Report says banning mercury in children’s vaccines could prevent autism,
speech disorders
A
recent study of mercury in childhood vaccines revealed that the doses are in
excess of the Federal Safety Guidelines, and showed alarming evidence for a
link between these excessive doses of mercury from thimerasol-containing
vaccines and neurodevelopment disorders such as autism and speech disorders,
as well as heart disease.
Those were the findings of the study published in the Spring 2003 issue of
the peer-reviewed Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons (JP&S),
authored by Mark Geier, M.D., Ph.D, president of The Genetic Centers of
America, and David Geier.
The
authors also concluded that the U.S. should ban the use of thimerosal in all
vaccines. "It is to be hoped that complete removal of thimerosal from all
childhood vaccines will help to stem the tragic, apparently iatrogenic
epidemic of autism and speech disorders that the United States is now
facing," they stated.
The
authors point to exploding rates of autism since introduction of thimerosal
in vaccines. In less than 20 years, the rate increased by more than 800%,
from one in about 2,500 children in the mid-1980s to one in about 300
children in 1996.
"Many in the scientific community have, initially, been highly skeptical
that thimerosal, an ethylmercury preservative in childhood vaccines, could
be associated with neurodevelopment disorders," wrote the Geiers.
In
2001, the
Institute of
Medicine
concluded that exposure to mercury in vaccines and neurodevelopment
disorders could not be linked because of indirect and incomplete
information, but that the link was biologically possible.
This study now confirms that, showing that there was a two- to six-fold
increased incidence of neurodevelopment disorders following an additional
75-100 microgram dosage of mercury from thimerosal-containing vaccines
compared to thimerosal-free vaccines.
The
study consisted of two parts. In the first, the authors evaluated the doses
of mercury that children received from thimerosal-containing vaccines, as
part of routine
U.S. childhood
immunization schedule. Those doses were compared to the U.S. Federal Safety
Guidelines for the oral ingestion of methylmercury.
Next, in order to gauge the effects of thimerosal in vaccine recipients,
they analyzed the incidence rates of neurodevelopment disorders and heart
disease reported following thimerosal-containing vaccines in comparison to
thimerosal-free vaccines. The data used was from the government's Vaccine
Adverse Events Reporting System (VAERS). Vaccines compared were
Diptheria-Tetanus-whole-cell-Pertussis and
Diptheria-Tetanus-acellur-Pertussis.
Also, the authors looked at data from the U.S. Department of Education on
the number of children of various ages in U.S schools who were reported with
various types of disabilities in comparison to the mercury dose that
children received from thimerosal in their childhood vaccines.
"In
light of voluminous literature supporting the biologic mechanisms for
mercury-induced adverse reactions, the presence of amounts of mercury in
thimerosal-containing childhood vaccines exceeding Federal Safety Guidelines
for the oral ingestion of mercury, and previous epidemiological studies
showing adverse reactions to such vaccines, a causal relationship between
thimerosal-containing childhood vaccines and neurodevelopment disorders and
heart disease appears to be confirmed," the authors wrote.
SOURCES:
“Thimerosal in Childhood Vaccines, Neurodevelopment Disorders, and Heart
Disease in the United States,” Journal of American Physicians and
Surgeons, Volume 8 Number 1, Spring 2003.
“Study: Childhood Vaccines Exceed Federal Guidelines for Mercury & Link with
Neurological Disorders & Heart Disease in Children,” Association of American
Physicians and Surgeons, Inc., March 21, 2003.