There are significant risks for kids
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www.jacksonville.com/tu-online/stories/052405/opl_18813122.shtml
The Florida Times-Union
May 24, 2005
I respectfully disagree with a recent letter from two doctors encouraging
parents to immunize their children because the "benefits of immunization far
outweigh the small risks."
Despite the fact that vaccines have reduced serious childhood infections, we
do our children and ourselves a disservice when we fail to research the
significant risks of permanent injury and death from vaccines.
We should demand from our pediatricians and health care providers the same
degree of testing and informed consent for vaccinations that is provided for
any other medical procedure.
Vaccines are a complex mix of viral proteins, preservatives, additives and
residuals from chemicals used in the manufacturing process. Thimerosal, a
sterilizer and preservative, is made with 49.6 percent organic mercury, a
known neurotoxin.
Five years ago, the federal government disclosed that the levels of mercury
in thimerosal-containing vaccines given to children exceeded federal safety
limits for adults by up to 50 times per shot.
Parents of vaccine-injured children bear the heavy burden of providing for
medical care, therapies and educational programs, yet have received no
reasonable explanation for the continued use of mercury in flu and other
vaccines given to our children.
Contrary to the letter writers' assurances, animal and test tube studies
published in respected medical journals by independent physicians and
researchers have provided biological evidence of a causal connection between
autism and other developmental disorders and thimerosal-containing vaccines.
Since 1988, the number of vaccines the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention recommends before a child reaches 2 years of age has nearly
tripled.
Simultaneously, we have seen asthma rates double, diabetes rates triple and
autism rates grow from a rare incidence of one in 10,000 births to one in
166 today. Today, one in every six American children has a developmental
disorder or behavioral problem.
Vaccines can be made safer. The one-size-fits-all vaccine policy and
schedule that the CDC and FDA promote is not justified by weighing the
benefits of immunization against the risk of death and injury to some of our
children. How can anyone claim the moral authority to write off an unknown
number of children to death or severe vaccine injuries for the benefit of
the rest of the population?
The recent parent movement for informed consent and safer vaccines and
vaccine policies should not be dismissed as anti-vaccine or extremist.
Informed parents may determine that it is in their child's best interests to
delay some or all vaccinations until their child is older and stronger,
until safer vaccines are produced or not to vaccinate at all.
Doctors should work with parents to make informed decisions for each child,
separate from any consideration of protecting the entire population.
No one should attempt to scare parents into vaccinating their children
without making an informed decision based only on the best interest of each
child.
BRUCE R. ANDERSON JR.,
Attorney, Jacksonville Beach