in Bailey Banks'
case, and vaccine-induced aggravation of an underlying mitochondrial
dysfunction that caused full-blown autism in the Hannah Poling case.
Both theories are different from those rejected in the three cases last
week.
Perhaps, these new disclosures will prompt The Times, with
all its influence, to actually make prudent journalistic inquiries into
the phony science CDC uses to defend its claims of "vaccine safety." If
it does, the paper will realize it has once again been ill used by
government agencies in a tragic campaign of public deceit. The Times
should make the reasonable demand that the government health agencies
finally release the Vaccine Safety Datalink for independent scientific
research and that CDC and HRSA lift their opposition to genuine
epidemiological studies that might finally provide real scientific
answers to this debate.
---
A NEW THEORY OF AUTISM CAUSATION? By David Kirby
A
ruling from Federal Vaccine Court -- that MMR vaccine caused an autism
spectrum disorder in a young boy named Bailey Banks -- flies directly
in the face of the triple-play decision against a vaccine-autism link
issued by the Court on February 12.
The Special Masters in those
three cases inferred that the vaccine-autism theory was the stuff of
Alice in Wonderland fantasy, and virtually accused the childrens'
physicians of medical malpractice. (CNN's Dr. Sanjay Gupta called the
Court's language "snide," and we agree).
Meanwhile, the US
Department of Health and Human services said the rulings should "help
reassure parents that vaccines do not cause autism." But why should
parents feel reassured when two out of five autism cases (40%) - that
we know of - have won taxpayer-funded compensation in Vaccine Court?
The Ruling
In
his decision, Special Master Abell ruled that the MMR vaccine produced
a side effect in Bailey called acute disseminated encephalomyelitis
(ADEM). ADEM is a neurological disorder characterized by inflammation
of the brain and spinal cord. The disorder results in damage to the
myelin sheath, a fatty coating that insulates nerve fibers in the
brain. ADEM can be caused by natural infections, especially from the
measles virus. But it also is a recognized post-vaccination injury,
especially from vaccines for rabies, pertussis, influenza, and MMR.
Evidence
presented to support an MMR-ADEM link was compelling. It included a
1994 report from the Institute of Medicine that said it was
biologically plausible for a vaccine to "induce... an autoimmune
response... by nonspecific activation of the T cells directed against
myelin proteins."
In fact, both parties in the Banks case agreed
"that the IOM has cited demonstrative evidence of a biologically
plausible relation between the measles vaccine and demyelinating
diseases such as ADEM," the Court wrote.
Most cases of ADEM
(80%) are in children. Symptoms usually appear within a few days to a
couple of weeks. They include: headache, delirium, lethargy, seizures,
stiff neck, fever, ataxia (incoordination), optic nerve damage, nausea,
vomiting, weight loss, irritability and changes in mental status.
I
know of thousands of parents who witnessed many of these same symptoms
afflict their children shortly after vaccination, most typically the
MMR. Did these children with autism also suffer initially from ADEM or
some subclinical version of the disorder? We may never know (physical
signs like myelin damage are transitory).
Bailey Banks was given
an MRI when his parents brought him to the hospital 16 days after his
MMR vaccine, and that helped confirm his diagnosis. The children I know
who were brought in with similar symptoms were instead given Tylenol
and told to go home.
(Interestingly, Tylenol can affect
production of glutathione, an essential antioxidant and detoxifier. A
preliminary study from UC San Diego showed that children who were given
Tylenol after their MMR vaccine were several times more likely to
develop autism than other children. "Tylenol and MMR was significantly
associated with autistic disorder," the authors wrote. "More research
needs to be completed to confirm the results of this preliminary
study.")
Is vaccine-induced ADEM (and similar disorders) a
neurological gateway for a subset of children to go on and develop an
ASD? That question will now become subject to debate. Thousands of
parents have reported similar reactions and symptoms following
vaccination, yet they lack radiological proof of ADEM or related
disorders in the form of an MRI. Meanwhile, most children with autism
do not present with myelin damage, but many do test positive for
antibodies to myelin basic protein (MBP).
Also worth noting is
that ADEM causes an inflammatory response in the brain, primarily in
the microglial cells. It is also associated with abnormal cytokine
levels in the brain, and with autoimmunity. Autism, meanwhile, has been
linked to brain inflammation, microglial cell activation, cytokine
imbalances, and autoimmunity.
In most cases, symptoms of ADEM
disappear within a few weeks or so, and the disorder may be treated
with IV cortisone to help reduce inflammation. But none of the children
with autism that I know were ever examined or treated for a possible
case of ADEM or other acute cases of encephalitis/demyelinating
disorder. By now, their myelin damage may have repaired itself, yet the
damaging agents, (MBP antibodies), persist.
ADEM is said to be
rare, but the disorder may be grossly under-diagnosed (or
misdiagnosed). Even the government's chief witness against Bailey's
case testified that he sees patients with ADEM "on a fairly regular
basis." What's more, Bailey's was the third successful vaccine-ADEM
case argued in Vaccine Court (that we know of) so far.
Can ADEM Cause PDD/ASD?
Special
Master Abell had no trouble linking MMR to ADEM in Bailey Banks' case.
But linking his ADEM to PDD/ASD was more difficult.
There is no
medical literature to support an ADEM-PDD link. The government's expert
witness, Dr. John MacDonald, testified that "all the medical literature
is negative in that regard." Instead, he proposed an alternative
hypothesis for Bailey's PDD (he suggested it was caused by glucose
transporter 1 deficiency).
But Special Master Abell berated the
government's witness in much the same way that Hastings et al. had
criticized witnesses for the families in their three cases.
"This
(glucose) hypothesis, which (MacDonald) declined to incorporate as a
plausible, probable theory of explanation, was used by Respondent to
blunt Petitioner's theory of ADEM," Abell wrote. "This hypothesis was
not given to a reasonable degree of medical probability or certainty,
and Respondent's expert admitted that it was merely 'a possible, not
necessarily a probable diagnosis.'"
Abell also chided MacDonald
for his assertion that "all the medical literature is negative" in
regards to an ADEM-PDD link. "However, soon thereafter, he corrected
this statement by clarifying, 'I can find no literature relating ADEM
to autism or [PDD],'" Abell wrote. "It may be that Respondent's
research reveals a dearth of evidence linking ADEM to PDD, but that is
not the same as positive proof that the two are unrelated, something
Respondent was unable to produce. Therefore, the statement that 'all
the medical literature is negative' is incorrect."
The Court
also took MacDonald to task for insisting that Bailey's initial
symptoms were not 100% consistent with the signs of ADEM. "His
distinction seems one of degree, not of type, and strikes as a trifle
semantic," Abell sniffed. He also noted that McDonald was having a hard
time determining Bailey's current diagnosis. "He ultimately concluded
that 'Bailey falls into the large group of children with autism/PDD in
which by our current evidence-based medicine we rarely can make a
specific diagnosis.'"
Special Master Abell seemed to lend more credence to witnesses for the Banks family.
Chief
among them was Dr. Ivan Lopez, a neurologist and psychiatrist. Dr.
Lopez testified that "the majority of patients with ADEM improve
significantly," but added that "the exception to this rule is when
patients have been exposed to measles, just like in the case of MMR
vaccine," in which case subsequent brain damage "may occur in up to 50
percent of patients." He said such events include "mental syndromes
such as PDD and others," and opined that "up to 50 percent of
patients...who have had ADEM will show (PDD) as a consequence."
Dr.
Lopez, a member of the US Military, gave his testimony by phone from
Mobile, AL where, the next day, he was to ship out for a tour of duty
in Iraq.
In his conclusion, Special Master Abell wrote:
The Court found that Bailey's ADEM was both caused-in-fact and
proximately caused by his vaccination. It is well-understood that the
vaccination at issue can cause ADEM, and the Court found, based upon a
full reading and hearing of the pertinent facts in this case, that it
did actually cause the ADEM. Furthermore, Bailey's ADEM was severe
enough to cause lasting, residual damage, and retarded his
developmental progress, which fits under the generalized heading of
Pervasive Developmental Delay, or PDD. The Court found that Bailey
would not have suffered this delay but for the administration of the
MMR vaccine, and that this chain of causation was not too remote, but
was rather a proximate sequence of cause and effect leading inexorably
from vaccination to Pervasive Developmental Delay.
And he added this:
Petitioner's theory of PDD caused by vaccine-related ADEM causally
connects the vaccination and the ultimate injury, and does so by
explaining a logical sequence of cause and effect showing that the
vaccination was the ultimate reason for the injury.
Does Bailey Banks Have Autism?
Bailey
Banks does not have "classic" or full-blown autism. But he has been
diagnosed with PDD-NOS, which is squarely on the autism spectrum of
disorders. There was quite a bit of back-and-forth on Bailey's
diagnosis in the ruling, whose heading included the term "Non-autistic
developmental delay." At several points in the proceedings, witnesses
took great pains to say that Bailey does not have "autism" which,
technical speaking, is true.
On the other hand, Special Master
Abell included notations declaring that "Pervasive Developmental Delay
describes a class of conditions, and it is apparent from the record
that the parties and the medical records are referring to Pervasive
Developmental Disorder Not Otherwise Specified (PDD-NOS)."
Even
so, some will argue that Bailey does not have an ASD. They are simply
wrong. The diagnosis of PDD-NOS was added to the list of autism
spectrum disorders in the 1980s. It was precisely from the inclusion of
these "milder" cases into the total number, that the CDC came up with
the estimate of 1-in-150 US children with some form of "autism/ASD."
So,
if Bailey does not have ASD, then the number of "autism" cases is well
below the 1-in-150 mark and needs to be revised downward (the CDC once
estimated that 40% of ASD cases were "non-autistic" in the classic
sense).
What's more, Bailey does not have a "mild" form of ASD
-- he struggles every day with endless challenges. He receives autism
services in his home state and attends a special school for children
with autism. Bailey was also completely eligible to file a case in the
Court's Omnibus Autism Proceedings (OAP), along with 5,000 other claims.
And
besides, if the government chooses after-the-fact to argue that Banks
simply has another form of brain damage but not, specifically "autism,"
is that really any comfort?
This particular theory of causation
-- Vaccine-to-ADEM-to-ASD -- is different from the three cases that
lost, and different than the theory in the Hannah Poling case
(vaccine-induced aggravation of an underlying mitochondrial dysfunction
caused full-blown autism).
So we now have two novel theories of
how vaccines might contribute to ASD -- both ADEM and mitochondrial
dysfunction are recognized by the Court as contributing factors.
And yet the government insists it has never made an award for vaccine induced ASD, just vaccine related ASD.
"The
government has never compensated, nor has it ever been ordered to
compensate, any case based on a determination that autism was actually
caused by vaccines," said David Bowman, a spokesman for HHS's Health
Resources and Services Administration. "We have compensated cases in
which children exhibited an encephalopathy, or general brain disease.
Encephalopathy may be accompanied by a medical progression of an array
of symptoms including autistic behavior, autism, or seizures."
"Some
children who have been compensated for vaccine injuries may have shown
signs of autism before the decision to compensate," he added, "or may
ultimately end up with autism or autistic symptoms, but we do not track
cases on this basis.
Unfortunately, the track record on vaccines
is cloudy in this particular Court: Three out of four ADEM cases have
been successful; and (at least) two out of five ASD cases have also won.
People
will argue that ADEM is rare; that vaccines "only" caused PDD in
Bailey; and that this was a legal and not scientific decision. The
problem is we don't know how prevalent ADEM is because we never looked;
while "PDD" is interchangeable with "ASD" in the language of public
health. And, the three cases that lost were also "legal" decisions.
Robert
Kennedy, Jr. and I would love nothing more than to reassure parents
that the nation's current vaccine program is 100% safe for all kids,
and that zero credible evidence has been presented to link vaccines
with autism. But that simply isn't true -- as at least two court cases
have found.
Copyright 2007. All Rights Reserved. |
|
FREE Vitamix 5200 Contest!
|