|
Healthy Kids Archives:
Evidence of Harm
Mercury in Vaccines and the Autism Epidemic
A Medical Controversy
By David Kirby
Thimerosal. Not a household word by any stretch of the imagination.
But for a group of parents with autistic children, though, it is. A
form of mercury used as a preservative in many childhood vaccines,
parents unwittingly have exposed their children to sometimes-toxic
levels of this heavy metal starting at less than six months of age.
There is probable evidence that this preservative, used to prevent
bacteria and fungus growth in multi-use vials of vaccines, causes
such neurological childhood disorders as ADD, ADHD, speech
disorders, and the most troubling of all, autism. The raging
controversy has been going on for years between the affected
families and some of the biggest pharmaceutical companies. David
Kirby plays out this medical, legal and political drama in the book
Evidence of Harm.
When researching autism treatments, writer David Kirby stumbled
across the theory that the mercury preservative thimerosal in
vaccines could be causing the disorder. Thinking it a little remote,
he dismissed it at first. Within a week, the House of
Representatives passed the Homeland Security Act, with a secret
rider buried in the text that absolved pharmaceutical giant Eli
Lilly and Company from any liability for damage caused by thimerosal.
Kirby found himself intrigued by the necessity for such a
clandestine provision in an unrelated bill, so he set out to find
some answers. It didn’t take log for him to become acquainted with a
grassroots group of parents whose children were ill, and who were
convinced that the immunizations their children received before the
age of two were the cause of their children’s illnesses
Autism was first recognized in the 1940’s. It was described by
psychiatrists Leo Kanner and Hans Asperger, who independently
referred to the disorder as autism, from the Greek word, autos, for
self. It was originally thought that the cause was aloof parenting;
mothers who were unwilling or unable to properly nurture their
children, and was viewed as a psychological rather than medical
problem. Once an exceptionally rare disorder, found in less than one
child per 10,000 born, it is estimated that 1 in 166 children
exhibit some form of autism today. This exponential growth is
difficult to ignore, and the connection to thimerosal is compelling.
When parents of affected children began to do research, they found
the symptoms and onset of their children’s illnesses were so
strikingly similar that they were compelled to take on the medical
establishment that they trusted to do no harm to their children.
Almost without exception, the children represented in the book
Evidence of Harm were happy, healthy infants and early toddlers.
They were children who were walking, talking and exploring at
normal, and sometimes even above normal, levels. Sometime after
their first birthdays, usually around some kind of exposure to
thimerosal in vaccinations in routine doctor visits; things began to
change for them. Some became ill with gastrointestinal problems,
strep or herpes infections, to name just a few, but all of them
ceased to develop, then began to digress. These once healthy babies
became sickly, unresponsive and lost the ability to interact with
their surroundings. Their parents set out to find answers to their
children’s health problems and found each other. Dubbed the “Mercury
Moms” this group of women became an influential force that compelled
doctors, drug companies and congress to address the use of mercury
in vaccines as a detriment to children.
Stopping short of using the word “proof,” Evidence of Harm
nonetheless illustrates some extremely compelling evidence that the
use of thimerosal in vaccines is harmful to kids. The use of this
chemical, while certainly cost-effective, is potentially very
damaging and, according to Kirby and a growing number of parents and
health professionals, should be eliminated. The CDC is presently
phasing out the use of this deadly toxin. While there is no
admission that thimerosal causes or contributes to the epidemic
prevalence of autism, its damaging effects are certainly being
addressed. Unfortunately it is too little too late for a lot of
kids, and many people feel that an immediate cease in the use of
mercury in children’s vaccines is imperative to protect a growing
number of children. David Kirby does an excellent job outlining the
problem, narrating the lives of the parents and children affected,
and calling out doctors, politicians and behemoth drug companies to
step up and eliminate the use of thimerosal in our kid’s vaccines.
This wonderful book can be seen as a public service, and Kirby’s
contribution shows an altruistic interest in protecting America’s
children.
Evidence of harm is published by St. Martin’s press and available in
bookstores nationwide. For more information about the use of
thimerosal in vaccines, visit
www.evidenceofharm.com.
Top of page
|