Wednesday, 28th June 2006
MMR-row doctor hits back at experts
THE doctor who first sparked the MMR controversy hit back
today at a call to draw a line under any supposed link
between the vaccine and autism.
Thirty leading experts, including David Elliman, of Great
Ormond Street Children's Hospital in London, published an
open letter yesterday saying that parents had been "confused
and dangerously misled" over the risks associated with the
triple jab.
But Dr Andrew Wakefield, who is now director of a
research centre in Texas, said the call was irresponsible.
The doctor published a paper linking the measles, mumps
and rubella jab with autism in children in the medical
journal The Lancet in 1998 but resigned from his post at
London's Royal Free and University College Medical School
amid controversy in 2001.
Recent weeks have seen a flurry of media reports
reigniting concerns about the safety of MMR.
One report concerned a US study that found measles virus
in the guts of children with autism (Telegraph
article).
A statement from the principle researcher that the
research did not prove a link with the MMR vaccine was
largely ignored.
'Perplexing'
In a joint letter with psychologist Dr Carol Stott, Dr
Wakefield said: "It is perplexing to us why, in the face of
replication by US scientists of the earlier detection of
measles virus in the diseased intestine of UK children with
regressive autism, Elliman and colleagues should want to
'draw a line' under this clearly unresolved issue.
"This flies directly in the face of scientific logic and
professional responsibility."
Referring to the recent research, the letter added: "The
vaccine-strain gene sequences obtained from the diseased
intestine of some of these US children is deeply worrying
and runs counter to the prevailing belief that the vaccine
virus should be cleared from the body in a matter of weeks.
"Further research will determine whether or not this
association is causal."
Defending the original research, Dr Wakefield continued:
"Every aspect of the original 1998 report of the first 12
children with this disorder has been endorsed by independent
research."
LEARN more about the MMR jab, from NHS Direct.
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