Study
Dismisses Fears Over Vaccine
By Emma Ross
AP Medical Writer
Wednesday, June 12, 2002; 2:21 AM
LONDON British experts have reviewed five decades of research on the
vaccine for mumps, measles and rubella and have concluded there is no link
to autism or bowel disease, as some parents have feared.
The review was commissioned by the British Medical Association after the
number of British toddlers getting the shots began to drop, sparking fears
that measles might make a comeback.
Experts say the new study and other recent authoritative reviews show
definitively that there is no evidence of a connection between the
inoculations and developmental and bowel problems in children, and that
parents should be reassured the shots are safe.
However, parents who believe their children have been harmed by the
vaccine, known as MMR, were not convinced.
Several groups, including the World Health Organization, the U.S.
Institute of Medicine, and Britain's Medical Research Council have reviewed
evidence investigating a possible link between the vaccine and autism, but
the latest project, published Tuesday in the Internet version of the journal
Clinical Evidence, is the most comprehensive.
"We looked through over 2,000 studies on millions of children, covering
50 years of research," said lead investigator Dr. Anna Donald, whose
company, Bazian Ltd., analyzes the quality of medical research. The company
was contracted by the publishing arm of the British Medical Association to
conduct the review.
"The science is very rigorous and this really does give a green light to
MMR," she said. "The science on this issue is over; the scientific debate is
dead."
However, Ann Coote from Jabs, a British-based support group for parents
who believe their children have been damaged by the MMR vaccine, said she
believes the issue has not been settled.
"It's not new evidence. It's only old evidence rehashed," she said.
"That's what's annoying parents if we've got all this money to throw away
on keeping on reviewing things, haven't we got the money to start new
research and look into it once and for all?"
Fears over the MMR vaccine intensified in 1998 after a British study
raised the possibility of a connection between the vaccine and developmental
problems in 12 children with bowel ailments. The study was conducted about
eight years after the children had been vaccinated.
By February of this year, MMR immunization in British 2-year-olds had
dropped to 84 percent, well below the 95 percent specialists say is needed
to prevent measles from returning. The decline prompted the British health
authorities to launch a campaign to persuade parents the vaccine is safe.
Donald said there is no doubt more research on autism is needed, but she
would not endorse any more research into the link between autism and MMR.
"This is a terrible distraction from limited funds that need to be
looking at autism itself and not at something that has been answered more
convincingly than most things we have ever tried to look at," she said.
Dr. John Clemens, a medical officer in the immunization program at the
World Health Organization, said WHO will continue to monitor future vaccine
safety studies but the U.N. health agency sees no need to spend more money
to further investigate a link to autism.
Dr. Neal Halsey, director of the Institute for Vaccine Safety at Johns
Hopkins University, said scientists should try to determine whether measles
viruses linger in the intestines or other tissues, but the outcome of such
studies would not alter his opinion that MMR is safe and effective.
On the Net: http://www.cdc.gov/nip/vacsafe/concerns/autism/default.htm
Letter
http://www.jabs.org.uk
© 2002 The Associated Press
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