October 26, 2004
Michael Rosenbaum, Producer
Elliot Kirschner, Producer
60 Minutes (Wed)
524 West 57th St.
New York,
NY
10019
Dear Michael and Elliot:
The
sadness I felt after watching the segment you asked me to participate in
(Oct. 20- Saying No To Vaccination) was not just about how you made
me and the three mothers I referred to you look, it was shame for having
believed that you were being honest with me. It was humiliation for having
allowed myself to be deceived into dragging three mothers, who trusted me,
into the most inaccurate and biased broadcast presentation that I have
participated in during the past 22 years of work to prevent vaccine injuries
and deaths through public education. It was a shock when I realized that, by
my participation, I had been used to give you a vehicle to launch a
gratuitous and inaccurate personal attack on Andrew Wakefield, M.D., while
you failed to inform your viewers that the main spokesperson in your piece,
Paul Offit, M.D., is a childhood vaccine patent holder and paid consultant
for Merck, one of the largest childhood vaccine manufacturers.
From the first discussion we had on the phone to the last discussion the
three of us had while standing in the lobby of the CBS office the second
time I had flown to New York to be interviewed, you promised me that you
would accurately and fairly portray both sides of the vaccine safety debate.
Elliot, we spoke at length in phone conversations leading up to my
persuading the Moms in New York to invite you and Dan Rather into one of
their homes, about how 60 Minutes was going to take a “different” approach
to the vaccine safety debate. We talked about examining it in the social
context of health care consumers questioning vaccines, just as they are
questioning the current medical model in search of alternative and
complimentary ways of preventing disease and maintaining health. That is why
I referred you to mothers who whose health care providers were involved in
an holistic approach to maintaining wellness.
However, even if you had not misled me into thinking this was going to be
your approach, it was unfair to tell me you “did not want a piece that
talked about the scientific studies” and ask me several times not to
talk about “the scientific studies” on camera when your piece was all about
how parents should “trust the experts” and “the scientific studies.” This
was particularly unfair when the main thrust of my argument (which you both
chose not to use) was that the crisis of trust currently existing between
parents and doctors centers on the fact that what government health
officials and doctors are telling parents is true about vaccine safety in
their “studies” is in direct conflict with what parents are experiencing in
their own homes after their children are vaccinated and they watch them
regress physically, mentally and emotionally into chronic illness and
disability.
I
made that point several times in our filmed interview, including explaining
why we want federal officials to open up their closed vaccine risk databases
to independent scientific analysis. But you did not include any of this and
instead chose to imply I was either ignorant or lying when I said the
appropriate studies had not been done by government health agencies and
industry to answer the outstanding questions about vaccine safety.
I
also made the point, several times in our filmed interview, that the
National Vaccine Information Center takes an informed consent position. We
defend the right of parents and all citizens to be fully informed about the
risks and complications of diseases and the risks and complications of
vaccines and be allowed to make an informed, voluntary decision. This is in
the tradition of the right to informed consent to medical treatment, which
is the centerpiece of the ethical practice of modern medicine. We fully
support a parent’s decision to use all government recommended vaccines for
his or her child. We worked for 14 years to persuade the FDA and CDC to
license and make available a purified, less reactive DTaP vaccine for
parents who want their children to be vaccinated for those three diseases.
At the same time, we fully support a parent’s decision to selectively
vaccinate using an individualized schedule or the decision not to vaccinate.
That puts us in the pro-informed consent or anti-forced vaccination
position not in an anti-vaccine stance but you failed to make that
distinction.
At
the end of the segment, your correspondent, Dan Rather, inaccurately implies
that today states require few vaccines and only recently began giving
exemptions. He says “You may remember the days when all children had
to be vaccinated before they entered school. While all states still require
some vaccinations for school age children, many now give
exemptions to parents who don’t want their children immunized.” If you had
done your research, you would have understood that all states have
always required children to be vaccinated since the turn of the 20th
century when one or two doses of smallpox vaccine was required. For many
years, the overwhelming majority of states have had exemptions to
vaccination for medical, religious and, in about one-third of the states,
for philosophical or conscientious belief reasons. The truth is that, today,
all states require many vaccines – most require at least 31 doses of
10 vaccines for school entry. The CDC recommends 37 doses of 12 vaccines for
“universal use” by all children and the remainder of these are in the
process of being mandated.
Following questioning me on film, your correspondent, Dan Rather, stated to
me that he admired my “passion” and my ability to “articulate” my position
but that he had a ‘bias” toward “the doctors and the science.” When I
reminded him that we maintain that the “the science” is inadequate
quantitatively and qualitatively, he admitted that several of my points made
sense, including the fact that “we might be using too many vaccines” and
that the “government database on vaccine risks should be open for everyone
to see.” I am left to wonder if his “bias” toward unquestioning belief in
the infallibility of doctors like Paul Offit either got in his way or your
way in the editing room.
I
have debated physicians three times live on the “Today Show” as well as on
other television shows and discussed both the science and the ethics of
mandatory vaccination. I would have gone head to head with any doctor and
talked about the scientific studies, including those concerning pertussis
and pertussis vaccine, which was the subject of the first major book to
critique the mass vaccination system, DPT: A Shot in the Dark (1985,
Harcourt Brace Jovanovich), which I co-authored. That book was used
as a reference by the Institute of Medicine in 1991 in its report on the
adverse effects of pertussis and rubella vaccines. I will talk about the
scientific studies anywhere with anyone but you requested that I not talk
about them because you obviously wanted to deceive me about what you really
intended to do.
You
opened with a mother talking about the dangers of whooping cough, which was
entirely appropriate because it is important to discuss risks of diseases if
you are also going to discuss risks of vaccines. But you did not discuss
vaccine risks except to categorically dismiss their significance. You did
not include a mother talking about what happened when her child suffered a
vaccine reaction. On camera I talked about what happened to my child after
vaccination. I talked about what happened to other children after
vaccination. I gave you a computer CD with several hundred pages of
descriptions of vaccine reactions reported by ordinary citizens across this
country in an on-line petition calling on the CDC to open up their vaccine
risk databases. But none of that was included.
You
totally ignored the entire point of why there is a crisis of trust among
educated parents when it comes to “trusting the experts” and their
“scientific studies” because you were afraid to address the real issue: too
many educated parents’ children are regressing after vaccination and being
left with learning disabilities, ADHD, autism and other brain and immune
system disorders that are preventing them from leading healthy, normal
lives. And these educated parents are too educated to buy the line that it
was “just a coincidence” that it all happened after their children were
given multiple vaccines on the same day. Then these educated parents use
their education to analyze the methodologically flawed vaccine safety
studies, many of which are conducted by doctors paid by drug companies
making and selling vaccines. And then they realize they have been deceived.
Just like parents were deceived by doctors and pubic health officials about
the safety of anti-depressants for children.
Just like you deceived me.
Then they don’t trust the experts anymore. Then they demand the right to say
no to vaccination. Because they would rather take their chances with a
disease than allow one more doctor to put a loaded syringe into their child
and pull the trigger.
It
is really quite simple.
Michael, you know exactly what you are doing from choosing the color of the
backdrops, camera angles and lighting for each interview to the background
research you conduct on each person you consider for interviewing and the
edits you make. Elliot, you are young. The next time you think about setting
up someone who trusts you in order to advance your career, you should
remember this: in the end you will reap what you sow in this life. Always.
Very truly,

Barbara Loe Fisher
cc: Dan Rather, Correspondent
Andrew Heyward, News Division Chief
Les Moonves, President