First, do no harm.
That's the Hippocratic oath that doctors swear to uphold. And it's the rule that congressional committees should follow as well.
First, do no harm.
That's the Hippocratic oath that doctors swear to uphold. And it's the rule that congressional committees should follow as well.
Rep. Dan Burton (R-Ind.), the chairman of the House Government Reform Committee, held a hearing this month to publicize his conviction that childhood vaccines cause autism. We heard heart-rending testimony from parents of autistic children who sincerely believe that vaccines caused their children's condition. And a few hand-picked researchers lent a scientific veneer by testifying that they believe vaccines may cause autism.
This is the kind of news that can alarm millions of families. That's why it's essential that parents know that the American Medical Assn., the American Academy of Pediatrics, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and virtually every medical expert around the world have reached a different conclusion: The scientific evidence does not support a causal association between vaccines and autism. Disregarding this evidence or overstating the dangers of childhood immunization runs the risk of needlessly scaring parents from vaccinating their children.
Failing to immunize our children exposes them to risks of serious illness, disability and death. Every year, 2.5 million children die and 750,000 are crippled worldwide from childhood diseases. Once common and now rare in our country, rubella causes deafness, blindness and mental retardation. Measles, mistakenly viewed by some as an innocuous childhood illness, caused 11,000 hospitalizations and 120 deaths in our country during a 1989-91 epidemic. Today, a measles epidemic in Afghanistan has killed as many as 900 people, most of them children.
The dangers of a vaccine-autism scare are real. In 1998, British surgeon Andrew Wakefield published a preliminary report alleging that autism in 12 children was associated with the measles-mumps-rubella vaccine. The resulting hysteria quickly drove measles immunization rates in Britain below the level experts say is necessary to avoid an epidemic.
In Ireland, health officials report that a similar drop in MMR vaccinations has caused a more than tenfold increase in reported measles cases since last year. As one Irish official noted: "The end result will be that an epidemic of measles may come back unnecessarily, and some children will suffer permanent damage or even die."