Chicago ground zero for vaccine safety debate

Deborah L. Shelton
Chicago Tribune
05/26/2010

Discredited autism researcher Dr. Andrew Wakefield said Wednesday at a ” vaccination choice” rally in Grant Park that he planned to resume his research in the U.S.

At the rally, held in conjunction with a conference hosted by the organizations Generation Rescue and Autism One, Wakefield said national vaccine policies had failed children and their families and it was time for “science and medicine to stand up for itself.”

“In the end, it’s about choice,” he told a small, cheering crowd. “Medicine has to choose — does it serve the patients or the pharmaceutical industry?”

Wakefield on Monday was barred from practicing medicine in his native Britain, following a ruling from the country’s General Medical Council that he had “repeatedly breached fundamental principles of research medicine.” The journal Lancet retracted his paper linking autism to the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine earlier this year.

But the gastroenterologist still enjoys strong support from many parents of children with autism who believe vaccines cause the disorder. Until recently, he was executive director of an Austin, Texas, clinic that treated children with developmental disorders with unproven alternative therapies.

Wakefield said he plans to start a “virtual university” that will develop collaborations with researchers across the country. His role will be to design research programs and solicit grants to fund studies looking at the causes of autism and other diseases, he said.

Wakefield’s talk was interrupted throughout by applause, and several people held supportive signs, including “Wakefield = Truth, Pharma = Lies.”

Rally organizer Louise Kuo Habakus told the group that parents who question the safety of vaccines often are unfairly labeled.

“We are not anti-vaccine,” she said vehemently. “We are in favor of choice. We are pro-vaccination choice.”

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About the author

VT

Jeffry John Aufderheide is the father of a child injured as a result of vaccination. As editor of the website www.vactruth.com he promotes well-educated pediatricians, informed consent, and full disclosure and accountability of adverse reactions to vaccines.