RESPONSE TO 2008
R. SCHECHTER AND J. GRETHER PUBLICATION CONTINUING INCREASES IN AUTISM REPORTED
TO CALIFORNIAS DEVELOPMENTAL SERVICES SYSTEM WHICH ADDRESSES CALIFORNIA
DEPARTMENT OF DEVELOPMENT SERVICES DATA ON EVALUATION OF THE RELATIONSHIP
BETWEEN THIMEROSAL AND AUTISM
8 January 2008
by Boyd Haley, Professor of Chemistry, University of Kentucky,
Lexington, KY
We should all consider that
there are two top priorities in the vaccine/autism issue every American should
be concerned with. We need to develop a safe vaccination program, and we need
to find the cause of autism and eliminate it if possible. I have been a strong
proponent of investigating thimerosal as the casual agent for autism spectrum
disorders based on the biological science that shows thimerosal to be incredibly
toxic, especially to infants. I know of nothing remotely as toxic as thimerosal
that numerous infants would be exposed to before 3 to 4 years of age. Below I
present several comments regarding this issue and the 2008 Schechter-Grether
study that I think are relevant. Mainly, while the Schechter-Grether study
appears to be a well done study it suffers from the fatal flaw of assuming that
thimerosal was removed to safe levels in vaccines by 2002. They also cut a fine
edge as to time when a significant drop in autism rates would be expected.
Further, no study exists that proves our vaccine schedule alone is safe, let
alone the current one that still exposes infants to thimerosal, a concern they
do not address. The alarming concern is that these authors seem more involved
at providing material saying thimerosal is safe than they are concerned with the
obvious fact, openly presented in their own data on autism rates, which strongly
indicated that increased rates of autism started with the CDC mandated vaccine
program. References to support the comments are readily available in many recent
publications.
1.Autism was not a known, described illness until about 1941-3, 8 to 10
years after the introduction of thimerosal and similar organic thiol-mercury
compounds in biological mixtures used in medicine and other areas. This argues
against autism being a genetic illness.
2.In 1977, 10 of 13 infants treated in a single hospital by topical
application of thimerosal for umbilical cord infections died of mercury
toxicity. This same topical was used on adolescents without obvious ill effects
which strongly supports the concept that infants are very susceptible to
thimerosal toxicity.
3.The recent increase (starting about 1990) of autism spectrum disorders
correlated well with the advent of the CDC mandated vaccine program which
increased thimerosal exposures with increased vaccinations. Due to its
toxicity, thimerosal would have to be suspect for causing autism.
4.As expected by science, extensive searching for a genetic cause of autism
has not turned up a significant find that would explain the recent increased
rate in autism. The latest genetic find, at best, might explain 0.5% of autism
causation. Most agree that a genetic predisposition is likely (like those that
lead to low glutathione levels), but that a toxic exposure is absolutely
needed. Consider also, that this increased toxic exposure would have had to
occur in all 50 states at about the same time as all states have reported
similar increases in autism rates. Only something like the government
recommended vaccine program fits this need for a time dependent, uniform
exposure of a toxin throughout all the states.
5.In the Schechter-Grether study it is implied or assumed that all
thimerosal containing vaccines were gone by the end of 2002 due to their
expiration dates. I dont think this is a valid assumption. I have talked to
mothers who asked to see the vaccine inserts as late as 2004 and found
thimerosal present as a preservative in infant vaccines being used in certain
clinics. Also, in 2004 the influenza vaccine was recommended by the CDC for
infants 6 months of age and older. It would appear as if a thimerosal free
vaccine time-frame would be very hard to identify, if one ever existed. I have
read that the average age of autism diagnosis is near 44 months of age.
Therefore, while it does seem reasonable to expect a decrease in autism after 4
to 5 years of complete thimerosal removal, assuming a consistent
diagnostic protocol was used, it appears this has not been accomplished. This
means the Schechter-Grether study is likely somewhat premature in reaching the
conclusions reported in that enough time has not passed for the expected
decrease to occur and that they were quite optimistic in identifying the dates
of thimerosal reduction and underestimate exposures occurring between 2002-4.
6.If, indeed, the complete removal of thimerosal from vaccines was
not followed in an appropriate time by a decrease in autism then this would be
solid proof that thimerosal was not causal for autism. However, thimerosal has
not been completely removed from vaccines and thimerosal used at the original
levels in the manufacturing of these vaccines with trace amounts left in the
vaccines when bottled. I dont know what level trace is since it is not a
term used in science to describe an actual amount. Some called the 12.5
micrograms mercury in the older vaccines a trace amount. Bottom line, the
infants are still getting some level of thimerosal, a trace amount that is
free and an amount of ethylmercury that is bound to the proteins that induce the
immune response. If vaccines are causing autism and it appears this is a strong
possibility based on the California data and, if removing thimerosal added as a
preservative really does not reduce the autism rate then the causation is much
more complex.
Consider the possibilities that:
A. Autism may be caused by a
thimerosal modified protein that sets off an immune response or causes some
other biological reaction that can cascade with injurious effects. Since the
vaccines are manufactured with thimerosal present in abundance it is quite
likely that any cysteine containing proteins would be modified with
ethylmercury. Removal of most of the free thimerosal (or just not adding it)
would not decrease the level of any toxic modified protein produced during the
vaccines production that might be causal. Removing the thimerosal added as a
preservative would not decrease the amount of this ethylmercury modified protein
in those vaccines with trace thimerosal levels.
B. That autism could be caused
in susceptible individuals by very low thimerosal or ethylmercury modified
protein exposures due to their genetic susceptibility or other factors (general
health, gender). In this scenario the higher thimerosal exposures are not
required and the induction of autism is not thimerosal concentration dependent
at the old and new thimerosal vaccine levels, but just requires a significant
exposure level that is met by the vaccines containing the lower trace amounts
of thimerosal and past thimerosal levels in vaccine production processes. Bottom
line, if genetic susceptibility is involved then causation of autism may not
increase linearly with increased thimerosal exposure. Causation may only require
low thimerosal exposure or exposure to modified proteins. It is possible that
the reduction of thimerosal as in the trace was just not enough to produce a
safe vaccine.
Not all toxins work like alcohol
and the old dose makes the toxin is not always correct. As long as they are
used, the mere use of trace thimerosal in vaccines along with higher levels in
the flu vaccine will always prevent a conclusive answer to thimerosals
involvement in autism causation. What should be studied is the no exposure
versus the exposed populations with regard to autism rates.
7. If indeed autism is rare among the non-vaccinated Amish populations, as
reported by Dan Olmstead, I find it an amazingly oversight that the CDC and
others responsible for infant health do not fund a study in this area. This
study could go both ways, if the Amish have autism rates identical with the rest
of the population the argument would be over---neither vaccines nor thimerosal
would be causal for autism, and I personally would argue in this direction. If,
however, the autism rates in the Amish are exceptionally low then vaccines would
have to be considered as a prime suspect in causation with the presence of the
highly toxic thimerosal the main suspect.
If the results in the 2008 Schechter-Grether study hold up with time, and
complete removal of thimerosal does not cause a drop in autism rates and the
autism rates in non-vaccinated populations are low then something else in the
vaccines would have to be considered the major causation factor for autism.
However, without doing the non-vaccinated population studies there cannot be a
conclusive statement either way about either vaccines or thimerosal as being
causal for autism. The steadfast refusal of the CDC and others to support such
studies being done is part of the reason that many parents, scientists and
physicians have severe doubts about the sincerity of their efforts to resolve
this issue. This is how I think, when I review a paper submitted for publication
I always ask why an obvious experiment wasnt done. The study of non-vaccinated
populations is a very obvious experiment that the CDC and its supporters appear
to refuse to consider. This makes me suspicious that this knowledge exists and
is being suppressed because knowledge of the rate among the non-vaccinated
population would answer many questions.
Finally, the Schechter-Grether study may be
good news to the vaccine manufacturers and those who recommended and use the
mandated vaccine program as it serves as manufactured uncertainty about the
thimerosal involvement in autism causation. However, it presents a major
concern to the parents and families of infants since it implies that our
vaccines, even with most of the free thimerosal removed, may not be safe and
that our CDC does not have a clue about what to do make them safe. Common sense
would lead most to attack finding the cause of autism instead of trying to prove
something besides thimerosal is causal. The major question is are our vaccines
causing autism---only comparing the non-vaccinated to the vaccinated will
answer this question. Common sense would have lead to this comparison being
done first and being done 10-15 years ago. In the recent past I have
recommended that parents vaccinate their children with thimerosal free vaccines
as I considered them safe. If Schechter-Grether are correct, and vaccines, but
not thimerosal, correlate with increased autism rates, then I am in error
assuming vaccines are now safer with regards to autism risk than they were 2000.
DISCLAIMER: 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.
"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?"