Anti-Science Activists Label Pro-Vaccine Safety Advocates "Antivaccine" in
June 26 JAMA Article
A Response
Barbara Loe Fisher, Co-founder and President
National Vaccine Information Center
In the latest efforts by anti-science activists to label pro-vaccine safety
advocates "anti-vaccine," a trio from Northwestern University have published an
article in the June 26, 2002 Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA)
entitled "Content and Design Attributes of Antivaccination Web Sites." In what
must surely be a lull in the careers of Robert M. Wolfe, M.D., Lisa K. Sharp,
Ph.D., and Martin S. Lipsky, M.D., these three have spent a lot of time and
effort pouring over the content of what they have dubbed "antivaccination"
websites in order to come up with an analysis purporting to get to the heart of
the thinking and motives behind organizations and individuals who operate
websites questioning the safety and efficacy of vaccines.
The National Vaccine Information Center (NVIC) which operates the oldest and
largest vaccine safety advocacy website, offers the following observations about
the content of the article and the thinking and motives of its authors:
1. This is not science, it is an op ed piece.
2. The information on the internet, thank goodness, is not peer reviewed by
doctors like these authors or we wouldn't be able to believe what is on the
internet anymore than we are able to believe what is published in JAMA.
3. They need to include a dictionary in their article. What exactly is their
definition of "antivaccination?" Is it the label they apply in the second
sentence of the first paragraph to those challenging "the safety and
effectiveness of recommended vaccines?" If that is the definition of
anti-vaccine, we can label these authors anti-science for suggesting that
challenging and testing existing knowledge in science be abolished in favor of
protecting the status quo.
4. The hallmark of good science is replication. We call for a public release
of the names of all the websites these authors have labeled anti-vaccine so
their analysis can be independently analyzed.
5. In just one of the many examples of intellectual bias, the authors
perseverate about the internet access the public has to personal and
emotional experiences of families with vaccine injured children. They, however,
apparently have no problem with the use of visual images of children who were
injured or died from polio as an incentive to the public to get vaccinated.
6. This article is a sophomoric attempt to label the vaccine safety and
informed consent movement as "anti-vaccine" in order to deflect attention
from the very real gaps in scientific knowledge about the biological mechanisms
of adverse responses to vaccination. Should the Institute of Medicine be labeled
anti-vaccine for repeatedly publishing reports over the past decade calling for
increased scientific research into outstanding questions about vaccine safety?
Instead of analyzing websites which are pointing out and asking for answers to
outstanding scientific questions about vaccine safety, these doctors should be
pulling their microscopes out of storage and finding out why some children are
not able to handle the 36 doses of 11 vaccines they are now getting. They could
work to develop genetic and other biomarkers to identify and screen out high
risk children. That would go a long way toward re-instilling trust in national
vaccine policies and eliminating some of the nagging doubts about vaccines that
parents of learning disabled, hyperactive, epileptic, autistic, asthmatic,
diabetic and mentally retarded children talk about on the internet.
7. History shows that challenge to the status quo, which is embodied in much
of the free speech that is taking place on the internet, is a first necessary
step to meaningful reform of powerful institutions. We proudly stand by the
content of our website at
www.909shot.com
which details our 20 year public record of working to institute vaccine safety
and informed consent protections in the mass vaccination system, including
playing a major role in obtaining a safer pertussis vaccine for American babies
licensed in 1996. We will stand by that accomplishment any day even if we
haven't published peer reviewed articles in JAMA.
Finally, this kind of pretentious posturing by doctors who claim that they
engaged in "critical revision of the manuscript for important intellectual
content" did not remove the responsibility from JAMA editors to exercise a
little self discipline and pass on this one. What the publishing of this kind of
junk science does is fuel the suspicions of parents that those in power are
determined to silence the voices of people suffering because science will not
listen and does not care. It is a sad commentary on an even sadder reality that
faces many families with vaccine injured children.
Content and Design Attributes of Antivaccination Web Sites
Robert M. Wolfe, MD; Lisa K. Sharp, PhD; Martin S. Lipsky, MD
Context Individuals searching the Internet for vaccine information may find
antivaccination Web sites. Few published studies have systematically evaluated
these sites.
Objectives To examine antivaccination Web site attributes and to delineate
the specific claims and concerns expressed by antivaccination groups.
Design and Setting In late 2000, using a metasearch program that incorporates
10 other search engines, we reviewed and analyzed 772 links to find 12 Web sites
that promulgated antivaccination information. Analyzing links from these 12
sites yielded another 10 sites, producing a total of 22 sites for study. Using a
standardized form, 2 authors (R.M.W., L.K.S.) systematically evaluated these
sites based on specific content and design attributes.
Main Outcome Measures Presence or absence of 11 Web site content attributes (antivaccination
claims) and 10 Web site design attributes.
Results The most commonly found content claims were that vaccines cause
idiopathic illness (100% of sites), vaccines erode immunity (95%), adverse
vaccine reactions are underreported (95%), and vaccination policy is motivated
by profit (91%). The most common design attributes were the presence of links to
other antivaccination sites (100%of sites), information for legally avoiding
immunizations (64%), and the use of emotionally charged stories of children who
had allegedly been killed or harmed by vaccines (55%).
Conclusion Antivaccination Web sites express a range of concerns related to
vaccine safety and varying levels of distrust in medicine. The sites rely
heavily on emotional appeal to convey their message.
JAMA. 2002;287:3245-3248
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"A foolish faith in authority is the worst enemy of truth."
-- Albert Einstein, letter to a friend, 1901
"I know of no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society but the people themselves, and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from them, but to inform their discretion by education."
-- Thomas Jefferson, letter to William C. Jarvis, September 28, 1820
"What's the point of vaccination if it doesn't protect you from the unvaccinated?"
-- Sandy Gottstein
"Who gets to decide what the greater good is and how many will be sacrificed to it?"