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Shaken Baby Syndrome or
Adverse Vaccine Reaction?
Many parents have been charged with murder for allegedly
shaking their babies to death, but medical evidence suggests that vaccinations
are to blame in a large number of these cases.
Extracted from Nexus Magazine, Volume 7, Number 6
(October-November 2000) or November-December 2000 in the USA only.
PO Box 30, Mapleton Qld 4560 Australia. editor@nexusmagazine.com
Telephone: +61 (0)7 5442 9280; Fax: +61 (0)7 5442 9381
From our web page at: www.nexusmagazine.com
© by Maureen Hickman © 2000
PO Box 274
Ettalong Beach, NSW 2257
Australia
Telephone: +61 (0)2 4342 5294
Fax: +61 (0)2 4342 5379
E-mail: acii@ozemail.com.au
Throughout history, mankind has been plagued by infectious
diseases. With the advent of modern biochemical antibiotics, many of these To
loving, caring parents, the act of child abuse is abhorrent. However, it must
be recognised that child abuse has occurred in the past and inevitably will
occur in the future. Medical professionals have the unenviable task of
establishing, by applying sound medical practice and scientific evidence, if
child abuse has in fact occurred.
Shaken Baby Syndrome (SBS) was described in
medical literature in the early 1970s1
but was recognised as a form of severe child abuse as far back as 1860.2 It is a collective term for
internal head injuries which a baby or young child may sustain from:
(a) being violently shaken (child abuse);
(b) a combination of medical problems exacerbated by a serious vaccine adverse
event;
(c) a lone serious vaccine adverse event.
According to New Scientist,3 researchers may be on the way to
identifying a biochemical signature that can help distinguish between brain
injuries caused by accidents and those resulting from violent abuse. Whilst
this research may identify SBS, it may not identify underlying medical problems
which have been exacerbated by a serious vaccine adverse event or a lone
serious vaccine adverse event. Unless sound scientific evidence is initiated
swiftly to diagnose the difference, parents could find themselves in the
position of a father in Sydney, Australia, who in 1995 was charged with the
murder of his child.
THE TRAGIC DEATH OF RIKKI LEE WALTERS
Scott Warren Walters was charged with the murder of his four-month-old baby
daughter, Rikki Lee Walters, by allegedly shaking the baby to death on 22 April
1995. Rikki Lee was born on 23 January 1995 at 41 weeks' gestation. The apgar
scores (the scale, from 1 to 10, upon which a baby's physical health is judged)
were 8 at one minute and improved to 9 at five minutes. She was vaccinated on
19 April 1995, 72 hours prior to her death. Vaccines given were triple antigen
(diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis), Hibtiter (Haemophilus influenzae),
hepatitis B and polio syrup.
The transcript of an electronically recorded
interview between the police and Scott Warren Walters is significant:
Q: Did she have any medical problems which you were aware of any time in
between those two visits to the doctors?
A: Oh, we were worried about her chest, 'cause she was, um, breathing a bit
heavy and like, we took, the doctor said she's just got a cold.
Q: When did the doctor say that?
A: When we took her to, um, get her needles and that, she was...
Q: So, you were worried about her chest when you took her to the doctors.
A: Yeah, we were; her chest was, since she was born, like she had a...she
caught a cold, and, you know, through the month...through, like, the second
month, she's caught a cold and it hasn't gone away; it was just...her breathing
was just heavy.
The transcript of the police interview with the
mother is also significant:
Q: Did Rikki Lee receive any vaccination?
A: Yeah; the other day it was her two-month-old needles, 'cause she had a cold
when they were due; ones for polio, hepatitis B, measles and mumps, all that
type of thing.
Q: Did Rikki Lee have diarrhoea?
A: No.
Q: Did she have vomiting?
A: She's always been a vomity baby after she is fed, but no more than usual.
Q: Did she have cold symptoms?
A: She's had a snuffly chest and nose, she had a really bad reaction to the
needles. She only had them on Wednesday; she had a runny nose since this.
[Author's emphasis in italics.]
The fact that Rikki Lee had a bad reaction to
vaccination was also noted by the police in the "Report of Death to the
Coroner", dated 23 April 1995:
"The deceased received two-monthly injections on Wednesday 19.4.95 on her
three-monthly period because she had been sick. The deceased then suffered a
bad reaction to the injections; however, the mother did not return her to the
doctor. [Signed by constable.]"
It is noted that the medical practitioner
said the following in a statement to police:
"I cannot recall this consultation; however, it [is] my usual practice to observe
the child and ask general questions as to the child's health. If the child had
been obviously unwell with fever, the vaccination would not have been ordered.
Further, the child did not appear to have any physical injuries or [to be]
suffering from neglect; and if the child had been, I am aware of the guidelines
in relation to [my] contacting the Department of Community Services. The child
received the vaccinations from nursing staff, as this is usually the normal
practice at the centre." [Author's emphasis in italics.]
We know that the child was ill because both
parents alluded to this fact when giving police statements. Did the medical
practitioner give adequate information to the parents on the risks and benefits
of vaccination so an informed decision could be made? The father alleged that
the medical practitioner, in a consultation lasting three to four minutes, did
not take any notes of the consultation, did not examine the child for
contraindications to the administration of a vaccine, did not question the
parents on the health of the child, and did not explain the risks and benefits
of vaccination.
If the medical practitioner did not recall
the consultation, how could he remember whether there were any physical
injuries or whether the child was suffering from neglect? Remember, the
doctor took no notes according to the parents. The doctor made the statement:
"If the child had been obviously unwell with fever, the vaccination would
not have been ordered." We know, however, that the doctor admitted only to
observing the child, so how could he make a diagnosis of whether the child had
any contraindications for the administration of the six vaccines?
The Australian Immunisation Procedures
Handbook4 is distributed by the National
Health and Medical Research Council to give medical practitioners guidance
about vaccination and to encourage them to maintain the highest standards in
the provision of vaccination services. The 5th edition of this handbook,
distributed in October 1994, is very clear on the issue of consent and advises
practitioners that informed consent must be obtained from the person being
vaccinated or, in the case of a child, the child's parent or guardian. The
handbook advises that consent should be obtained prior to each vaccination,
after the recipient's fitness and suitability have been established, and that
the person being vaccinated or the parent/guardian should be informed of all
possible side effects.
It does appear that the medical practitioner
in this instance was clearly negligent because he did not follow government
guidelines in the provision of vaccination services. He did not establish Rikki
Lee's fitness for vaccination correctly, as she was subsequently found to have
been suffering from viral pneumonia. Seventy-two hours later, disastrous
results emerged from his carelessness.
Following this vaccination, Rikki Lee slept
for 10&endash;11 hours on Friday night, 21 April 1995, the night before her
death. Was this "excessive somnolence"? This is defined by Peter O.
Behan, Professor of Neurology at Southern General Hospital, Glasgow, as "a
state of drowsiness" and is an adverse reaction to vaccination.6 He wrote: "Albeit, this may
be difficult to quantitate but, normally, mothers will be aware that the child
will be difficult to arouse, will not take its food, and most mothers will note
that the child is sleeping excessively."
According to the transcript from an
additional police interview, Scott Warren Walters was asked about feeding
details on the day Rikki Lee died:
A: ...she only, she didn't have it; she wouldn't have been two minutes; she was
on the bottle and she just...
Q: About two minutes on the bottle?
A: Yeah.
Q: And what, she wasn't interested in the food?
A: No, no.
The father admitted that Rikki Lee, following
the administration of the vaccines, had shown signs of excessive drowsiness,
projectile vomiting and diarrhoea, had not been taking the full amount of her
formula and was on continual doses of Panadol every six hours.
DOCTORS CALLED BY CROWN LEGAL TEAM
In the case of Regina v Scott Warren Walters,5 heard by Acting Judge Black in the
NSW Supreme Court in April 1998, the Crown called three expert witnesses: a
forensic pathologist, a paediatrician and a neuropathology professor.
¥ The forensic pathologist reported:
"There were no fractures of the skull; subdural haemorrhage was present
diffusely across the superior surface of the right cerebral hemisphere. There
was no evidence of bruising of the neck. There were no fractures of the rib
cage. No digested food was seen in the intestine and there was minimal faecal
material within the colon. An X-ray skeletal survey was performed, and no
evidence of old or recent trauma or other bony disease was seen."
Acting Judge Black commented on the
forensic pathologist's testimony in his Judgment:
"Examination of the fixed eyes noted haemorrhages around both sides of the
optic nerve and diffuse retinal haemorrhages... There was laryngopharyngitis
and moderate microvesicular steatosis present in the liver... Cytomegalovirus
was isolated from a nasal swab. She said that cytomegalovirus was a viral
pneumonia which she would not expect to cause death but would expect to cause
something like a bad cold, maybe bronchitis... She was not able to say how long
Ricki Lee had been suffering from viral pneumonia.
"The microscopic examination of the subdural haemorrhage told her that the
haemorrhage occurred within around 12 hours prior to Ricki Lee's death."
The forensic pathologist determined that the direct cause of death was subdural
haemorrhage occurring up to approximately 12 hours prior to death. No
antecedent causes or other significant conditions that may have contributed to
the death were listed.
In cross-examination, the following questions and answers were put and given:
Q: And first of all, it is the case, is it not, that there is some controversy
within the medical profession about this whole issue of shaken baby syndrome?
A: Yes.
Q: There are those who would debunk the whole idea completely?
A: There are certain people that say that shaking alone is insufficient to
cause injuries, that there must be impact as well; and there are others that
say that the shaking is sufficient.
¥ The paediatrician, Chairman of the Child
at Risk Committee at Westmead Hospital, Sydney, reported:
"The clinical and pathological
findings are almost certainly the result of a violent shaking injury to the
child in the short time prior to her death."
Slightly later in his report, he said this:
"The only other possible explanation for a spontaneous haemorrhage into
the brain would be some form of haemorrhagic disease such as vitamin K
deficiency in the neonatal period. I understand that she did receive her
vitamin K injection and this would virtually rule out this possibility."
In his Judgment, Acting Judge Black
commented on the paediatrician's findings:
"In the course of his evidence, the paediatrician had said that he felt
strongly about his position and I asked him to clarify what he meant by that.
He said it was not because he was trying to make out that he was zealous about
the matter; it was just that because of the range of injuries within the brain,
he felt it was consistent with violent shaking, way out ahead of any other
possibility; in terms of percentages, something like 99 per cent, something
like that.
"He was not aware that the child had been vaccinated about three days
before her death.
"He says that the presence of cytomegalovirus would not be a
contraindication for immunising the child. He said the current advice is that
immunisation should be done unless there is a particularly serious illness.
"In relation to the microvesicular steatosis found by the forensic
pathologist, he [paediatrician] did not refer to it in his report. He said in
relation to it:
'It is not something I think I could comment on, but I think I was
concentrating largely on the injuries that were documented but it is obviously
important in the context.'
'Q: When you say you cannot comment on it, are you saying you cannot comment on
microvesicular steatosis?'
'A: Yes, I would have to be told what that is. I don't know what that is.'
"I am surprised [said Judge Black], in view of those answers, that the
paediatrician felt able to be as positive in his conclusions as he was."
¥ A neuropathology professor also gave
evidence for the Crown. Commenting on his testimony, Acting Judge Black wrote
in his Judgment:
"Injuries are consistent with the child having been shaken. He was asked,
'Would it be possible for a child to have received these injuries and to appear
normal to a number of adults over a period of hours?' A: 'Yes.' When asked to
put a time frame on this, he said, 'The injuries could have happened twenty-four
to forty-eight hours prior to the arrival of the ambulance on the Saturday
night'. He was unaware that the child had been vaccinated three days prior to
the death. He noted the presence of cytomegalovirus but that did not cause him
any concern, nor did he see any relationship between that and the vaccination.
"He did not consider whether scurvy was a problem and said, 'Scurvy is a
diagnosis that...again I am no [more] expert on the clinical aspects of vitamin
deficiencies than I am on the vitamin aspects of brain problems, but scurvy
does not normally cause any brain pathology'."
It was clear from the medical evidence tendered that the subdural
haemorrhage was the cause of death and was probably less than 24 hours old.
The retinal haemorrhage would have occurred near the time of death and could
have been caused by resuscitation. In other words, there were two instances of
haemorrhage allegedly caused by the baby being shaken.
DOCTORS CALLED BY DEFENCE LEGAL TEAM
Two medical practitioners were called on behalf of the defence in the case of Regina
v Scott Warren Walters.
¥ Dr Mark Donohoe, MB, BS, gave the following
testimony:7
"The contributing and unusual factors in this case do make it difficult to
attribute the intracranial bleeding to a single cause. The range of
contributing and potentially causative factors include: hepatic mitochondrial
abnormality (as evidenced by the microvesicular steatosis of the liver);
antibiotic use in the neonatal period; cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection causing
pneumonia; poor feeding and fluid intake causing a depletion in glutathione;
multiple antigen vaccination administered while she was suffering a significant
viral infection; adverse reaction to the vaccination; the use of paracetamol to
manage her high temperature; nutritional deficiencies, including vitamins K and
C."
This is an extract from Acting Judge
Black's Judgment concerning Dr Donohoe's testimony:
"In summary, his [Dr Donohoe's] report focuses on the moderate
microvesicular steatosis present in the liver, found by the forensic
pathologist. He says this condition arises from an inherited or acquired
disorder of hepatic mitochondrial function. This was either inherited by Rikki
Lee from her mother or caused by a toxic drug reaction. This type of hepatic
damage would be expected to cause coagulation and bleeding disorders. In his
view, the administration of an antibiotic when Rikki Lee was eleven days old,
the presence of the cytomegalovirus infection, the administration of the
vaccines, the administration of Panadol and possible vitamin deficiencies all
combined to the possible sudden onset of spontaneous bruising and bleeding in a
previously apparently healthy child.
"He disagreed with the forensic pathologist's evidence that the steatosis
of the liver was consistent with viral infection from the cytomegalovirus. He
said the literature and research in the last five years had been fairly
definitive that microvesicular steatosis is a mitochondrial disorder.
"I [Judge Black] have considered the forensic pathologist's evidence about
this carefully, and on this issue I am not satisfied that Dr Donohoe is
wrong."
¥ Dr Archie Kalokerinos, MB, BS,
well-known (retired) general practitioner and author of the book Every Second
Child,8 also gave evidence for
the defence. This is an extract from his testimony:
"A possible cause of Rikki Lee's death was scurvy haemorrhage precipitated
by pertussis vaccine.
"The precipitating factor giving rise to scurvy is the endotoxin contained
in pertussis vaccine, and the amount of endotoxin varies tremendously from one
batch to another. In addition, endotoxin is more likely to be stimulated in
production because bottle-fed babies do not have normal bowel flora. Also, the
administration of antibiotics can stimulate the production of excessive amounts
of endotoxin. Vitamin C neutralises the effects of endotoxin; however, infants
exposed to endotoxin can develop a sensitivity which can precipitate extremely
acute and even fatal symptoms occurring without warning.
"The presence of a viral infection means more utilisation of vitamin C and
probably causes the production of endotoxin in the gut. All the factors
necessary for the production of scurvy haemorrhages are present in this
case."
Regarding Dr Kalokerinos and his evidence,
the Acting Judge noted:
"He said from his own experience and from the research he had done,
haemorrhages can occur in scurvy. The haemorrhages noted by the forensic
pathologist could all have been caused by scurvy. The vitamin deficiencies and
problems arising therefrom are far more common amongst Aboriginal and
part-Aboriginal children than amongst Caucasian people. (It is noted here that
the accused's evidence was that he was Aboriginal.) He says, in the present
case, the vitamin C deficiency was a very likely possibility, 'much more likely
than any other possibility'. He disagreed with the professor's evidence that
scurvy did not normally cause any brain pathology.
"It will be remembered that the professor had disclaimed any expertise in
vitamin deficiency. Further, the professor had not said that scurvy could not
cause any brain pathology; the words he used were 'does not normally cause'.
Accordingly, I am not satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that scurvy cannot
cause brain pathology."
Acting Judge Black, in the Supreme Court
of New South Wales, Criminal Division, in handing down Judgment on 24 April
1998, said:
"In relation to those two doctors [i.e., doctors for the defence], I had
the opportunity of seeing them both give their evidence and be carefully and
comprehensively cross-examined in the witness box. I have also paid attention
to the written submissions provided to me by the respective counsel. I did not
form the view that either of those doctors was putting forward a fanciful,
untenable proposition. Perhaps, putting the burden the correct way, I am not
satisfied that their evidence should be rejected as unreliable, nor am I
satisfied that their propositions are unreasonable.
"...Suffice it then to say, in this case, having regard to all the
evidence before me including, in particular, that given by witnesses whom I
have seen, my verdict is that the accused is not guilty." [Author's
emphasis in italics.]
An innocent man would have been jailed in this matter if the Judge had not
found that the medical practitioners for the defence were presenting reasonable
propositions for alternative medical reasons, including a vaccine adverse
event, rather than SBS for the death of the baby. Other accused parents have
not been so fortunate.
COMPARISON WITH SBS/VACCINE CASES IN UK
& USA
In the United States, a father has been jailed for life after a jury found him
guilty of causing SBS. Baby A.9
was born in September 1997 and vaccinated eight weeks later with diphtheria,
tetanus, pertussis (DTP), hepatitis B, polio syrup and Hib (Haemophilus
influenzae)--exactly the same vaccines that were administered to baby Rikki
Lee.
It is interesting to note that Baby A. had advanced bilateral pneumonia, whilst
Rikki Lee was diagnosed as having viral pneumonia. Both mothers noted that
their babies had chest congestion from birth to death and had a falling-off of
feeding patterns and increased lethargy following the administration of
vaccines.
Clearly, the medical condition of both babies following birth should have
precluded them from undergoing any vaccination, and especially not six vaccines
at the one time. It is obvious that the babies in the two cases mentioned had
underlying medical problems that were exacerbated by the administration of
multiple vaccines and that a vaccine adverse event contributed to each death.
The post-mortem findings on Rikki Lee found subdural haemorrhage of the right
cerebral hemisphere and retinal haemorrhages were noted. In the case of Baby
A., the findings found subdural haemorrhages of the right and left cerebral
hemispheres as well as retinal bleeding. It is also interesting to note that
both mothers had urinary tract infections during pregnancy and were treated
with antibiotics.
The father of Baby A. is fighting for his life and is presently seeking
sufficient worldwide medical expertise to file an appeal. Many medical
professionals around the world have responded to his request for support,
including Dr Archie Kalokerinos who gave evidence in the Walters trial.
Another tragic case in the United States is that of a mother who has been
jailed for life for allegedly shaking her quadruplets. The naturally conceived
quadruplets were born two months prematurely, weighing around three pounds
each. When the babies were three weeks old, they were given hepatitis B
vaccine--following which, all four babies became ill and required
hospitalisation. Two babies ultimately required insertion of shunts in their
brains to release blood and fluid as a result of subdural haemorrhages.
Immediately the babies were hospitalised, the medical professionals made a
diagnosis of SBS. These four babies are now scheduled for adoption and the
maternal grandmother has been dismissed by state authorities as a possible
candidate.
In the United Kingdom, a 35-year-old lawyer was recently convicted of the
double murder of her baby sons. Christopher died in 1996 and Harry in 1998.
Sally Clark was accused of shaking Harry to death. Because of that accusation,
it was alleged that it was too much of a coincidence to believe that
Christopher did not die in 1996 in exactly the same way, even though death at the
time was attributed to "natural causes". Harry was diagnosed with
retinal haemorrhage; however, one medical expert prior to the trial had doubts
about this diagnosis, as he claimed he had been looking at the wrong slides.
This disclosure weakened other medical experts' evidence of SBS, but it was not
sufficient to sway the jury from a verdict of guilty. Christopher was
vaccinated 23 days before his death, and Harry on the day he died; so it is
feasible that both of these babies could have died from a severe vaccine
adverse event.10
There was a divergence of medical opinion at the trial of Sally Clark as well
as at the trial of the father of Baby A. The question must be asked whether
juries are capable of understanding complex, conflicting medical evidence
empowering them to judge a person's guilt or innocence in such cases. It is
interesting to note that in the Australian case of Walters, a Judge alone found
the defendant not guilty.
ACCURATE CASE ASSESSMENT
It should be noted that SBS may not
always result in the death of a baby. In New South Wales recently, parents of a
child suffering a serious vaccine adverse event were suspected of SBS. The baby
has been removed from the care of the parents and placed with a Department of
Community Services (DOCS) foster parent. The law in New South Wales11 gives representatives of DOCS
the right to attend on the residential address of any parent suspected of abusing
children. A notice12 is served
on them to present their child forthwith to a nominated medical practitioner at
a hospital or some other place so specified so a medical examination of the
child can take place.
Under the law, the Director-General of the Department of Community Services may
keep the child for "such period of time as is reasonably necessary for the
child to be examined". A court of law will ultimately decide the fate of
the baby, i.e., whether the baby would be returned to the care of the parents
or whether it would be fostered out to family or other carers. Following a
hearing, it is possible that the court could refer the matter to the police.
The situation may then arise where a person is charged with a criminal offence
(SBS), even though the injuries to the baby may well have been reported to the
appropriate authorities by that person as a serious vaccine adverse event.
It is clear that the diagnosis of SBS requires meticulous medical
investigation. This investigation will be made much more difficult in the
future with the recent endorsement by governments around the world of hepatitis
B vaccination of all newborns. As more vaccines are released onto the market,
the number of serious vaccine adverse events--including death--will increase in
our children and at a younger age.
The problem is the failure of medical professionals to recognise that vaccine
adverse events do occur and that they are guilty of labelling them
"coincidental" or "by chance".13 In Australia, six deaths14 have been reported from vaccines
in the 27-month period from 6 June 1997 to 2 September 1999. Because of the
under-reporting and under-recognition of such events, it is likely that death
and other serious injuries occur in much higher numbers than the public has
been led to believe. In other words, it is more politically correct to label
the death or injury of a baby as SBS than to investigate the safety and
effectiveness of vaccines which are considered by governments and the majority
of the medical profession as the only panacea for the treatment of infectious
diseases.
Clinical trials prior to licensure of
vaccines are notoriously small, and this inhibits researchers' ability to
establish accurately the cause and effect relationship between vaccines and
serious adverse events. Vaccine trials are usually funded by vaccine
manufacturers themselves and are unlikely to quantify accurately the true
"risks vs benefits" ratio, lest it reflect on sales and marketing
strategies.
What is seriously lacking is independent scientific research with large numbers
of trial participants, where one half is given the vaccine and the other half
is given a placebo.
Dr Mark Donohoe, the Sydney medical practitioner who gave evidence for the
defence in the Walters trial, was very explicit in his SBS research when he
said:15
"There exist major data gaps in the medical literature regarding SBS.
These are summarised as:
¥ Lack of clear definition of cases. There is an urgent need for standard
criteria, to identify certain cases for the purpose of homogeneity in trials
and identification of the unique features of SBS as opposed to other abuse,
other medical conditions and normals.
¥ Lack of useful and specific laboratory or other markers proven to identify
SBS.
¥ Poor definition and quantification of the social and family risk factors to
provide guidance on likelihood of abuse for a given set of circumstances.
¥ There is a strong need for a checklist or other diagnostic or management tool
to assess cases and to quantify index of suspicion of shaking."
A paper in the British Medical Journal
concluded:16
"Subdural haemorrhage is common in infancy and carries a poor prognosis;
three quarters of such infants die or have profound disability. Most
cases are due to child abuse, but in a few the cause is unknown."
[Author's emphasis added.]
The authors of the paper believe that the
clinical investigation of such children should include:
¥ a full, multidisciplinary, social assessment;
¥ an ophthalmic examination;
¥ a skeletal survey supplemented with a bone scan or a skeletal survey,
repeated at around 10 days;
¥ a coagulation screen;
¥ a computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging.
However, according to Dr Mark Donohoe:
"There is an urgent need for properly controlled, prospective trials into
SBS, using a variety of controls. Until such studies are complete, published
and replicated, the current opinion on the link between SDH/RH and SBS cannot
be sustained."
RESPONSIBILITIES OF THE LEGAL AND MEDICAL
PROFESSIONS
The correct diagnosis of Shaken Baby Syndrome is a problem for those being
accused of this syndrome around the world. The cases mentioned are only a small
number that have occurred over the past few years.
It is hard to imagine the distress, confusion and despair suffered by the
accused and their families, especially those who have been jailed for life for
a crime they claim they did not commit.
Juries and lawyers rely heavily on what medical experts tell them. If medical
experts are guilty of grossly misleading a court of law by providing skewed
evidence from inadequate medical research on SBS, then innocent individuals are
suffering unnecessarily. Let us hope that the SBS medical experts comprehend
that they are not infallible and realise the untold human tragedy that can
occur if they are wrong.
Glossary
The key terms in the identification
of SBS are alleged to be:17
¥ Cerebral oedema: fluid collecting in the brain, causing tissue to swell.
¥ Haematoma: a localised accumulation of blood in tissues as a result of
haemorrhaging.
¥ Haemorrhage: a condition of bleeding, usually severe.
¥ Retinal haemorrhage (RH): bleeding of the retina, a key structure in vision
located at the back of the eye.
¥ Subdural Haematoma (SDH): a localised accumulation of blood, sometimes mixed
with spinal fluid, in the space of the brain beneath the membrane covering
called the dura matter.
Endnotes:
1. Gale Encyclopedia of Medicine (Olendorf, Jeryan, Boyden, editors),
Gale Research, Detroit, MI, vol. 4, 1999, p. 2604.
2. "Abuse and Neglect of Children", Nelson Textbook of Pediatrics
(Behrman, Kliegman, Jenson, eds), W.B. Saunders Co., Philadelphia, PA, 2000,
16th edition, chapter 35, p. 113.
3. Baker, Mitzi, "That was no accident: Biochemical markers could one day
help identify battered children", New Scientist, 28 November 1998,
p. 21.
4. The Australian Immunisation Procedures Handbook, National Health and
Medical Research Council, 5th edition, October 1994 and revised 5th edition,
1995.
5. Regina v Scott Warren Walters, Supreme Court of New South Wales, Criminal
Division, No. 70031 of 1998.
6. Behan, Peter O., MD, FACP, FRCP (Professor of Neurology, Glasgow University,
Scotland), "Report on the Neurological Complications of Pertussis Vaccination
in Children", August 1995; and letter from Professor Behan to Sydney
solicitors, dated 13 October 1993, regarding a vaccine damage claim.
7. Dr Mark Donohoe's research on Shaken Baby Syndrome, prepared for the case of
Regina v Scott Warren Walters, heard in Sydney, Australia, in 1998.
8. Kalokerinos, Archie, MD, Every Second Child, Pivot/Health Books/Keats
Publishing, CT, USA, 1981 (first published by Thomas Nelson Australia Ltd,
1974), ISBN 0-87983-250-9.
9. Information provided to the writer by the father of Baby A. in written
correspondence and history, taken by Harold E. Buttram, MD, and F. Edward
Yazbak, MD, of the Woodlands Healing Research Center, Quakertown, PA, USA,
dated 25 May 2000.
10. Driscoll, Margarette, "Shadow of Doubt", Sunday Times News
Review, UK, 28 November 1999. The article reports that Christopher was
vaccinated on the day before his death; but Dr Viera Scheibner has learned that
the boy was vaccinated 23 days before he died--one of the critical days,
according to her studies linking SIDS (sudden infant death syndrome) with
vaccinations.
11. New South Wales Children (Care and Protection) Act 1987, No. 54.
12. ibid., section 23, pp. 30-31.
13. The Australian Immunisation Procedures Handbook, 7th edition, March
2000, pp. 22, 259; also, Drs Gordon Ada and David Isaacs, Vaccination: The
Facts, The Fears, The Future, Allen & Unwin, Sydney, 2000, pp. 91, 94, ISBN
1-86508-223-6.
14. Commonwealth Department of Health and Aged Care, Communicable Diseases
Intelligence Bulletins: 21(20):313, 2 October 1997; 21(23):364, 25 December
1997; 22(7):146, 9 July 1998; 22(10):234, 1 October 1998; 23(1):34, 21 January
1999; 23(9):255, 2 September 1999.
15. Dr Mark Donohoe's research on Shaken Baby Syndrome, prepared for the case
of Regina v Scott Warren Walters, ibid.
16. Jayawant, S., Rawlinson, A., Gibbon, F., Price, J., Schulte, J., Sharples,
P., Sibert, J.R., Kemp, A.M., "Subdural haemorrhages in infants:
population-based study", British Medical Journal 317:1558-1561, 5
December 1998.
17. Gale Encyclopedia of Medicine, op. cit.
About the Author:
Maureen Hickman, JP, has been a para-legal in Sydney law firms for over 25
years and currently works part-time at Carters Law Firm. She is the author of
Vaccination: The Right Choice? (reviewed in NEXUS 7/04, June&endash;July
2000).
Editor's Note:
For additional background information, refer to "Shaken Baby Syndrome: The
Vaccination Link" by Viera Scheibner, PhD, published in NEXUS 5/05,
August&endash;September 1998.
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ALL
INFORMATION, DATA, AND MATERIAL CONTAINED, PRESENTED, OR PROVIDED HERE IS FOR
GENERAL INFORMATION PURPOSES ONLY AND IS NOT TO BE CONSTRUED AS REFLECTING THE
KNOWLEDGE OR OPINIONS OF THE PUBLISHER, AND IS NOT TO BE CONSTRUED OR INTENDED
AS PROVIDING MEDICAL OR LEGAL ADVICE. THE DECISION WHETHER OR NOT TO
VACCINATE IS AN IMPORTANT AND COMPLEX ISSUE AND SHOULD BE MADE BY YOU, AND YOU
ALONE, IN CONSULTATION WITH YOUR HEALTH CARE PROVIDER.