MMR and the Inquest into the Death of Toddler George Fisher
The Inquest into the Death of George Fisher
By Allison Edwards
On a dismal and bitterly cold December day, the outside of Gloucester's Shire Hall's was covered up, hidden behind shabby tarpaulin drooped over scaffolding. By the lunchtime break it might have occurred to anyone attending the Inquest into the death of little George Fisher, that some caring renovation work would not have gone amiss on the due process taking place inside the building.
Let me make it clear, procedure may be being followed but there is a distinct air of collaboration amongst the professionals who seek to cover their own backs.
Positioning of the
powerful within the semi-circular chamber
was obvious, in the, more than a
hint-of-sixties styled, brightly lit
courtroom. In command of the proceedings,
for this case is
Coroner Alan Crickmore in the highest
seat with the grandiose pale wooden
surroundings. A clerk chaired at ground
level beneath him facing out to the family,
ready to read statements to the theatre
auditorium calls "all stand" as Mr Crickmore
enters (and leaves), which I thought only
happened in American dramas, obviously not.
Three seating sections sprayed out from the
centre, the middle occupied by the family
fronted by their barrister, to their right
they were flanked by pharma and nursing
representatives, and their left by
Immunisation Department bods and doctors,
most notable being Dr Liz Miller. Media and
public to the rear.
The accepted experience of these proceedings
being more "every day" to the Coroner and
professionals trained up for just such
circumstances is countered by the awesome
and menacing importance of this for the
Fishers who were thrust into this dauntingly
emotional process by the tragic experience
of discovering their son dead in his cot.
The stuff of all our nightmares'. Scant
regard or consideration seemed to be given
to how 'abnormal' all of this procedure this
is to them was highlighted by an incidence
at the beginning when Sarah's disabled
Auntie, sitting on an automatic scooter
hidden from view behind the half height
wooden semi-circular wall in front of her
dared to speak up to say (quite rightly)
that she couldn't hear. Accompanied by her
husband with a hearing aid in each ear. It
was all handled so insensitively by Coroner
Crickmore who promptly stamped his authority
and rather rudely told her to move herself
to a better position.
Deposited as she was, on the main carpeted
routeway, with no seating he ought to have
deduced why she positioned there in the
first place. It was left to her old man to
explain that she was disabled and couldn't
shift, he too was not handled with any
deference. An Usher saved the situation by
giving her a microphone/speaker set. Nerves
were by now jangling throughout the room
that if the disabled were handled like this
how would the rest of us be treated if we
dared make a sound? I think he was rather
clumsily, making a point of showing he would
not be messed with, by anyone! Quite frankly
we were ALL wondering how we were going to
hear as she bravely bore the brunt of his
opinion on interruptions.
However, he managed to do a fair old bit of it himself throughout, cutting the family barrister off before she'd reached the end of her first sentence on a couple of notable occasions and giving her a verbal dressing down. Do as I say but not as I do! She was a little too obedient for my liking. He was having no "asking a question one way, then putting it in another way in order to extract a different answer" - this sort of directness would indeed be welcomed at the everlasting hearing for Dr's Wakefield, Walker-Smith and Murch.
The mumbling mutterings of Dr Alan Joseph
Day were irritatingly quiet, yet no-one
dared say a thing. He was there to give his
professional opinion, as a local Consultant
Paediatrician, in an evidence report he'd
written in March 2008. It covered George's
medical history relating to his first
febrile convulsion in the September prior to
his death the following January, how it was
a short but dramatic seizure not a fifteen
minute one that would have caused more
concern. No further monitoring of George was
done up to his death. Dr Day did not see
George when he was alive. As far as giving
him the MMR, there were no
contra-indications as far as he was
concerned, he was asked to state his opinion
on MMR, he declined. It was remarkable. His
voice barely audible, crucial sentences were
left unfinished, hanging in the air, for
example, "each case needs it's own......"???
Not a word from the Chair on high - why not?
Perhaps he too couldn't hear.
When Mr Barton, from Sanofi, brought out the
big files he deftly rounded on Calpol and
Medi-ced as being neither a cure or
preventative of fits. He managed to visibly
quosh Dr Day's confidence in his 'standard
advice' to use them, as he was asked to read
out the conclusion from "NICE Guidelines of
'expert opinion' on the clinical handling of
fever advice recommendations" that based on
reported side-effects such drugs should not
be used with other drugs and the dangers of
it being given while the child is
dehydrated. This is the point where the
family's barrister should have leapt to her
feet and asked him to read out the list of
reported symptoms of adverse reactions to
MMR on their own product sheet because
Georgie had displayed a range of them, but
she didn't an opportunity missed.
The determined base of Sanofi's case is to
pin it on another product. Mr Barton is an
top barrister, a 'troubleshooter', oozing
confidence without a shred of arrogance,
he's eloquent and direct and very sharp.
There was, however too little Medi-ced left
in Georgies bloodstream, as he had been sick
after his milk bottle the previous evening
to give this as a credible cause of death.
No, the MMR had left Georgie with a runny
nose, straight after, diarrhoea (he also was
teething), sore ears, a temperature of 37.5,
vomiting even though he went out and played
football after, he was off his food, and had
sore red eyes which had prompted his Mum to
phone to make a doctors appointment he had
died before she could take him to. He
reacting to the three live viruses that were
in his system. It clearly tortured his Mum
wondering if she'd only given him more
perhaps his temperature would not have got
so high and he wouldn't have fitted.
It was so hard to hear how this robust
toddler died. He was a remarkably good birth
weight almost 8lbs 10oz, he breastfed well
until aged 11 months. He was the youngest of
four children, Sarah and Chris were
well-experienced and instinctive parents.
They too felt they had no real concerns. His
feisty nature was described by them both in
turn, how he could lift a baby sit-in car
above his head at age twelve months and
managed to move his cot across the wooden
floor of his bedroom whilst still in it.
Many times we heard the circumstances in the
run up to and subsequent discovery of his
body and it prompted tears around the room
and broken voices particularly that of the
Practice Nurse, Hannah Mitchell who
administered George with the MMR on January
9th. She could not recall the process of the
case but followed a regular pattern of
checking notes and medical records and
informing the parents putting them at ease.
She, of course attends regular updates.
Chris and Sarah both maintained this was not
done, they were not given the correct advice
or even a leaflet, for had they known to be
aware of monitoring their son more closely
they would have admitted him to hospital or
may not have given him the 3-in-1 jab at
all. Unbelievably, being asked just that by
the coroner, "what they would have done if
they knew" was probably again as insensitive
as could be in the circumstances, seeing as
they were sitting at his inquest. His
parents remained brave and dignified but
also fidgety with concerns that important
points were being missed out which gave rise
to a rebuke by Cornoner Crickmore for mum
Sarah Fisher when she spoke up unannounced
during Dad, Chris's testimony.
How much do a couple need to endure before
their words are heard fairly? Patience and
time seems to be granted to the emotionally
detached, cooly uncaring back saving
professionals. Why? What a price to pay 'for
the greater good'. Will the same nit-picking
as that done into Calpol and Medi-ced be
given to MMR? I very much doubt it. For all
children due for their MMR, it ought to be.
Later on Dr. Liz Miller admitted this can
happen after MMR, that febrile convulsions
can happen, and is most active on the tenth
day being a true possibility. A damning
testimony a little too carefully wrapped up
in deniability – with again, no
cross-examination worth it's salt. Dr Liz
Miller was brought in to replace Dr Fink ,
to be impartial, but how impartial when she
was party to the very introduction process
of the MMR into the UK. She's hardly going
to admit she made a mistake, so any
reservations will be ably batted away with a
swipe from her five other experts who are
coming over well.
The hardest point raised was the suggestion that on the morning of Georges death, Chris had gone in to the room and moved his sister Meg, who was awake and had got into Georgie's cot, the poor little soul had obviously spotted that something was amiss. Chris had lifted her out and put her in her own bed. There was 18 months between them but they were almost the same size as George was "big for his age", they shared a room. Again, insensitively put, the Coroner's directness asked that there could be no possibility that she might have covered George smothering him? There was none. Dad lifted her out of the cot then he'd gone off to work at 7.30am hoping not to waken George up, but not realizing he was probably already dead.
Sarah found him around twenty minutes later, having beforehand directed clingy Meg to "get into mum's bed for a cuddle" not making the connection for Meg's distress. Then she went to get Georgie, found he was cold, his arms either side of his head, bubbles at his mouth his teeth firmly clenched, dead.
A fit?
She took him downstairs wrapped in a blanket and laid him on the sofa and rang the emergency services. Police and paramedics arrived to a distraught household, they tried to resuscitate him but failed he was declared deceased at 8.25am on January 19th 2006, 10 days after his MMR. His lungs and blood showed measles virus, he had an enlarged spleen which means he was fending off a virus – or three.
I have never been to an inquest before. I am the Mum of a boy who became severely autistic after his MMR. I sat next to Jackie Fletcher, of JABS a remarkable lady and mother to Robert who has a most profound disability after his MMR too. We have reason to believe that the faith and trust we parents place in those guardians of public health on immunisations has become much more about their own protection than our childrens'. We have been betrayed. We trusted their word and gave the vaccine they recommended. So much more depth and honesty is deserved when it goes wrong but in this case it would be admitting to murder if they knew about adverse reactions yet persisted with their safety assurances. Unfortunately I predict that no-one will be held accountable and the death put down to an "unascertained cause".
My deepest sympathy is with Sarah and Chris Fisher, devoted parents of Georgie, and their family.
What a lovely little boy. I bet he was just full of life and happiness. His parents must feel utterly betrayed.
Posted by: Julie Swenson | December 05, 2008 at 07:34 PM
What part of this is confusing? What part of this is questionable?
These poor people.
Posted by: Jeanne | December 05, 2008 at 04:37 PM
Posted by: Deborah Nash | December 05, 2008 at 03:56 PM
Posted by: sorsha | December 05, 2008 at 03:52 PM
"An examination of related legal and other correspondence has now made clear the reason for this extraordinary omission. It is that child health experts, following public loss of confidence in vaccination when the risks of brain damage were first publicised, were trying to maintain a united front in preventing further debate. Even paediatricians who gave testimony on Mrs Clark’s behalf told defence lawyers that if vaccination were mentioned as a possible cause of Harry’s death, they would dispute it. Not wanting to confuse the jury, and with judges having a history of bowing to dominant medical opinion, the defence decided to stay silent on the issue."
http://www.spectator.co.uk/the-magazine/cartoons/30630/what-killed-sally-clarks-child.thtml
But, of course, the problem is not restricted to one side of the Atlantic. Here is a remarkable and frightening analysis by Ed Yazbak 'SBS: Pitfalls in Diagnosis and Demographics' formerly published in Red Flags:
http://www.jabs.org.uk/forum/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=960
Posted by: John Stone | December 05, 2008 at 03:34 PM
We need independent doctors who are not tied to government and drug companies looking at our children.
Parents all over the world need to protest outside the drug companies offices and demand to see all the trials done.
How many children have now died from the MMR vaccine?
Together, we as parents can make a difference.
Posted by: Isabella Thomas | December 05, 2008 at 03:03 PM
Looking for change to come from the US as the UK is so stitched up it would be laughable if the subject matter was a bit lighter..
Heart felt sympathy to George and family
Angus Files
Posted by: Angus Files | December 05, 2008 at 01:41 PM
(Dr Archie Kalokerinos in Australia, from his time as a GP in aboriginal communities, knows very well of this link, and has written clearly of it in his book Every Second Child. It has to do, in his experience, with the stress of the vaccination on a malnourished child's system, esp. depleting its stores of vitamin C.)
Posted by: Stan | December 05, 2008 at 12:56 PM
Okay...I thought I'd seen it all but this has got to take the cake!! What the h-e-double toothpicks kind of reasoning is that??
I mean, isn't the science *gold standard* for clincal trials testing based on "short-term" observations???
And doesn't the FDA make a "adverse event" determination based on these short-term studies????
Posted by: Kelli Ann Davis | December 05, 2008 at 12:05 PM
http://www.cmaj.ca/cgi/content/full/179/10/995
the last few paragraphs are particularly revealing:
"But Goudge also leveled blame at Smith's superiors, former chief coroner Dr. James Young and his deputy, Dr. James Cairns. "For far too long, Dr. Smith was not held accountable."
Both Young and Cairns ignored or dismissed complaints about Smith's work and "did far too little" about his mounting problems, Goudge said. In fact, the "symbiotic" relationships that existed among the men led Young and Cairns to protect Smith when his work was questioned.
Young's desire to protect the reputation of the Office of Ontario's Chief Coroner overshadowed any concern for victims of Smith's mistakes, Goudge added. "When he finally did act, it was to protect the reputation of the office, and not out of concern that individuals and the public interest may already have been harmed."
Sound familiar?
My heart and deepest sympathies go out to this family
Posted by: Randy | December 05, 2008 at 11:48 AM
http://www.jabs.org.uk/forum/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=3337&whichpage=1
The verdict is unlikely to lead to great trust in government or the vaccine programme.
Posted by: John Stone | December 05, 2008 at 06:59 AM