Battle Lines Drawn Over Mercury in Shots
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BL Fisher Note:
Mercury is a neurotoxin. In countries around the world, mercury is being
eliminated as a toxic pollutant from the water and air because it can damage
the brain. Every government, every politician, every medical and scientific
organization, every doctor inside of government as well as those operating
the World Health Organization should call for a ban on injecting mercury
into the bodies of babies via vaccines. It is a "no-brainer" so to speak.
It should be against the law to inject poisons in any form into our children
for any reason.
Website
From the Los Angeles Times
Battle Lines Drawn Over Mercury in Shots
States push for bans in children's vaccines. But leading medical groups are
pushing back.
By Myron Levin
Times Staff Writer
April 10, 2006
As lawmakers in about 20 states press for bans on mercury in children's
vaccines, they are meeting stiff resistance from influential health and
medical organizations, including groups that get substantial funding from
drug makers and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Seven states have adopted the anti-mercury bills - California being one of
the first.
California's law, passed in 2004 and to take effect July 1, will prohibit
shots with more than a trace of thimerosal for pregnant women and children
younger than 3. In recent weeks, similar bills have been defeated in at
least five states.
The push for legislation comes long after the uproar over continued use of
thimerosal, a mercury-based antibacterial agent, appeared to subside in
1999, when manufacturers began phasing it out of routine pediatric vaccines.
But the controversy flared anew when flu shots containing thimerosal were
added to the childhood immunization schedule in 2004 and the CDC refused to
recommend thimerosal-free shots for infants and pregnant women.
Angered by the CDC's refusal - and fearing a backslide into more thimerosal
use - state lawmakers and anti-mercury advocates began pushing for outright
thimerosal bans.
The legislation faces opposition from groups such as the American Academy of
Pediatrics and the Immunization Action Coalition - a stance that
anti-mercury advocates say defies logic.
"We're trying to get [mercury] out of the environment," said Marilyn
Rasmussen, a Washington state senator and sponsor of a thimerosal bill that
was signed into law last month.
"Why would we be injecting it into babies? We've got to be smarter than
that."
Mercury can damage the nervous system, and infants and toddlers are thought
to be particularly at risk because of their low body weight and rapidly
developing brains. That concern is behind wide-ranging initiatives to cut
mercury pollution from industrial plants and warn pregnant women to limit
intake of some types of fish.
The American Academy of Pediatrics and its allies, including some state
health departments, say there is no proof that the small amount of mercury
in vaccines is harmful. They argue that legal restrictions could undermine
confidence in vaccines - causing people to skip their shots - and lead to
shortages.
The academy, an organization of 60,000 pediatricians, has generally taken a
zero tolerance stance on mercury, even joining a federal lawsuit seeking
stricter controls on power plant emissions. Its official policy, published
in July 2001 in its journal Pediatrics, states in part:
"Mercury in all of its forms is toxic to the fetus and children, and efforts
should be made to reduce exposure to the extent possible to pregnant women
and children as well as the general population."
Dr. Louis Z. Cooper, the academy's former president and chairman of its
Center for Child Health Research, acknowledged the group's stand on
thimerosal "does appear to be a paradox."
But Cooper said he did not believe "the science justifies codifying in state
law that we ban all mercury-containing vaccines."
He also voiced concern about the effect on immunization programs in the
developing world. The World Health Organization relies heavily on thimerosal
to immunize millions of children in poor nations, and could face cost and
logistical problems if forced to abandon it.
"If we banned mercury-containing vaccines by statute in the United States,"
Cooper said, "it would make it a lot harder to explain in other parts of the
world" why they should accept them.
Vaccine producers generally oppose the bills but have kept a low profile,
leaving health groups to lead the charge. Last year, pharmaceutical
companies contributed about $1.54 million to the academy out of a budget of
$68.2 million. Among the donors were vaccine giants Merck & Co.,
GlaxoSmithKline and Sanofi Pasteur Inc., according to tax filings and
academy officials.
The group also got about $1.55 million from the CDC for several health
programs.
Although CDC officials are not permitted to lobby states, they have warned
that thimerosal bans could create confusion about which vaccines are
acceptable and lead some parents to delay or forgo immunization of their
children.
Cooper said financial ties to drug makers and the CDC had not influenced the
academy. "The bottom line has always been what would be best for the child,"
he said.
Another opponent of bans, the Immunization Action Coalition, based in St.
Paul, Minn., runs websites and newsletters promoting immunization. The group
has been dispensing strategy advice and materials to critics of the
anti-mercury bills.
"We're scaring people away needlessly from very safe vaccines," said Diane
Peterson, the group's associate director.
The coalition last year got about $628,000 from the CDC, about 42% of its
$1.51-million budget. Industry donors listed on the coalition's website -
including Merck, GlaxoSmithKline, Sanofi Pasteur, Chiron Corp. and Wyeth
Pharmaceuticals - appear to contribute most of its remaining funds, though
the group would not disclose total industry support.
Along with California and Washington, New York, Iowa, Illinois, Missouri and
Delaware have passed thimerosal bills. The laws permit a waiving of
restrictions in a public health emergency. Bipartisan federal legislation to
ban thimerosal has 73 co-sponsors in the House of Representatives.
Introduced long before current standards for safety testing, thimerosal came
into wide use in vaccines sold in multi-dose vials to prevent bacterial
contamination from repeated insertion of needles. Single-dose vials don't
need thimerosal, but doctors and clinics historically preferred multi-dose
containers for ease of storage and lower price.
Exposure to thimerosal rose sharply in the early 1990s when the CDC added
five new shots for infants in their first six months. Many of these shots,
as well as some already prescribed, contained thimerosal. The chemical is
nearly 50% ethyl mercury, considered somewhat less toxic than the methyl
mercury in fish and power plant emissions.
The thimerosal issue erupted in 1999 when it became known that U.S. health
authorities for the first time had totaled the cumulative dose of mercury
from multiple shots. The calculation showed that infants who got their shots
on time could be exposed to mercury in excess of an Environmental Protection
Agency guideline.
As a precaution, the CDC and the American Academy of Pediatrics called on
vaccine makers in 1999 to phase out thimerosal. By 2002, the chemical had
been removed or cut to trace levels in all routine children's shots through
a switch to single-dose vials. But then mercury made a comeback in 2004,
when the CDC added flu shots to the list of prescribed vaccines.
The only supplier for children younger than 2, Sanofi Pasteur, then known as
Aventis Pasteur, marketed most of its vaccine in multi-dose vials. Then, as
now, the CDC decided not to recommend that doctors select thimerosal-free
shots for pregnant women and children.
Sanofi Pasteur since has increased its capacity to make mercury-free
vaccine, yet because the government has expressed no preference, some of the
capacity has gone unused.
In a pivotal moment in the debate, a committee of the prestigious Institute
of Medicine rebuffed claims that thimerosal was responsible for an increase
in autism cases.
In its May 2004 report, the panel declared that "the body of epidemiological
evidence favors rejection of a causal relationship between
thimerosal-containing vaccines and autism."
But parent activists and some scientists criticized the report - contending,
among other things, that the institute had given too much weight to research
in countries where thimerosal exposures had been lower than in the U.S.
Either way, the report considered only autism and not potential risks of
subtler developmental effects.
The CDC is engaged in a study of 7- to 10-year-olds to see if thimerosal
exposures might have influenced language development, physical coordination
and IQ.
And while rejecting the thimerosal-autism link, a report in November in the
Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal stated that risks to "the fetus,
premature infant and low-birth-weight infant have insufficiently been
studied."
Some say the resistance by medical groups to bans on thimerosal reflects a
profession in denial.
Cooper, of the American Academy of Pediatrics, said he could understand why
people had come to see the academy as overly defensive. "But I hope we're
big enough to be open to science," he said.
*
Times researcher Jenny Jarvie contributed to this report.
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