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THE row over the safety of the
controversial MMR vaccine intensified last night as new scientific
evidence emerged of a direct link between the jab and autism.
US researchers say they can prove
that a significant number of children suffered an abnormal response
to the measles component of MMR, triggering autism.
Their findings back up those
published five years ago by Dr Andrew Wakefield that started
widespread concerns about a link between the triple combined jab,
autism and bowel disease.
Parents of autistic children
allegedly damaged by the vaccine have welcomed the findings. Welsh
mother Julie Loch, who lives near Newport, believes her six-year-old
son Oliver developed autism after the MMR jab. She told The Western
Mail, "This study proves that our children have followed the same
normal development pattern but have regressed after having MMR and
it seems as though the key is the children's immune systems.
"These findings reinforce what
parents have been saying for so many years - something is happening
to this group of children as they are reacting abnormally, with
devastating effects. Our children cannot be ignored any longer."
The research, by Dr Vijendra Singh
and Ryan Jensen, of the Utah State University, into samples from 52
autistic children who had been vaccinated with MMR, found that
measles antibodies - a sign of an immune reaction to the measles
virus - were significantly greater in this group than among the
non-autistic children studied.
More than 80% of the autistic
children had these antibodies compared with none of the 30 normal
children and none of the 15 siblings involved in the research.
Singh and Jensen believe the
presence of antibodies show that many autistic children have
suffered an abnormal response to the measles element of the MMR
vaccine, causing them to develop these "inappropriate" antibodies.
The findings, which are published
in the journal Paedi-atric Neurology, are the result of the pair's
theory that as viruses are common trigger agents for auto-immune
diseases, where the human body attacks itself, autism could involve
a virus-induced auto-immune response, which in turn leads to autism.
Crucially, none of the autistic
children involved had any history of measles rash or wild-type
natural measles infection, which implies that the source of the
measles antibody is the strain of measles virus used in the MMR
vaccine.
This new research comes 10 days
after the High Court ruled that two girls, aged four and 10, had to
have the MMR jab, on their absent fathers' insistence, despite their
mother's concerns about its safety.
Public confidence and take-up
rates of MMR have plummeted since Dr Wakefield's controversial study
in 1998 linking it to autism and bowel disease.
In Wales the MMR take-up rate has
fallen again over the last quarter to just 78.1%, compared with a
year ago when 82.5% of children were vaccinated with MMR.
Chief Medical Officer for Wales Dr
Ruth Hall said,
"I realise that parents are
concerned about the MMR vaccine and the unproved allegation that the
vaccine can harm some children, but it is the safest way to protect
children from measles, mumps and rubella.
"The vaccine is used successfully
in over 30 countries around the world and is the vaccine recommended
by the World Health Organisation. "Measles is one of the world's
biggest killers and the recent outbreaks in the Cardiff area
demonstrate the importance of the MMR vaccine.
Measles outbreaks falling
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