Mercury Linked to Autism
Michael Arnold Glueck and Robert J. Cihak
Friday, Sept. 10, 2004
During the 1990s, millions of children were exposed to mercury above federal
guidelines because more and more routine shots contained thimerosal, a
mercury compound. (See our article "Are Vaccines Shots in the Dark?"). Vaccine
makers and many health officials say there is no "proof" of a causal link
between thimerosal and autism. Since 1999, most vaccines contain only trace
amounts.
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But there are many degrees of proof and certainty in science, just as there
are in the courtroom, in politics or in life.
"Clinical judgment" is the standard for advising patients and making
decisions in everyday medical practice, based on what would be called a
"preponderance of evidence" in civil legal cases.
"Scientific proof" is typically "beyond a reasonable doubt," the standard of
proof required for a guilty verdict in criminal cases.
In our clinical judgment, there's enough evidence to convict these doses of
thimerosal and find them guilty of causing significant toxicity in many
children, leading to a spectrum of childhood diseases including autism.
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC) have failed in their responsibility to protect
Americans against unsafe medical and dental procedures, according to Boyd
Haley, Ph.D., a biochemist and chairman of the Department of Chemistry at
the University of Kentucky. Dr. Haley spoke at the Doctors for
Disaster Preparedness meeting in July 2004.
Officials often ignore research
implicating mercury toxicity; at the same time, the only research considered
acceptable is rife with conflicts of interest.
In this controversy, most government agencies seem to be demanding a "beyond
a reasonable doubt" standard of proof for research showing harm from
mercury – while accepting a "preponderance of evidence" standard for
research exonerating mercury.
Let's review some of the evidence that has largely been ignored:
Since 1970, British health authorities have recommended vaccination with
thimerosal-containing vaccines. Even so, nearly 15 percent of British children were
not vaccinated between 1970 and 1980; only one autistic child has been found
in this unvaccinated group, in contrast with an epidemic of autism among
vaccinated children.
Athletes dying suddenly with idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy have 22,000
times the usual level of mercury in the muscle of their hearts, according to
Dr.Haley. He stresses that all his data come from published, peer-reviewed
sources.
Geier and Geier recently demonstrated a positive dose-response
relationship between thimerosal dosage and cardiac arrest in children.
[http://www.jpands.org/vol8no1/geier.pdf.]
In the newsletter Civil Defense Perspectives
[http://www.oism.org/cdp/july2004.html], Jane Orient, M.D., president of
Doctors for Disaster Preparedness (DDP), reports on the epidemic of "pink
disease" (also known as acrodynia or erythredema) that afflicted children
in the early 20th century. Children presented with a pink discoloration
of the fingers and toes, desquamation of the palms and soles, and a rash,
among other symptoms, including flushing; irritability; swollen, painful
fingers and toes; weakness; tachycardia; elevated blood pressure;
photophobia; and polyneuritis. One mother stated, "My child behaves like a
mad dog." Mortality was about 7 percent.
This "peculiar neurosis of the vegetative nervous system in young children"
occurred in babies between the ages of 6 months and 2.5 years in the
English-speaking world but between the ages of 2 and 5 on the continent.
Popular theories included viral infection, nutritional deficiency and
"over-nutrition" in more affluent families. Most physicians did not consider
poisoning, nor did they investigate "the customs of mothers or the activities
of the advertising and patent medicine industries."
By 1950, considerable evidence had implicated mercury, widely used in
remedies such as teething powders. The disease disappeared when mercury was
voluntary withdrawn by the manufacturers from most teething powders after
1954.
Bernard Rimland, Ph.D., founder and director of the Autism Research
Institute and author of many articles and the prize-winning book "Infantile
Autism," said at the DDP meeting that "the autism epidemic is the greatest catastrophe" the USA has
ever suffered. He also noted the strong association of
vaccines with autism.
The Verdict
We find that the preponderance of evidence implicates mercury as a guilty party
in a wide spectrum of childhood conditions, including autism, idiopathic
dilated cardiomyopathy, cardiac arrest in children, pink disease and other
neurodevelopmental disorders.
We're not saying that mercury causes all cases of all these conditions; we
do say that the form of mercury and the dose are all-important and that the
same medical condition can be caused by different agents or different
combinations of factors.
For example, the dose of mercury from the environment probably does not
contribute a significant dose to humans. For one thing, the metal element
mercury has to be converted to more toxic chemical forms before it causes
harm.
In parting, we offer a simple solution to the problem. In the past, vaccines
contained thimerosal because it helped prevent bacterial contamination in
bottles containing dozens or hundreds of doses. We suggest packaging
vaccines in individual doses, thereby obviating the need for any
preservative. A bit more expensive, perhaps – but your children and
grandchildren are worth it!
Related articles:
http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2003/4/9/13459.shtml
http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2004/6/29/160508.shtml
http://newsmax.com/archives/articles/2003/8/4/201454.shtml
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Robert J. Cihak, M.D., is a Senior Fellow and Board Member of the Discovery
Institute and a past president of the Association of American Physicians and
Surgeons. Michael Arnold Glueck, M.D., is a multiple-award-winning writer
who comments on medical-legal issues.
Contact Drs. Glueck and Cihak by Web e-mail