New York – 10 of the 13 scientists who produced a 1998 study linking a childhood vaccine to several cases of autism have retracted their conclusion. Read more >
Bowel virus found in autism children who had MMR jab – Daily Mail
Safety fears over MMR have been increased still further by a study which detected signs of a chronic viral infection in the bowels of children.. Read more >
Is there a third way? – The Independent Review
Many parents remain unconvinced the MMR vaccination is safe, as illustrated by this week´s appeal court ruling that two children must have the.. Read more >
Lancet criticises MMR scientist who raised alarm – The Times
THE scientific paper that led thousands of parents to boycott the MMR vaccine was severely criticised last night by the journal that published it
Editors at The Lancet said they might never have published the study by Andrew Wakefield in 1998 if they had known that he was also paid £55,000 as part of a legal action against the vaccine´s manufacturers.
They said the payment was a potential conflict of interest that should have been declared to their editorial board. They also criticised Dr Wakefield for fading to tell them that children used in The Lancet study were planning to sue the manufacturers of the vaccine.
Last night Richard Horton, Editor of The Lancet, said: “If we had known the conflict of interest Dr Wakefield had in this work it would have been rejected. As the father of a three-year-old who has had MMR, I regret the adverse impact this paper has had.´
Mr Horton told the BBC News: ´If we had known then what we know now, we certainly would not have published the part of the paper that related to MMR. I believe there remains validity in the connection between bowel disease and autism, but I do not believe the MMR connection.´
In the wake of the report, parents in their thousands opted not to have their children vaccinated with the triple measles, mumps and rubella vaccine. In early 1995, 92.5 percent of children under two were having the triple jab. Today it stands at 79 per cent.
In 1997 there were 117 cases of measles but by 2002 the number of cases had risen to more than 300. By last September 360 cases had alredy been reported for 2003.
The Lancet´s statement came after it received serious allegations about the ethics of the study, published in 1998. The allegations, by a journalist, claimed that Dr Wakefield failed to disclose £55,000 in fees that he received from the Legal Aid Board.
This was paid to conduct a pilot project investigating the grounds for pursuing legal action on behalf of parents of allegedly vaccine-damaged children. Some of the children who were reported in The Lancet study were also part of the Legal Aid Board-funded study.
The Lancet found those complaints proved but it dismissed other allegations made in the complaint. These were that ethical approval was not obtained for the 1998 study, and that the children described in that study had been ´cherrypicked´ to make the argument seem more plausible.
But they did find that Dr Wakefield had not been open about the potential conflict of interest in the work. ´We regret that aspects of funding for parallel and related work and the existence of ongoing litigation that had been known during clinical evaluation of the children reported in the 1998 Lancet paper were not disclosed to editors,´ they wrote. ´We also regret that the overlap between children in the Lancet paper and in the Legal Aid Board-funded pilot project was not revealed to us.´
In a long statement issued last night, Dr Wakefield did not address the conflict of interest question raised by The Lancet but denied misrepresentation. ´My colleagues and 1 have acted at all times in the best medical interests of these children and will continue to do so. Whether parents perceived an association with MMR vaccine or not, whether parents had approached lawyers with the intent to seek legal redress, or whether
children were in receipt of legal aid funding or not had no bearing on their selection for ~cal investigation or inclusion in the Lancet report´ Humphrey Hodgson, the Vice-Dean of the Royal Free and University College Medical School, where Dr Wakefield´s research was carried out, denied that the study did not have ethical approval.
The investigation had been “properly submitted to and fully discussed” by the ethics committee at the Royal Free Hospital, he said in a statement.
But he conceded. ´Had the advice of the institutions been sought at the time concerning conflict of interest, they would undoubtedly have advised that any potential conflict of interest should be declared so that others could judge whether such conflicts were real´
Jeff Bradstreet, the medical director of the International Child Development Resource Centre in Florida, where Dr Wakefield now works, said that the criticisms reported to The Lancet were part of a smear campaign to discredit the MMR research.
´I think it´s a witch-hunt,´ said Dr Bradstreet the father of an autistic child, who has presented conferences around the world with Dr Wakefield. ´It is so outrageous. 1 have known Andy for about four years and he is the most ethical individual 1 have ever met.´
A conspiracy of silence or paranoid scaremongering? – Sunday Times
Is the MMR vaccine a cause of autism – or is it a vital health programme undermined by this medical maverick? Read more >
MMR: The betrayal of these tragic parents – Daily Mail
The fierce controversy over the MMR vaccine escalated dramatically yesterday. Dr Andrew Wakefield, who first suggested a link between the jab and autism.. Read more >
MMR The facts, claims, realities and the unanswered questions – The Independent
Tony Blair yesterday stepped into the future surrounding MMR vaccination after the Government´s chief medical officer dismissed the research.. Read more >
Doctor faces probe into “flawed” MMR research – Metro
The doctor responsible for “flawed” research linking the MMR jab to autism in children will be investigated by the General Medical Council.. Read more >
Thousands of Scots children get single jabs as anxious parents pay up to avoid MMR
THOUSANDS of children in Scotland have received single jabs to protect them against measles, mumps, and rubella instead of the controversial MMR vaccine during the past five years.
An investigation by the Sunday Herald has revealed worried parents are flocking to private clinics offering individual jabs costing hundreds of pounds, many years after disputed research suggested a link between the vaccine and autism. Read more >
Autism whistleblower might avoid all charges despite 20 month `witch hunt`
The doctor at the centre of the MMR vaccine controversy might not face misconduct charges after all, despite a long-running investigation by the medical watchdog. Dr Andrew Wakefield, the first doctor to suggest a link between autism and the measles, mumps and rubella jab, has been the subject of a 20-month inquiry into alleged serious professional misconduct. Read more >

