Generation Rescue - June 26, 2007 Autism Higher in Vaccinated Boys
Here is where US Charity Generation Rescue has published the results the survey it commissioned and paid for:-California-Oregon Unvaccinated Survey - Generation Rescue - June 26, 2007And the rates of asthma are much higher too.
http://www.generationrescue.org/survey.html
Cal-Oregon Unvaccinated Survey- | Households with a child or children aged 4-17 |
- | Whether or not that child had been vaccinated |
- | Whether or not that child had any one (or more) of the following diagnosis: ADD, ADHD, Asperger's, PDD-NOS, Autism, Asthma, or Juvenile Diabetes (the final two of which were added to consider other health outcomes). |
San Diego Sonoma Orange Sacramento Marin |
Multnomah Marion Jackson Lane |
- | Vaccinated boys were 155% more likely to have a neurological disorder (RR 2.55) |
- | Vaccinated boys were 224% more likely to have ADHD (RR 3.24) |
- | Vaccinated boys were 61% more likely to have autism (RR 1.61) |
- | Vaccinated boys were 158% more likely to have a neurological disorder (RR 2.58) |
- | Vaccinated boys were 317% more likely to have ADHD (RR 4.17) |
- | Vaccinated boys were 112% more likely to have autism (RR 2.12) |
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(Note: older children may be a more reliable indicator because many children are not diagnosed until they are 6-8 years old, and we captured data beginning at age 4.) |
- | Vaccinated boys were 185% more likely to have a neurological disorder (RR 2.85) |
- | Vaccinated boys were 279% more likely to have ADHD (RR 3.79) |
- | Vaccinated boys were 146% more likely to have autism (RR 2.46) |
- | Vaccinated boys and girls were 120% more likely to have asthma (RR 2.20) |
- | No correlation established for juvenile diabetes |
- | No meaningful differences in prevalence were noted for NDs (which may be due to the smaller sample size of the study because girls represent about 20% of cases.) |
"There is no evidence that a loosening in the diagnostic criteria has contributed to increased number of autism clients...we conclude that some, if not all, of the observed increase represents a true increase in cases of autism in California...a purely genetic basis for autism does not fully explain the increasing autism prevalence. Other theories that attempt to better explain the observed increase in autism cases include environmental exposures to substances such as mercury; viral exposures; autoimmune disorders; and childhood vaccinations." |
- | U.S. children have been analyzed to compare those who received some mercury in their vaccines with those who received more mercury in their vaccines for the outcome of autism (not ADHD). The conclusion of the study was neutral, meaning a link could neither be confirmed nor denied. This study, conducted by the CDC, is the only study ever done using data of U.S. Children. |
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- | Children in several European countries have been analyzed to compare those who received mercury in their shots with those who received no mercury in their shots for the outcome of autism. The conclusions of these studies was that no association was found, although these studies have been disputed. See www.putchildrenfirst.org for more details. |
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- | Further, in 2006 the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, at the request of Senator Joseph Lieberman, issued this report which effectively conceded that both the CDC study of U.S. children and the "Danish Studies" were of poor study design and not reliable in determining whether or not Thimerosal causes autism. As this article from UPI reporter Dan Olmsted noted following the report's release: "For three years, the CDC has used a study conducted on its own Vaccine Safety Datalink to reassure parents that mercury in vaccines does not cause autism. Now a panel of government-appointed experts says there are "serious problems" with exactly the approach the CDC took." Olmsted interviewed the Chairperson of the NIEHS Committee who was quoted as saying: |
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"It's an 'open question' whether anything about vaccines -- timing, dose, preservative -- is related to the rise in diagnoses [of autism]. Some studies are stronger than others. The Verstraeten [Pediatrics] study was an improvement on other studies including the two in Denmark, both of which had serious weaknesses in their designs that limit what we can learn from them." | |
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- | No studies have ever been done to compare ND rates of children who received vaccines with those who received no vaccines, which is what our survey accomplished. Moreover, no studies have ever explored a link between vaccines and ADHD, despite the fact that 1 in 13 U.S. children have this diagnosis (versus 1 in 150 for autism). |
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- | Even the Institute of Medicine, which is often cited in the media for issuing a 2004 report refuting the relationship between mercury and autism, held a 2007 workshop on "autism and the environment" that featured "presentations and discussions on strategies for research focusing on the potential relationship between autism and an array of environmental exposures." |
Criticism: | Parents who do not vaccinate their children are less likely to seek an ND diagnosis, which explains the difference in prevalence you found. |
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Response: | We think the data disproves this, because we found no meaningful difference in prevalence for NDs between vaccinated and unvaccinated girls. If this was simply an issue of parent behavior, the girls would have shown wide discrepancies in prevalence, too, and they did not. |
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It's also interesting to consider a study completed by the CDC and published in Pediatrics, Children Who Have Received No Vaccines: Who Are They and Where Do They Live? The study noted: | |
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Criticism: | The ratio of diagnosed to undiagnosed children in this survey may be too high, indicating a potential response bias. |
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Response: | The survey does not attempt to newly establish the prevalence of
autism in the general population. The survey attempts only to shed
preliminary light on any relationship between vaccination status and
diagnosis. It is not surprising and not unexpected that parents with
children who have received a diagnosis may have been more willing to
complete the health battery included in this survey than parents of
children who have not been diagnosed. However, that does not make the
parents who did participate in this study likely to lie about, or forget
about, the vaccination status of their children. The only way a possible
"response bias" in favor of those households with a diagnosed child
would invalidate the results of this research is if asking about
vaccination status of a child independently produced a bias and that
bias interacted with the bias caused by asking about NDs. For the
concern to be valid: somehow, the main group of vaccinated families
would have to be more likely to respond if there was an ND in the
family, without also affecting the response of unvaccinated families in
the same way. While such an interaction is possible, this criticism can
be addressed by further, more elaborate research. Such a potential
interaction does not invalidate this research.
It's also worth considering that if there was response bias, we should have received a disproportionate share of our responses from parents of boys, who represent 80% of NDs, and we did not. Boys were 51.9% of responses and girls were 48.1%. (We hope there was some response bias, because our numbers show a prevalence of autism of 1 in 43, far higher than the CDC's reported number of 1 in 150.) |
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Criticism: | Parent responses is not a reliable way to gauge either a child's diagnosis or whether or not a child has been vaccinated. |
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Response: | We would point to our "Methodology" section above and cite the CDC, who also uses a parent phone survey to gauge prevalence of NDs in children. We generally mimicked their approach. |
"In this country, we have very high levels of vaccination as you
probably know, and I think this year we have record immunization levels
among all of our children, so to (select an unvaccinated group) that on
a population basis would be representative to look at incidence in that
population compared to the other population would be something that
could be done.
But as we're learning, just trying to look at autism in a community the size of Atlanta, it's very, very difficult to get an effective numerator and denominator to get a reliable diagnosis. I think those kind of studies could be done and should be done. You'd have to adjust for the strong genetic component that also distinguishes, for example, people in Amish communities who may elect not to be immunized (and) also have genetic connectivity that would make them different from populations that are in other sectors of the United States. So drawing some conclusions from them would be very difficult. I think with reference to the timing of all of this, good science does take time, and it's part of one of the messages I feel like I've learned from the feedback that we've gotten from parents groups this summer (in) struggling with developing a more robust and a faster research agenda, is let's speed this up. Let's look for the early studies that could give us at least some hypotheses to test and evaluate and get information flowing through the research pipeline as quickly as we can. So we are committed to doing that, and as I mentioned, in terms of just measuring the frequency of autism in the population some pretty big steps have been taken. We're careful not to jump ahead of our data, but we think we will be able to provide more accurate information in the next year or so than we've been able to do up to this point. And I know that is our responsibility. We've also benefited from some increased investments in these areas that have allowed us to do this, and so we thank Congress and we thank the administration for supporting those investments, not just at CDC but also at NIH and FDA." |