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New fears as tests link triple jabs to childrens disease
Sunday Express March 18, 2001
Scientists discover damning evidence that MMR injections
could cause autism The most damning and compelling evidence yet of a link
between autism and the controversial MMR jab has been discovered by scientists.
Researchers working on two separate studies have linked
the brain dysfunction to physical abnormalities that could have been triggered
by the multiple vaccine.
The revelation will dismay thousands of parents told by
the Government that the vaccine is safe and they should go ahead with
inoculations. It will also increase pressure on ministers to fund more
research.
The new evidence is far more convincing than results of
previous studies because it is based on clinical tests rather than analysis of
statistical information.
Because scientists were investigating physical symptoms
they were able to put samples under the microscope instead of just numbers.
Paul Shattock, head of the Newcastle-based Autism Research
Unit said the studies represent the most important research into the condition
ever carried out.
He said: This is what we have been waiting for for so
many years a proper scientific look at what may trigger autism.
We knew that this research was being done, but you do not
know how strong the findings are. These findings could not be stronger in
getting to the bottom of autism.
And Rosemary Kessick, chief executive of the medical
research and support charity Allergy Induced Autism, said the findings
vindicated what have long believed.
She said: This is a huge step forward in helping prove
what we have felt from the outset which is that vaccines, viruses and food play
a major part in causing autism in a huge number of children.
Until now autism has been seen as a purely mental
disorder. But the new research suggests it may be connected to physical
conditions that could have been caused by the MMR jab.
One of the ground breaking reports found that many
autistic children suffer from a condition known as leaky gut syndrome.
The disease, which damages the intestine wall, is often
found in children with autism and very rarely in other children.
Researchers from the Royal Free Hospital in London, who
studied 68 children over a period of
two years, believe the gut disorder is linked with, or could even cause autism.
Other research has led experts to believe these symptoms
could be triggered by a reaction to the MMR jab.
World renowned
child specialist and the main author of the report, Simon Murch, said the study
was an important advance.
He said: People have seen autism as a mental, not a
physical illness. We have shown for the first time in a properly controlled
study a clear link between gut inflammation and brain damage.
A second studied carried out in the United States has
found evidence suggesting that vaccines can cause childrens immune systems to
go out of control.
Child specialists at the University of Minneapolis,
studied 35 autistic children and found 27 had abnormal immune systems. The
abnormalities had apparently been triggers by vaccines or other external
factors including viruses and certain foods.
The scientists, due to present their work at the,
conference of the American Academy for Allergy Asthma and Immunology next week,
believe this immune disorder could affect the brain and cause autism.
However the research was dismissed by Government experts
who insist there is not enough evidence to prove any link between inoculations
and autism.
David Salisbury head of vaccines at the Department of
Health, said his advisors had examined evidence from the Royal Free and could
not support their findings.
He said: We have looked at this work and the conclusions
are not convincing.
ONE patient under the care of doctors at the Royal Free is
seven-year-old Thomas Hewitt, who suffers both autism and leaky gut syndrome.
His doctors recently confirmed he is carrying the measles
virus in his gut and believe this could be linked to his symptoms.
The youngsters mother, Ann, 52, is convinced Thomas
problems were triggered by the MMR Inoculation.
She said: He was a perfectly healthy boy and had achieved
the usual developmental milestones -in fact he was very advanced for his age.
Her sons health and behaviour suddenly changed after he
was given the MMR jab at 13 months, She recalled: He became very unsettled. He
screamed and would bang his head against the walls.
Ann, from in Wood Green, North London, later discovered
Thomas had a form of autism and serious digestive dysfunction. He is now on
powerful medication, can barely eat, and suffers constant pain and diarrhoea.
The Royal Free, which runs a unit specialising in child
stomach disorders, still believes parents should vaccinate their babies.
However, it argues that the Government should fund proper scientific research
into the potential risks. The hospital currently has an 18-month waiting list
for children from across the world seeking its medical expertise and struggles to
fund research.
Thomas had started to tall nine months and was even
beginning to walk by the tin had was given the jab.
But weeks later he started become very agitated. It was
this point when he started having screaming fits and banging his head against
walls.
At first we just didnt understand it, recalls Ann.
eventually took him to his G who identified that Thomas a stomach disorder.
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WHETHER OR NOT TO VACCINATE IS AN IMPORTANT AND COMPLEX ISSUE AND SHOULD BE
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