Scientists call for single inoculation option as
report links MMR to autism
VICKY COLLINS
SCIENTISTS today called for parents to be given the option of having
single measles, mumps, and rubella vaccines for their children after
a new US report showed a "highly significant association" between
the controversial triple MMR vaccine and autism.
The study, which was being published today in the online version
of the journal International Pediatrics, found children were five
times more likely to develop neurological diseases after receiving
the MMR jab than they were after receiving the diptheria, tetanus,
and whooping cough vaccine (DTwP). Parents and scientists have
expressed fears that both are implicated in the massive rise in
autism cases in western countries.
The report said a "combined MMR policy can no longer be
sustained" as a result of the findings and called for parents to be
given the option of having single vaccines for measles, mumps, and
rubella.
Dr Mark Geier and David Geier, who carried out the research,
claimed that the increased risk of autism following MMR was over
five times that for DTwP.
The findings, taken from analysis of the database kept by the US
Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), which logs reports
of adverse reactions to vaccines within the first 30 days after
inoculation, were a "significant milestone in the ongoing MMR
debate", according to the report.
Action Against Autism, the Scottish pressure group, welcomed the
report and said more research was needed urgently into possible
links both vaccines had with autism.
"We believe that the mercury (in a preservative) in the earlier
DTwP vaccine is not excreted and there is a build-up of toxins in
the child's body as a result."
- May 20th