Across the country there's outrage in much of
the autism community.
That's because politicians have effectively killed lawsuits against
pharmaceutical giants by inserting language in the Homeland Security Bill
that protects the drug companies.
So far, there are no medical studies that prove childhood shots have
anything to do autism, reports Joel DeSpain in part 2 of his special
series on the neurological disorder autism.
But lots of parents are convinced there's a connection. Part II aired
on "News 3 at Ten" on Nov. 20.
It's been hard for five-year-old Josie Wagnitz's parents to communicate
with her, but she is working at sharpening language skills.
"In
some cases, children will be able to use natural speech to communicate, in
other cases a device, or something a little more complex, will ultimately
be what the individual will use to socially engage and to converse with
other people," said Jamie Murray-Branch, UW clinical instructor.
"It's hard to put in to words how difficult it's been," said dad Mike
Wagnitz, who is a chemist, and like many parents, he's convinced childhood
vaccinations -- many of which contained mercury until recently -- somehow
triggered his daughter's autism.
Doctors don't always agree.
"Every study I've seen has really not shown that," said Dr. Tom Saari,
professor of pediatrics at UW Physicians Plus.
Large numbers of respected pediatricians believe autism is brought on
by genetics, and many don't believe there are actually more kids suffering
from it, despite skyrocketing numbers.
"I'm not convinced in my own mind that that means there's been an
actual increase in children who have autism," Saari said. "I think we've
gotten better at diagnosing it."
Josie's parents don't buy it.
"A
kid stops talking. They pull their hair out of their head. They smash
their face. They totally lose contact with their surroundings," Wagnitz
(pictured, right) said. "Are you telling me 10 years ago they couldn't
have noticed this?"
He and his wife spent over $30,000 on Josie's medical bills last year
because autism is considered a psychological disorder and much of the
expense is out of pocket.
"That is the kiss of death," said Jeanie Muckian. "No insurance company
will give you a dime for that diagnosis."
Muckian, an autism practitioner, left a hospital pediatric unit and is
now part of a growing cottage industry treating kids outside of the HMO
structure.
She says time constraints imposed by such organizations make it
virtually impossible to help autistic kids, whose varied problems require
a multitude of time intensive therapies.
"There are other doctors who won't even address the issue," Muckian
said. "I remember I was examining a 10-year-old boy who had a lot of
yeast. He had a lot of bacteria in his gut, and the mother started to cry,
and I said, 'Why are you crying?' And she said, 'No one ... ' I'm going to
start to cry ... 'No one has ever touched him before. Imagine having a
10-year-old child. Your child, that no practitioner would even touch. It's
wrong."
Some doctors are rethinking the issue, and questioning whether
environmental factors like mercury just might be triggering some autism in
some susceptible children.
"Unfortunately to many colleagues this is a road to heresy, because
it's not what we're taught," said pediatrician John Bohn. "But at some
point, I realized we're all victims of what we are taught, and our
experience, because I knew lots of things for sure which I know aren't
true now because of new information."
At the UW's Waisman Center, autism researchers in fact now suspect
there maybe any number of environmental triggers.
The Centers for Disease Control is investing $10 million with hopes of
discovering what they are.
"I think that the future looks good because the resources are now being
invested in the research that needs to be done," said Paul Shattuck, an
autism researcher. "But that's not a comfort, frankly, for families with
kids who need help right now."
"As she communicates better, she becomes less and less frustrated,"
Josie's dad said. "I'm bound and determined to make her well, and I'm not
going to stop until I do."
While there is controversy over when and how to vaccinate kids, there
seems to be consensus that immunizations are crucial to children's overall
health.
In the third part of Joel's series, he reports on how parents are
joining forces to fight autism.
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