Blame preservative added to medication for
children's autism
By Alice Dembner, Globe Staff, 9/1/2001
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parents of three autistic Massachusetts children have filed a class action
lawsuit against the nation's major vaccine manufacturers, putting the state at
the forefront of a dispute over whether a widely used preservative in vaccines
causes neurological disease.
The suit alleges the children ''were poisoned with toxic mercury'' contained
in the preservative, thimerosal, that is used in a range of childhood vaccines,
including hepatitis B, Haemophilus b, and diphtheria/tetanus. The complaint
says as many as 500,000 children in Massachusetts may have been ''unnecessarily
exposed to dangerously high doses of toxic organic mercury'' from 1990 through
this year because of stepped-up vaccination campaigns.
The Massachusetts lawsuit is the second of at least 15 suits a team of
lawyers in Medford and Portland, Ore., are planning to file across the nation.
Altogether, lead attorney Robert Bonsignore said, as many as 30 million
American children may have been injected with vaccines containing thimerosal in
the last 10 years.
''No one can tell you what caused the autism,'' said Michael Chmura of
Waltham, father of 4-year-old Evan, who is one of the plaintiffs. ''But you
find out you're injecting poison into your kid's bloodstream, the same poison
they tell you not to give them via tuna fish.''
A spokesman for Aventis Pasteur, the lead company in the suit, said he
couldn't comment on pending litigation.
However, the Food and Drug Administration has maintained the vaccines were
and are safe.
''Certainly mercury is not good for you, but at the concentrations that were
present in the vaccines, there's no indication that they were harmful,'' said
Dr. William Egan, deputy director of the vaccine office at the FDA.
But two years ago, amid growing public concern over possible health risks,
the FDA, the Public Health Service, and the American Academy of Pediatrics
began urging vaccine makers to phase out use of the preservative. All
recommended children's vaccines are now available in versions that are either
thimerosal-free or contain only trace amounts. However, doctors may still use
those containing the preservative, and public health specialists say it is better
for children to be inoculated with those vaccines than to go without
protection.
Several studies are underway to examine the possible connection between the
vaccines and autism, a neurological disorder that results in symptoms including
extreme social withdrawal and repetitive behavior.
The suit, filed last month in Middlesex Superior Court in Cambridge, alleges
that seven vaccine manufacturers and five companies that produce thimerosal
failed to test the vaccines properly and warn parents about the presence and
risks of the additive.It says the children were given doses that
exceeded guidelines for exposure to other types of mercury set by the
Environmental Protection Agency and the National Academy of Sciences. There are
no guidelines for exposure to ethyl mercury, the form contained in thimerosal.
Evan Chmura was diagnosed with autism at age 21/2, and his father points to
the 15 vaccinations Evan had received since birth as the culprit. Chmura said
it was clear by age 2 that Evan was not developing normally. ''His speech was
delayed, he didn't want to play with other kids, he'd open and close doors
repeatedly, and he wouldn't respond when we called. He'd get very upset if his
routine was disturbed - he'd break into tears and throw a tantrum if anything
in the yard was rearranged.''
''I'm not a scientist. But there's something different in our environment
that's causing it,'' he said.
In the suit, Bonsignore lays out the circumstantial case that has led some
parents and doctors to believe that the vaccines can cause autism. Neurological
injuries in children, including autism, have soared in the last decade at the
same time that a number of new vaccines were given to children at earlier ages.
Attention has focused on vaccines for hepatitis B and mumps, measles, and
rubella.
Bonsignore says that the preservative was only needed in multidose vials of
the drugs that he says the companies produced ''solely to drive up their
profits.'' Thimerosal prevents bacterial growth, and its addition to vaccines
was approved by the FDA.
The second couple in the suit, Jared and Majorie Hansen of Framingham, have
two children with autism; Jacob, who is 3, and William, who is 2. The children
were vaccinated in Utah before the family moved here last year.
The suit seeks an unspecificed amount of money for medical care and special
education for the ill children. It also seeks damages for loss of future
earnings and quality of life as well as punitive damages against the companies.
''The ultimate goal is to find out what can be done to bring these kids back
as close to normal as possible,'' said Bonsignore.
"A foolish faith in authority is the worst enemy of truth."
-- Albert Einstein, letter to a friend, 1901
"I know of no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society but the people themselves, and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from them, but to inform their discretion by education."
-- Thomas Jefferson, letter to William C. Jarvis, September 28, 1820
"What's the point of vaccination if it doesn't protect you from the unvaccinated?"
-- Sandy Gottstein
"Who gets to decide what the greater good is and how many will be sacrificed to it?"