Topeka
Backed by one of the nation's biggest
critics of the use of mercury in childhood vaccines, a group of Kansas parents
on Thursday met with Atty. Gen. Phill Kline, seeking help from the state in
getting compensation from pharmaceutical companies.
"This is a bigger epidemic than 9-11 and AIDs, and no one
knows about it," Dr. Mark Geier, a geneticist who has been sounding the alarm
about the dangers of thimerosal, a mercury compound that has been used for
decades in vaccines.
Geier and a growing number of scientists and parents are
blaming the skyrocketing incidence of autism and other neurological disorders on
the presence of thimerosal in vaccinations given to children.
And they want the companies that put thimerosal in the
vaccines to pay the state for the cost of treatment and care for the
mercury-damaged children.
Linda Weinmaster of Lawrence has an 11-year-old son, Adam,
who is autistic. Weinmaster said she believed Adam's disorder was caused by a
Rogam injection she received while she was pregnant.
"We want the kids taken care of when we're gone, and we
don't want any more kids damaged by this," Weinmaster said. "This is the biggest
cover-up in medical history."
Geier said autism was an epidemic, increasing 714 percent
nationally since 1992-93, and 904 percent in Kansas, according to government
figures.
Journal-World File
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Bobbi Manning believes
thimerosal caused her son Michael's autism.
He said health care for these children would cost $2
trillion over their lifetimes, including $10 billion in Kansas. "If this is
allowed to continue, you will not recognize our society in 20 years. We'll be
like a Third World nation," he said.
Eli Lilly & Co., which had been the main manufacturer of
thimerosal, denied any connection between the compound and autism.
"There is no scientific, credible, causal link established
between thimerosal and autism," said Eli Lilly's Rob Smith. "We need to let the
science guide us. We don't support politicians and trial lawyers demagoging the
issue."
Smith said one reason for the dramatic increase in autism
may be improved methods of diagnosing the condition.
But Geier rejected that statement.
He said numerous studies showed that the increase in
autism was real. "Anyone who denies the existence of an epidemic is totally out
of left field," he said.
The parents of children with autism who met with Kline
said they wanted him and other attorneys general to join in a lawsuit against
the pharmaceutical companies, in much the same way that attorneys general sued
big tobacco companies that resulted in a $246 billion national settlement.
Their meeting was scheduled to last one hour, but went
three hours; Kline attended for about an hour.
He said he was interested in the information and wanted to
discuss it further with his assistants before deciding what course to take.
Weinmaster said she was happy with how the meeting went.
"They (Kline's assistants) said it was well worth their time. That's pretty
positive," she said.
Next week, a group of scientists, physicians and parents
of autistic children will travel to Washington, D.C., urging President Bush to
hold a conference on the increase in autism. Weinmaster and another Lawrence
resident, Bobbie Manning, whose son is autistic, will attend.
"These kids are being damaged and the taxpayers cannot
afford this anymore," Weinmaster said.
A provision in the Homeland Security bill originally
shielded Eli Lilly from lawsuits brought by parents of autistic children.
Congress repealed that provision earlier this year.
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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?"