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Dublin: 12 °C Monday 20 May, 2013

No link between vaccines and autism, says medical research body

However, the US-based Institute of Medicine says it found convincing evidence of side effects of vaccines including brain inflammation and anaphylaxis.

Image: AP Photo/Alexander F. Yuan/PA

VACCINES CAN cause certain side effects but serious ones appear very rare — and there’s no link with autism and Type 1 diabetes, the Institute of Medicine says in the first comprehensive safety review in 17 years.

The report released today by the US-based group isn’t aimed at nervous parents. And the side effects it lists as proven are some that doctors long have known about, such as fever-caused seizures and occasional brain inflammation.

Instead, the review comes at the request of the US government’s Vaccine Injury Compensation Program, which as the name implies, pays damages to people who are injured by vaccines. Federal law requires this type of independent review as officials update side effects on that list to be sure they agree with the latest science.

Tackling diseases

“Vaccines are important tools in preventing serious infectious disease across the lifespan, from infancy through adulthood. All health care interventions, however, carry the possibility of risk and vaccines are no exception,” said pediatrician and bioethicist Dr Ellen Wright Clayton of Vanderbilt University, who chaired the institute panel.

Still, the report stresses that vaccines generally are safe, and it may help doctors address worries from a small but vocal anti-vaccine movement. Some vaccine-preventable diseases, including measles, are on the rise.

“I am hopeful that it will allay some people’s concerns,” Clayton said.

The review echoed numerous other scientific reports that dismiss an autism link.

But it found convincing evidence of 14 side effects:

  • Fever-triggered seizures, which seldom cause long-term consequences, from the measles-mumps-rubella, or MMR, vaccine.
  • MMR also can cause a rare form of brain inflammation in some people with immune problems.
  • The varicella vaccine against chickenpox sometimes triggers that viral infection, resulting in widespread chickenpox or a painful relative called shingles. It also occasionally can lead to pneumonia, hepatitis or meningitis.
  • Six vaccines — MMR and the chickenpox, hepatitis B, meningococcal and tetanus-containing vaccines — can cause severe allergic reactions known as anaphylaxis.
  • Vaccines in general sometimes trigger fainting or a type of shoulder inflammation.

There’s suggestive evidence but not proof of a few other side effects, including anaphylaxis from the human papillomavirus, or HPV, vaccine and short-term joint pain in some women and children from the MMR vaccine.

On the other hand, the report cleared flu shots of blame for two long-suspected side effects: Bell’s palsy and worsening of asthma.

That doesn’t mean there aren’t other side effects — the review couldn’t find enough evidence to decide about more than 100 other possibilities. Some vaccines are just too new to link to something really rare. Another example: Flu shots have long come with a caution about rare, paralyzing Guillain-Barre syndrome, but Clayton said research hasn’t settled if that’s a coincidence since the disorder is more common during the winter.

The Health Resources and Services Administration, which runs the vaccine compensation program, is reviewing the report but said it’s too early to predict if it will prompt changes to the injury list.

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Comments (17 Comments)

  • Sadly, the vaccine for stupid isn’t ready yet. Some people won’t accept this.

    Reply
    • Barry 26/08/11 #

      Totally agree, the likes of Jenny McCarty in the USA and Oprah (for promoting Jenny McCarty) have alot to answer for.

      Followers of these fools should be charged with child neglect.

      Reply
  • A blonde bimbo who like to show her wares on MTV

    Reply
  • Denis 25/08/11 #

    Comes a bit too late for the parents of the dead and brain damaged kids from the recent French measles outbreak
    But they probably wouldn’t have believed it anyway, Darwin awards for the parents perhaps.

    Reply
  • This is an exceptionally unbalanced article that seems only there to scaremonger. You have looked at the risks of vaccinating but you have not once looked at the risks of not vaccinating. With measles alone 90% of those who are non immune will catch it if exposed. Side effects of getting measles include encephalitis(brain swelling), pneumonia, otitis media, sclerosing panencephalitis, corneal ulceration, coma, seizures and death. These occur at vastly greater frequency than the side effects of vaccination. High level of vaccination in the community can prevent outbreaks happening at all meaning that those who cannot be immune (such as the immunocompromised and young babies) can be protected. Measles kills up to 30% of immunocompromised people it infects.

    Reply
  • This is old news. The doctor that first suggested a link has been well and truly discredited. He even admitted his research was wrong.

    Reply
    • Ya wasn’t his study carried out on like 7 patients? Some crazy low number anyway that wouldn’t give any conclusions whatsoever. He wasn’t srtuck off fast enough though before the media got wind of it and administration of the mmr dropped… and people wonder why we are having measles outbreaks of late

      Reply
  • Who’s Jenny McCarthy?

    Reply
  • Dr Wakefield never asserted any link between vaccinations and autism , that was put forward by another team of doctors , that was put forward by some of his colleagues on the evidence he submitted concerning the link between childhood gut disorders while under the age of 5 as a precursor to their Autism related behaivour. His only conclusion was to say that the measles/gut disorder link to those 12 Autistic children warranted further study.
    There were only 12 cases mentioned in his findings but he worked with hundreds of children.
    A more recent study from Wake Forset University found that 70 of 82 Autistic children examined had the measles virus in their guts , however the strain they found was not a wild virus but the same strain used in MMR’s.

    Dr Wakefield was first attacked in the press by none other than Rupert Murdochs Media Empire , It is no secret the Murdoch family have heavily invested in GlaxoSmithKline , indeed his son James in the board of directors. When the story broke and he was hauled before the General Medical Council and was removed from the register , is it possible that it was a move to back up the UK’s stance on not compensating victims of vaccine harm?

    Of course any parent who believes that pumping the tiny veins of a baby with mercury , asparatime ,aluminium, chicken embryo , monkey kidneys , formaldehyde , Biothrax(a compound of Anthrax) , embryonic fliud , not forgetting human diploid cells from aborted fetal tissue, is perfectly entitled , i know of many parents who if they could would change their decisions.

    Reply
  • My younger brother happened to be one of those rare cases who had an adverse reaction to the vaccine which left him partially brain damaged and I know of another case in Donegal. Specialists kept on saying that it was this disease and that all the while being completely over defensive that the vaccination had no part in it. What struck me was that of the 5 or more specialists we visited, neither of them had the same prognosis and were quick to pluck some random disease out of the air. We couldn’t care less about any compensation. We would just like to know what happened to him.

    Reply
  • Yet again the media cause more damage than good – Examples: The scaremongering in the media of the MMR vaccine years ago actually resulted in far more children dying (as a result of parents refusing the vaccine) from Measles, Mumps and Rubella than the vaccine would have ever caused. You also may recall the scaremongering in the media a few years back regarding oral contraceptives? This resulted in a massive spike in the numbers of females presenting for elective abortion. All drugs have risks and benefits. This is not denied by any body involved – Pharma or Regularory – There is no such thing as an absolutely safe medicine. It’s about potential benefit vs risk and how we assess and manage that risk. For example: People may not be comfortable with giving their child a vaccine that one day could save their life but don’t think twice about putting them in an airtight tube 30000 ft above the ground travelling at 500 mph to bring them to a country and expose them to high levels of UV radiation for 2 weeks! Extreme example but does illustrate the point.

    Reply
  • http://www.merck.com/product/usa/pi_circulars/m/mmr_ii/mmr_ii_pi.pdf

    MMR vaccine Manufactures information re: adverse reactions pages 7 and 8

    Reply
  • Yeah It’s all just a huge coincidence that Ireland and every other western country have an epidemic of children/ young adults with autism, bowel disease i.e( Crohn’s disease / Ulcerative colitis), juvenile arthritis, diabetes type 1,
    epilepsy, etc etc in children who were fully vaccinated!.

    Maybe you should read the manufactures information leaflet ( NOT the HSE’S VERSION) for the MMR vaccine.

    Reply

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