Are Vaccines Shots in the Dark?
Michael Arnold Glueck, M.D., and Robert J. Cihak,
M.D.
Wednesday, April 9, 2003
The Issue
Few issues agitate your Medicine Men more, or fill
our e-mail inboxes faster, than vaccination of children.
We've often held that compulsory vaccination has
complications that the public health community and the
general public too often ignore. Sometimes we're derided
as cranky, or worse.
But perhaps not this time.
A new study [
http://www.jpands.org/vol8no1/geier.pdf ]
in the March 2003 issue of the Journal of American
Physicians and Surgeons by Mark Geier, M.D., Ph.D.,
president of The Genetic Centers of America, and David
Geier, B.A., provides alarming evidence of an
association between mercury found in vaccines and
neurodevelopmental problems such as speech disorders and
autism, as well as heart attacks.
We usually find claims of new poisons in the
environment, food and medicines to be blown way out of
proportion to their real significance. But, as sometimes
happens, new evidence on some particular concerns tips
the balance from respectful skepticism to "Sound the
Alarms and Save the Children."
The Controversy
A chemical containing mercury, thimerosal, is a
preservative first used in the 1930s to prevent germs
from growing in vaccines packaged in containers holding
more than one dose of vaccine. Most vaccine doses are
quite small, one 50th of a teaspoon, or 0.1 cc., for
example, so at that time it made sense to supply one
small glass bottle containing 30 cc. (one ounce) rather
than 300 tiny glass vials.
In the body, this chemical is changed into
ethylmercury and thiosalicylate. The ethylmercury is
what we're worried about because a related mercury
compound, methylmercury, is poisonous. In the 1950s,
methylmercury poisoned hundreds in Japan when they ate
fish contaminated with mercury.
A Brief Background
In 1999, the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) and
the U.S. Public Health Service (PHS) issued a joint
statement which said "The large risks of not vaccinating
children far outweigh the unknown and probably much
smaller risk, if any, of cumulative exposure to
thimerosal-containing vaccines over the first six months
of life."
But "because any potential risk is of concern, the
Public Health Service, the American Academy of
Pediatrics, and vaccine manufacturers agree that
thimerosal-containing vaccines should be removed as soon
as possible."
The relationship between various vaccines and
multiple possible associated complications has been
strongly controversial. Just four months ago, on Dec. 5,
a Wall Street Journal editorial proclaimed "no
scientific study has ever found a link between vaccines
and autism."
That's no longer the case.
The Geiers note an 800 percent increase in the
incidence of autism since the mid-1980s, when officials
approved and then mandated many new vaccines for
children.
To Link or Not to Link
In the Geier study, the authors looked at the
total amount of thimerosal given to children rather
than just the amount from any single vaccine. Other
vaccine studies usually looked at only one
specific vaccine or only one specific medical condition.
As always, the dosage determines the effect.
As Dr. Jane Orient writes in the January 2003 issue
of the Civil Defense Perspectives newsletter
[http://www.oism.org/cdp/jan2003.html]:
"Using data from the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting
System maintained by the CDC and from the 2001 U.S.
Department of Education report," Dr. Geier found "a
strong correlation ... between dosage of thimerosal from
childhood vaccines and the incidence of autism, speech
disorders, and cardiac arrest, but not with common
vaccine reactions such as fever, pain, and vomiting, or
with other common childhood disabilities."
The Good News
Most vaccines don't contain thimerosal; some other
vaccines are available in thimerosal-free versions.
We hope the current study will motivate manufacturers
to package more vaccines free of thimerosal, such as in
sterile, preservative-free single-dose vials.
We also hope that scientists and drug companies will
do more research into totally new kinds of disease
prevention.
Most immediately, our hope and that of the Geiers is
that "complete removal of thimerosal from all childhood
vaccines will help to stem the tragic, apparently
iatrogenic [medically caused] epidemic of autism and
speech disorders."
And the heartbreak that goes with it.
Michael Arnold Glueck, M.D., is a
multiple-award-winning writer who comments on
medical-legal issues. Robert J. Cihak, M.D., is a past
president of the Association of American Physicians and
Surgeons.
Contact Drs. Glueck and Cihak by e-mail at
[email protected].