Controversial Doctor proven right concering autism

This article was forwarded to me, and if what it claims are true… this is a major turning point. This could lead to some major changes. Cases are being won in court and goverments are conceding to pressure and admitting the truth about the MMR vaccine and the damage it can do to children. If true, this means a lot of kids who suffered brain injuries are being misdiagnosed as autistic.

Following publication of the 1998 Lancet Wakefield et al paper, “Ileal-lymphoid-nodular hyperplasia, non-specific colitis, and pervasive developmental disorder in children”, Dr Wakefield advised UK children be immunised with single spaced out doses of Measles, mumps and rubella vaccines, whilst further safety research into MMR vaccine was carried out. Ignoring this sensible, pragmatic advice could go down in history as one of the biggest blunders in medical history. It could also result in the biggest litigation since big tobbacco.

This is very good news and I hope the world is finally listening. Far too long children have been left in suffering, being refused proper tests and investigations. And all becuase they were trying to protect the reputation of a vaccine which has injured thousands. This could be a turning point, not only to make sure that kids who have suffered this injury finally get proper treatment but also to make sure those who covered it up and allowed it to happen pay for their criminal actions.

Peter

Controversial Doctor and Autism Media Channel Director Proven Right

March 8, 2013 Austin, TX

Two landmark events – a government concession in the US Vaccine Court, and a groundbreaking scientific paper – confirm that physician, scientist, and AMC Director, Dr. Andrew Wakefield, and the parents were right all along.

In a recently published December 13, 2012 vaccine court ruling, hundreds of thousands of dollars were awarded to Ryan Mojabi,[i] whose parents described how “MMR vaccinations,” caused a “severe and debilitating injury to his brain, diagnosed as Autism Spectrum Disorder (‘ASD’).”

Later the same month, the government suffered a second major defeat when young Emily Moller from Houston won compensation following vaccine-related brain injury that, once again, involved MMR and resulted in autism.

The cases follows similar successful petitions in the Italian and US courts (including Hannah Poling[ii], Bailey Banks[iii], Misty Hyatt[iv], Kienan Freeman[v], Valentino Bocca[vi], and Julia Grimes[vii]) in which the governments conceded or the court ruled that vaccines had caused brain injury. In turn, this injury led to an ASD diagnosis. MMR vaccine was the common denominator in these cases.

And today, scientists and physicians from Wake Forest University, New York, and Venezuela, reported findings that not only confirm the presence of intestinal disease in children with autism and intestinal symptoms, but also indicate that this disease may be novel.[viii]

Using sophisticated laboratory methods Dr. Steve Walker and his colleagues endorsed Wakefield’s original findings by showing molecular changes in the children’s intestinal tissues that were highly distinctive and clearly abnormal.

From 1998 Dr. Wakefield discovered and reported intestinal disease in children with autism.[ix] Based upon the medical histories of the children he linked their disease and their autistic regression to the Measles, Mumps, Rubella (MMR vaccine). He has since been subjected to relentless personal and professional attacks in the media, and from governments, doctors and the pharmaceutical industry. In the wake of demonstrably false and highly damaging allegations of scientific fraud by British journalist Brian Deer and the British Medical Journal, Dr. Wakefield is pursuing defamation proceedings against them in Texas.[x]

While repeated studies from around the world confirmed Wakefield’s bowel disease in autistic children[xi] and his position that safety studies of the MMR are inadequate,[xii] Dr. Wakefield’s career has been destroyed by false allegations.X Despite this he continues to work tirelessly to help solve the autism catastrophe.

The incidence of autism has rocketed to a risk of around 1 in 25 for children born today. Meanwhile governments, absent any explanation and fearing loss of public trust, continue to deny the vaccine-autism connection despite the concessions in vaccine court.

Speaking from his home in Austin, Texas, Dr. Wakefield said, “there can be very little doubt that vaccines can and do cause autism. In these children, the evidence for an adverse reaction involving brain injury following the MMR that progresses to an autism diagnosis is compelling. It’s now a question of the body count. The parents’ story was right all along. Governments must stop playing with words while children continue to be damaged. My hope is that recognition of the intestinal disease in these children will lead to the relief of their suffering. This is long, long overdue.”

Dr. Andrew Wakefield is a best selling author,9 founder of the autism research non-profit Strategic Autism Initiative (SAI), and Director of the Autism Media Channel.

Source

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YAH
March 9, 2013

Shocking that the government is so evel and hellbent on ignoring the truth. If autism can be prevented it is so worth it.

March 9, 2013

The scientific community has denounced his findings, that is very different from just denying. And judges awarding damages does not prove scientific findings. It just proves that someone gave an argument that convinced someone else. While I sincerely sympathize for parents and children affected by this (my husband is on the spectrum as well), I am frightened by what this will cause…

March 9, 2013

…millions of people dying of diseases that we can easily prevent and even eradicate is not worth it to me. I have seen the evidence in my own family and the families of others which links autism and other disorders on the spectrum to genetic origins. These families should, at the very least, explore this possibility before denying entire nations the right to survival from devastating epidemics.

March 9, 2013

Saisei: The scientific community no longer thinks that anymore. The British Journal of Medicine retracted it’s claims against Dr. Wakefield in 2011. http://www.naturalnews.com/033425_BMJ_Andrew_Wakefield.html The BMJ admited that fraud claim against Dr. Andrew Wakefield has no basis in fact. His work is now considered accurate, and governments are conceding this incourt: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/david-kirby/government-concedes-vacci_b_88323.html That isn’t a court decision, that is a confession by the government. Last time I checked, a confession was sound evidence… right?

March 9, 2013

Wow, I couldn’t disagree more on this one, sorry. Are you taking the piss?

March 9, 2013

No sir, I am not ‘taking the piss’. There have been at least three major events concerning the connections between vaccines (namely the MMR) and autism, and this time around, some of the cases were settled because the governmen stepped up and ‘conceded’ that the plantif was right and paid out the case. You’re free to have an opinion, but when more than one government steps up andadmits to it, it’s hard to disprove an open admission of guilt.

March 9, 2013

I’m afraid the first article is not any sort of evidence of a retraction of its claims against his findings…furthermore it is an unprofessional article(not news) wrought with opinions (reference the very first paragraph…very opinionated and biased) and sourced from Autism websites. One of the lower paragraphs describes the UK’s specialist journalist of the year(April 2011)as a “freelance hack”

March 9, 2013

I do think, however, that it’s unfortunate that so many children are now suffering from Autism and associated disorders. My husband and I have spoken to many experts on this spectrum and will continue to stay apprised of any accepted scientific developments. Witch hunts are not for us ,but when so many desperate people want to pin their hopes on false half-truths, it saddens those who CAN help.

March 13, 2013

I cannot imagine the challenges having an autistic or brain damaged child must bring. However, barring Wakefield’s now retracted study (and ten of the twelve scientists associated with it have retracted their conclusions) there is no evidence that vaccines cause damage on this scale. While vaccine injury does happen in rare cases, it’s still less of a risk than the risks of the disease.

March 13, 2013

Also that quote of Wakefield’s directly contradicts what he said when the GMC struck him off – “I never made the claim at the time, nor do I still make the claim, that MMR is the cause of autism”. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/healthnews/7758704/Andrew-Wakefield-struck-off-over-MMR-scandal.html