April 9, 2006

NAA/A-CHAMP Fundraiser in Memory Of Liz Birt

Raising the Bar for Autism Awareness
A New York City Fundraiser in Memory of Liz Birt




A night to raise funds and awareness in memory of Elizabeth Birt. Proceeds will benefit SafeMinds and the National Autism Association and will be allocated to research projects to honor Liz.
nycfundraiser

Saturday, April 29, 2006 from 6:00 p.m. to Midnight

Antarctica Bar 287 Hudson Street at Spring

$50 donation

* All you can eat and drink
* The Voltaires Band
* The Dark Marbles Band
* Comedians Maria Shehata and Eliza Faria- Santos
* Celebrity bartenders behind the bar working hard to earn your tips which will also benefit the charities.

RSVP to Heidi Roger at (201) 906-3475 or by e-mail at elevatordance@msn.com

For more information please visit SafeMinds and the NAA .


Elizabeth Kilpatrick
SafeMinds

Kirby In Alaska

AUTHOR OF BESTSELLING BOOK ON MERCURY AND AUTISM TO VISIT ANCHORAGE, ALASKA
ON MONDAY & TUESDAY, APRIL 17 & 18, 2006

Schedule:
Book-signing and short talk at UAA bookstore, Monday 5:30-7:00PM (free
lecture)

Longer talk at Wilda Marston Theater, Z.J. Loussac Library, Monday
7:30-9:30PM (free lecture, donations accepted)

Featured speaker at Downtown Rotary, Tuesday at noon (members and their
guests)

NEW YORK - David Kirby, author of the New York Times bestselling book,
"Evidence of Harm, Mercury in Vaccines and The Autism Epidemic" (St.
Martin's Press) will be in Anchorage, Alaska April 17 & 18, 2006 (Monday &
Tuesday), to give a series of talks.

Kirby's book details the burning controversy over whether the use of mercury
in vaccines has contributed to the autism epidemic in America, which has
left 1-in-166 children with some form of the disorder. He will be discussing
recent developments in science, in the media, and on Capitol Hill, as well
as the recent numbers out of California, which show a decline in new autism
cases for the first time in 35 years. This drop could be a result of the
gradual removal of mercury from vaccines, which began in 1999.

Evidence of Harm has been awarded the "Investigative Reporters and Editors
2005 Award for Outstanding Investigative Reporting in a Book," the
organization announced today. In their comments, award judges - comprised of
some of the most experienced investigative journalists in the country -
noted that, "Kirby told the story of stonewalling, denial and cover-up by
federal regulators, medical groups and the pharmaceutical industry." And,
they added, "He documents covert efforts by some of those same powerful
forces - along with the U.S. Congress - to grant blanket immunity for drug
companies that put mercury in vaccines. Like so many scientific
controversies involving complex science and big business, the topic is
controversial. Kirby's careful and meticulous reporting is exemplary in its
balance, accuracy and documentation," the judges said.

FOR MORE INFORMATION ON THE BOOK:
www.evidenceofharm.com

Local contact and sponsor: Sandy Gottstein, President of Vaccination News,
A Non-Profit Corporation,
www.vaccinationnews.com, 907-566-0401


Sandy Gottstein (Mintz), President
Vaccination News, A Non-Profit Corporation
PO Box 111818
Anchorage, AK 99511-1818

http://www.vaccinationnews.com/
http://www.vaccinationnews.com/Scandals/past_scandals.htm
http://www.vaccinationnews.com/Out_of_Control/past_ool.htm

SPONSOR OF SBS, VACCINES, AUTISM and other ONLINE CONFERENCES AT
http://www.redflagsdaily.com

"Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty." - Wendell Phillips (1811-1884),
paraphrasing John Philpot Curran (1808)

DISCLAIMER: All information, data, and material contained, presented, or
provided here is for general information purposes only and is not to be
construed as reflecting the knowledge or opinions of the publisher, and is
not to be construed or intended as providing medical or legal advice. The
decision whether or not to vaccinate is an important and complex issue and
should be made by you, and you alone, in consultation with your health care
provider.

In addition, the fact that this email has been forwarded in no way
necessarily implies endorsement of the point of view of the author or
authors of the particular email.

WebMD: Debate Flares Over Vaccines and Autism

Debate Flares Over Vaccines and Autism:
Activist Groups Spar With CDC Over Claims of Link Between Autism and Thimerosal
By Todd Zwillich
WebMD Medical News

Reviewed By Louise Chang, MD
on Friday, April 07, 2006


April 7, 2006 -- Debate over a possible tie between mercury-containing vaccines and autism flared up this week as activist groups launched a campaign accusing federal health agencies and prominent researchers of manipulating scientific findings on the link.

Some parents of autistic children have long blamed vaccines containing the preservative thimerosal for an alarming rise in the disorder. Thimerosal contains a type of mercury. A series of reports by the Institute of Medicine (IOM) ending in 2004 concluded no evidence could be found linking the vaccines to neurological diseases, including autism.

But groups this week mounted a campaign to publicize previously undisclosed transcripts and emails that they say point to efforts by the CDC to manipulate the IOM's scientific conclusions on the safety of vaccines containing thimerosal. The groups accuse the CDC of trying to defend a long-held policy promoting childhood vaccinations.

"In the interest of protecting the immunization program, they forgot about child safety. They are continuing that pattern of behavior and denial that thimerosal causes harm," Bobbie Manning, vice president of Advocates for Children's Health Affected by Mercury, tells WebMD.

According to the CDC, all vaccines recommended for children are available in thimerosal-free versions. But some parents say millions of previous exposures helped caused a spike in autism cases since the 1980s.

The CDC contracted with the IOM in 2001 to generate a series of reports on possible links between vaccines and a variety of health problems. An IOM committee of outside experts, led by Harvard researcher Marie McCormick, MD, found no evidence of a link and concluded that proposed biological explanations for a mercury-autism relationship were "theoretical."
Allegations of Bias

Activist groups released transcripts of closed-door conversations in 2001 between McCormick and Kathleen Stratton, the study director. Groups say the conversation suggests that the committee would fashion its findings to meet the CDC's desires to play down a link between thimerosal and autism.

"[The CDC] wants us to declare, well, these things are pretty safe on a population basis," McCormick said to Stratton, according to the transcript, posted on a web site called Putchildrenfirst.com.

Thirty-four pages later in the transcript, McCormick states, "...we are not ever going to come down that [autism] is a true side effect."

Manning said the transcript shows that the CDC "directed that committee to find what they wanted to find, which was no causation" between vaccines and autism.

In an interview, McCormick confirmed that the statements in the transcript are "accurate and true." But she said there was "no truth" to allegations that CDC officials influenced the IOM or that the committee reached conclusions before its scientific review.

McCormick said her comments reflected a debate over whether the committee would look at vaccine effects in individuals or across populations, and not what any specific findings would be.

The conversation also took place in late 2001, before the committee's final 2004 report on vaccines and autism was planned, McCormick said.

"In 2001 we did not know we were going to look at autism again. To use those as evidence for what we did in 2004 is really inappropriate," she said.

McCormick added that the committee's experts were chosen specifically for their scientific independence and for a lack of ties to both pharmaceutical manufacturers and the CDC.

CDC Perspective

Parents groups alleged that CDC officials had worked to dissuade agency scientists from looking more deeply into links between thimerosal and autism.

The groups also alleged that CDC officials narrowed the scope of the IOM's report to include a handful of studies, most of which the agency had a role in funding or planning. Those studies generally showed little evidence of a link between vaccination and autism.

Tom Skinner, a CDC spokesman, said the agency has been "very transparent" about its ongoing studies of autism and vaccines and that the emails have been taken "out of context." He said the agency closely guards its scientific credibility and "in no way" tried to influence IOM experts.

"We stand behind our science that's been done to this date and we will certainly do more in the future," he said.

Louis Z. Cooper, MD, an emeritus professor of pediatrics at Columbia University and a founder of the National Network for Immunization Information, said in an interview that some of the emails and transcripts "cause some anxiety" because they may help fuel fear among parents about the safety of vaccines and the motivations of health officials.

Still, Cooper, who noted he's known McCormick professionally for at least 20 years, called accusations of bias against her or other members of IOM's committee "rubbish, scurrilous, and awful."

"If I wanted a group who were committed to objectivity and were committed to science, I couldn't have asked for a better group of people," said Cooper, a former president of the American Academy of Pediatrics.

Manning said her group and others would continue to push for congressional investigations into how the IOM conducted the studies and whether they were influenced by the CDC. "We believe that this is a serious issue that needs to be examined," she said.

Autism in a Needle?

Autism in a Needle?
The toxic tale of vaccinations and mercury poisoning
By Annette Fuentes
Nov 11, 2003

Lyn Redwood’s son Will was a healthy, happy baby who met all the normal developmental standards—he was walking and talking by one year. About three months later, however, he began to regress, losing speech, avoiding eye contact and appearing miserable. “He didn’t seem happy anymore,” Redwood said in a recent interview. “He just wanted to sit in his infant seat and watch videos over and over again.”

Doctors initially blamed hearing problems for Will’s decline. Neurologists told the parents that their son had global and receptive speech delay. At age 5, the boy was diagnosed as autistic by his school.

Seeking answers to her son’s condition, Redwood turned to the Internet in 1999 and began a search that led to startling discoveries about thimerosal. This vaccine preservative is composed of nearly 50 percent mercury, which is a known neurotoxin especially harmful to fetuses, infants and children. What’s more, it has been linked to a range of symptoms collectively known as Autism Spectrum Disorders. At one end is severe autism, in which children are socially withdrawn, do not speak and exhibit bizarre, repetitive, sometimes aggressive behaviors. At the other end are Asperger’s Syndrome, a high-functioning form of autism, Pervasive Developmental Disorder (PDD), Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD) and Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD).

Thimerosal was widely used since the ’40s in over-the-counter medicines until that use was banned in 1998. It’s still found in some vaccines for adults and infants. Its medical, political, economic and international implications represent a chilling chapter in the history of public health, in which regulatory agencies were negligent, if not guilty, in covering up health hazards, by failing to act quickly to protect millions of children. Said Redwood, a nurse practitioner and a board of health member in her Georgia county, where vaccination is a major public health program: “If someone had told me prior to 1999 that vaccines were responsible for my son’s disabilities, I would have thought they were crazy.”

Regulators ‘asleep at the switch’

Before 1980, autism was diagnosed in 1 in 10,000 children; in 2002, the National Institutes of Health raised that figure to 1 in 250 children. The Autism Society of America now estimates that autism disorders are growing by 10 percent or more annually. Some scientists believe boys are afflicted by the neurological disorders of autism at a rate three to six times that of girls because the female hormone estrogen protects against mercury toxicity.

In a sad twist, scientists increasingly believe that the mercury-laced vaccines meant to protect children from illness are at the root of this spike. In 1985, four of the shots recommended for infants in their first 18 months contained thimerosal. By 1991, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) added three Hepatitis B shots (each containing 12.5 micrograms of thimerosal) and four Hib shots (each with 25 micrograms of mercury). As a result, the number of vaccines containing thimerosal jumped to 11, and the amount of mercury exposure mushroomed to 237.5 micrograms, an amount that exceeded all federal limits.

Neither the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) nor the CDC, the nation’s chief regulatory agencies for pharmaceutical products and the watchdogs of public health, added up the micrograms. The regulatory spotlight was finally fixed on thimerosal in 1997 when Congress passed the FDA Modernization Act. Part of the act required the FDA to investigate all drugs that contained mercury and determine their effects on humans. Within a year, the FDA had called for the removal of all thimerosal-containing products from over-the-counter products. Thimerosal remained in more than 50 vaccines, however, until the Public Health Service (which includes the FDA, the CDC and the National Institutes of Health) and the American Academy of Pediatrics issued a statement in July 1999 “urging” vaccine makers to reduce or eliminate thimerosal because of “theoretical potential for neurotoxicity.”

Last year, the staff for Rep. Dan Burton (R-Ind.) obtained an internal e-mail written June 29, 1999, by former FDA scientist Peter Patriarca. In that e-mail Patriarca offered his colleagues a “pros and cons” assessment of the thimerosal statement shortly before its release:

Will raise questions about FDA being ‘asleep at the switch’ for decades, by allowing a potentially hazardous compound to remain in many childhood vaccines, and not forcing manufacturers to exclude it from new products. Will also raise questions about various advisory bodies about aggressive recommendations for use. We must keep in mind that the dose of ethyl mercury was not generated by ‘rocket science’: conversion of the % of thimerosal to actual ug [micrograms] of mercury involves 9th grade algebra. What took the FDA so long to do the calculations? Why didn’t CDC and the advisory bodies do these calculations while rapidly expanding the childhood immunization schedule?

Roger Bernier, of the CDC’s national immunization program, received the e-mail. In a recent interview he explained why the cumulative amount of mercury was never figured. “Vaccines tend to be evaluated on an individual basis, the requirements for safety and efficacy on an individual basis,” Bernier said. “This holistic view of safety was not part of the review.” Bernier said the health agencies did not order vaccine makers to stop using thimerosal and to recall existing vaccines containing it because “this was a theoretical concern, it was conceived as precautionary measure, not because evidence showed a risk. There wasn’t a sense of urgency. It was viewed as something to be done—not because we had to, but because it should be done.”

Toxicity and plausibility

While the FDA and CDC moved glacially slow on mercury, the EPA had been since the early ’70s aggressively educating the public about ingesting mercury in food, especially fish, and setting standards for exposure. The inconsistent approach to mercury is reflected in the standards agencies set for maximum daily consumption. Set in micrograms per kilogram of body weight, the EPA’s standard is lowest, at .1 micrograms, the FDA’s is .4 micrograms. Those guidelines are for methylmercury, the toxic cousin of ethylmercury, which is in thimerosal. While some government scientists defending the use of thimerosal have argued that ethyl is less toxic than methyl, both forms will harm living tissue, according to Boyd Haley, chair of the department of chemistry at the University of Kentucky and an expert on toxic metals. “Some parents of autistic children called me and asked me to look at thimerosal. We did some experiments with human brain tissue and it was dramatic,” Haley said. “It penetrates the proteins in the brain. It is toxic to neurons and enzymes.” Haley co-authored an August 2003 study that showed autistic children retained more mercury in their bodies than normal children, evidenced by higher levels of the toxin in their hair. That means the ethylmercury from thimerosal had been absorbed into their brain and other body tissue, likely causing neurological damage.

The July 1999 statement on thimerosal hardly put the issue to rest. For Redwood, it was the catalyst that led to the creation of SAFE MINDS, a parents’ group that has conducted research on the thimerosal-autism disorders link. With several other parents of autistic children, in 2001 Redwood published “Autism: A Novel Form of Mercury Poisoning” in the journal Medical Hypotheses. Their study showed that the symptoms of mercury poisoning mirrored those of autism and concluded that early exposure to mercury from thimerosal had caused many cases of autism, while genetic and environmental factors made some children more vulnerable than others. “Once we got the paper together, we contacted the NIH, CDC and FDA,” Redwood said. “We got mixed responses. We petitioned the FDA on three occasions to take thimerosal off the market. They turned us down.”

The CDC launched its own study of thimerosal safety in vaccines in fall 1999, tasking Dr. Thomas Verstraeten to analyze the agency’s Vaccine Safety Datalink, which gathers information on vaccine safety from several health maintenance organizations. Verstraeten’s first report in February 2000 found a statistically significant risk for neurological developmental disorders at age 3 months as the amount of thimerosal that babies received increased. And he found a risk of autism 2.48 times greater for infants getting higher amounts of thimerosal in vaccines, compared to infants who received thimerosal-free vaccines. A June 2000 analysis by Verstraeten found a link between thimerosal and language, speech and developmental delays during the child’s first 6 months. Verstraeten’s initial findings were never publicly released, and SAFE MINDS obtained copies of his reports only through Freedom of Information Act filings in 2001. For Robert Krakow, whose son is autistic, Verstraeten’s findings were a bittersweet discovery. “If the Verstraeten report had been publicized, my wife would have read about it because she was up on these things and our son wouldn’t have had thimerosal-containing vaccines,” he said. “Why is the public not told? To protect the vaccine makers.” Verstraeten left the CDC shortly after his presentation to work for vaccine maker GlaxoSmithKline in Belgium. He declined to comment for this article, citing “ongoing litigation in the U.S. regarding thimerosal.”

The thimerosal issue continues to reverberate in the scientific and public health community. The Institute of Medicine (IOM), an advisory body created by the National Academies of Science, convened in fall 2001 to assess thimerosal’s potential to cause autism and other neurological problems in children. The IOM’s statement, after assessing Verstraeten’s research and hearing testimony of scientists such as Haley and others linking autism and thimerosal, walked a fine line. It said in part: “Although the hypothesis that exposure to thimerosal-containing vaccines could be associated with neurodevelopmental disorders is not established … the hypothesis is biologically plausible.”

In the past year, further studies of thimerosal’s connection to autism have been churned out in scientific journals, primarily denying any link. A December 2002 study funded by the National Institutes of Health and published in The Lancet claimed thimerosal was safe for babies. An October 2003 study from Denmark also purported to disprove the thimerosal-autism link. The most recent study, published November 1 in Pediatrics by Thomas Verstraeten and a CDC colleague, uses the same CDC database but this time erases any connection between thimerosal and neurological damage to children.

If the CDC and FDA seemed to acknowledge the risks of thimerosal four years ago and the need to get mercury out of medical products, today the official stance is to circle the wagons against mounting public and scientific criticism about its handling of the thimerosal issue. “Rational people can think differently, but to resolve this issue they must be honest to the American people,” Haley said of the regulators. “They could come out and say we’ve cleaned it up, we’ll keep it out. But what they do is come up with cockamamie articles and fight back.”

The stakes are high for the pharmaceutical industry. Eli Lilly, inventor of thimerosal, was granted protection from lawsuits by parents of autistic children under a short-lived provision slipped into the Homeland Security Act in November 2002 (see sidebar). But hundreds of lawsuits now have been filed against it and other companies, including Merck, GlaxoSmithKline, Aventis Pasteur and American Home Products, which have used thimerosal in children’s vaccines. An additional 4,000 claims are pending in the federal Vaccine Injury Compensation Program. “These kids are not going to die. They are going to live 50, 60 years and the cost will be monumental,” said Krakow, a New York attorney who filed a case with the vaccine compensation program on behalf of his son. “The political hurdles are the bigger problem. This is so big and gets to the heart of lots of issues, like what I call the government-pharmaceutical complex.”

Thimerosal is global

Today, vaccine makers have removed thimerosal from almost all childhood vaccines or created thimerosal-free alternatives. But some still have trace amounts, such as GlaxoSmithKline’s Pediatrix, and its DTaP-Hepatitis B vaccine. Aventis Pasteur manufactures six vaccines for adults using thimerosal, including tetanus and flu, each with 25 micrograms of ethylmercury. Merck’s Hepatitis B for adults contains 25 micrograms of ethylmercury. While the health effects of that amount of mercury for adults are unknown, limiting exposure in all forms—in foods and environmentally—should be a priority of the FDA and CDC, according to Kentucky researcher Haley. “They should be working on getting all the mercury out. Thimerosal suppresses the immune system, and if you have some elderly person who has a compromised immune system, a flu shot with thimerosal can pose a risk,” Haley said. “They are saying its OK to give to Third World countries where children have compromised immune systems to begin with.” (Representatives for Aventis and Merck did not respond to requests for comment on their companies’ policies on thimerosal use.) But to date, neither the FDA nor the CDC has issued a clear preference for thimerosal-free vaccines. Many critics believe that is a politically defensive, not a scientifically sound one.

The Third World is the next frontier in the thimerosal debate. Eli Lilly has licensing agreements with drug companies in 40 countries that make thimerosal and market it under the trade name Merthiolate. In countries where sanitary conditions are questionable, vaccine preservatives become crucial. Single-dose vials rather than multi-dose containers have provided one solution in the United States, but in the developing world that strategy poses challenges and costs. The World Health Organization (WHO), which has a vast vaccination program, assessed the thimerosal issue in 1999, prompted by the U.S. health agencies’ review. The agency echoed the U.S. position and declared in its weekly newsletter: “With the weight of public opinion against the use of mercury of any sort, WHO and other agencies has begun the process of reducing and removing [thimerosal] from vaccines.” The WHO outlined a three-year plan for creating alternative preservatives and new vaccine delivery technologies with the goal of eventually eliminating mercury.

Yet in 2003, WHO abandoned this aggressive plan and issued a revised policy on thimerosal, citing its own vaccine advisory committee’s decision that ethylmercury is less harmful than methylmercury, and that “there is no reason on grounds of safety to change immunization practices with [thimerosal]-containing vaccines since the benefit outweighs any risks.” What happened over four years, according to Dr. Philippe Duclos, coordinator of WHO’s Immunization Safety Project, was a dose of reality. “Taking thimerosol away was more tricky than originally thought,” he said. “Taking it away might have created a vaccine with a lower safety profile. And the use of monodose vaccines in many places is difficult because of production capacity. Changing the capacity is a major investment, and you can’t just assume things will be done correctly. It takes time.”

Duclos insisted that recent research has shown risks associated with thimerosal are more theoretical than real—and so far alternatives are elusive. “Vaccine distribution in developing countries is a tricky thing. If you use monodose, products will overload the cold chain [the process by which vaccines are maintained at between 2 and 8 degrees Celsius]. Expanding that capacity would take a tremendous amount of time and money and it becomes a matter of priorities.”

For U.S. pharmaceuticals, though, the global market for vaccines containing thimerosal is a goldmine. UNICEF, the WHO’s parent body, purchases 40 percent of all vaccines used in developing countries and Merck is its sole supplier. Merck makes Recombivax HB, a Hepatitis B vaccine that contains thimerosal.

Beyond the issue of thimerosal’s link to autism and developmental disorders lies the larger question of public trust in national vaccination programs—in the United States and the developing world, where global agencies like the WHO and its health programs can be viewed as politically suspect. The thimerosal debacle at the FDA and CDC, with its taint of conflicts of interest with big drug companies and compromised research, does more harm than good, given that the medical community’s primary directive is “First, do no harm.”

“I am a farm boy. I own a farm today. I am a person who knows the value of vaccinations,” [Haley] said. “But if the American people realize how the CDC and the vaccine boards work, they are going to lose faith, and that isn’t my doing. Its their own doing.”

More Cases of Illness Linked to Meningitis Vaccine

More cases of illness linked to meningitis vaccine
Thu Apr 6, 1:48 PM ET

Three more cases of Guillain-Barre syndrome (GBS), a neurological disorder involving temporary paralysis, have been reported in people given the Menactra vaccine to prevent meningitis.

The additional cases bringing the total number reported to eight, according to an article in the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, published by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Still, when the eight cases of Menactra-related GBS were compared against the expected rates of GBS in populations in the same age group, no significantly increased risk was seen, suggesting that the association may have been due to chance alone.

The CDC continues to recommend Menactra for people who run a high risk for contracting meningitis, such as first-year college students living in dormitories, military recruits, and travelers to regions where meningitis is epidemic.

The possible link between the vaccine and GBS first surfaced in October 2005. At that time, five confirmed cases of the syndrome had been reported to the Vaccine Adverse Events Reporting System. In the present report, researchers from the CDC describe in detail two of the three cases that occurred between October 2005 and February 2006.

The first case involved a 19-year-old man who began experiencing numbness and weakness in his extremities, difficulty running, and decreased dexterity 25 days after being vaccinated with Menactra. Test results were consistent with GBS, and other possible causes of the neurologic symptoms were ruled out. He was treated and had made a full recovery by eight weeks after symptoms began.

The second case, which involved a 17-year-old male, was similar to the first, but disease onset occurred just 11 days after he was given the Menactra vaccine. Treatment resulted in a complete recovery two weeks after he has admitted to the hospital.

SOURCE: Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, April 6, 2006.

New FAIR clip of Imus and Lieberman

From FAIR:

Hi folks,

FAIR Autism Media has just posted a clip from a recent "Imus in the Morning" interview on MSNBC where Don Imus speaks with Senator Joseph Lieberman (D-CT) regarding thimerosal in vaccines and the autism epidemic.

If you would like to see this clip, visit:
http://www.autismmedia.org/media11.html

Enjoy,

Erik Nanstiel

CDC is "Disapointed" with USA Today Ad

Statement
For Immediate Release
April 6, 2006 Contact:
Division of Media Relations
404-639-3286
CDC Statement regarding autism-related advertisement in USA Today

We know that autism is a heart-wrenching situation for many families and many children and it presents special challenges that we would certainly want to prevent and do anything we could to avoid. When it comes to the nation’s immunization recommendations, the CDC and Public Health Service are always guided by one overriding goal and interest—all our recommendations are designed to protect the health and well being of all children.

We are very disappointed in an advertisement that appears in today’s edition of USA Today. The advertisement completely mischaracterizes the efforts of CDC, the American Academy of Pediatrics, the Institute of Medicine, and others to protect the health and well being of the nation’s children. CDC has sponsored multiple public meetings and scientific reviews, we’ve involved numerous outside organizations and experts in our research and recommendations, and we’ve made continued investments in research designed to discover factors which may place children at risk for developing autism. Importantly, if levels of thimerosal found in vaccines, including influenza vaccines, were associated with harm, CDC, the Public Health Service, and the nation’s physicians (e.g., the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American Medical Association, and American Academy of Family Physicians) would not recommend their use.

We’ve made substantial progress in removing thimerosal from vaccines – and have done so without placing infants and children at risk for potentially serious vaccine preventable diseases. As we continue in our efforts to further reduce the use of thimerosal in vaccines, we must also ensure, particularly in the case of influenza, that our efforts do not create serious undesirable outcomes, such as vaccine shortages that would place people, including children, at risk. History has shown that disruptions in vaccine supplies can render the population more vulnerable to diseases we know we can prevent.

We don't know, unfortunately, for children with autism what caused it, nor do we have sound, scientifically valid information on effective treatments. That's a fact. We just simply don't have answers to the cause of this disorder or the disorders that fall into the autism spectrum. We don't have a complete picture of the scope of the problem. We're just learning about the subtleties that can be early signs of autism, we're learning about the importance of early detection, and we're learning about the importance of early treatment, but we have a long way to go before we really understand the scope and magnitude of this problem in our country and what the trends really mean.

As we're looking for answers related to the causes and effective treatments for autism, we have to also be careful not to base our health recommendations on unproven hypotheses or fear. We have to base our decisions on the best available science that we have in front of us, and today the best available science indicates to us that vaccines save lives, and that's a very, very important message for all of us to remember.

For more information about autism, immunizations, or thimerosal, we encourage you to visit the CDC website: www.cdc.gov

April 7, 2006

Parents of Autistic Kids March Against Mercury

Parents of Autistic Kids March Against Mercury
Lindsay Puccio

April 6, 2006

Almost a thousand parents and physicians marched their way through the streets of Washington, DC to get the government's attention.

Parents said they want more research done to find out if mercury, which is found in children's vaccines, caused their sons and daughters to become Autistic.

"It empowers us as parents, it gives us some power to do something," said Kathy Young, a Charlottesville mother of an Autistic daughter.

Young walked in the "Mercury Generation March" to support her daughter. For years research showed Autism was a genetic disorder. But Young believes her daughter developed the disorder because of a known toxin that is in most vaccines. There has been some studies to prove it.

"No more lies from the CDC," parents chanted. These parents feel if more research is done to find the true cause of Autism, they can possibly find a cure.

"The main goal for all of us is that our kids get the proper treatment because currently with the government refusing to look at the issue seriously, little research is being done," said Young.

Right now, there isn't much parents can do if they believe mercury is responsible for their child's Autism. They feel this rally is their last hope to get the government on their side.

"The FDA and the CDC are making it very difficult for researchers to get the facts so that they can help our kids," said Young.

The CDC denies any cover-up. Currently, one out of every 166 kids are diagnosed with Autism.

April 6, 2006

"What You Have Done Unto The Least of These, You Have Done Unto Me"

Scott man extends religious experience to autistic
Thursday, April 06, 2006
By Margaret Smykla, Tri-State Sports and News Service

A few years ago, two Catholic families Larry Sutton knew had trouble finding proper religious instruction for their children with autism to receive the sacraments.

About the same time, Mr. Sutton, a child psychologist and a deacon at Our Lady of Grace Church in Scott, read about an autistic boy who was suffocated during a prayer service in a Milwaukee church as members tried to exorcise what they said were evil spirits. That incident occurred in a small Christian church called Faith Temple, which was in a strip mall.

He said both instances emphasized the lack of knowledge in society, including the religious community, about autism and the subsequent need for a program to help autistic children live fuller spiritual lives.

Autism is a neurodevelopmental disorder and children with it often have problems in social interactions and in communicating.

"The church is really to serve all people," said Mr. Sutton, of Mt. Lebanon. "People with disabilities need to be equal partners in our Christian community."

Along with help from Sister Michelle Grgurich, director of the Department for Persons with Disabilities for the Diocese of Pittsburgh, Mr. Sutton hopes to begin at his church a religious education program for autistic children up to age 18.

Six children have signed on, but more are needed for a viable program. Students will prepare for the sacraments of Penance, Eucharist and Confirmation.

Classes will be held in a nearby room during the 9:30 a.m. Sunday services at Our Lady of Grace.

Instruction will be based on the Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy Program to Improve Catholic Religious Education for Children and Adults with Mental Retardation, a program which includes religious instruction, lesson plans on the liturgical year, prayer services and a parents' handbook.

That nationwide program was developed in the diocese in 1996 under the direction of the Kennedy Foundation and Grace Harding, who was then director of the diocese's Department for Persons with Disabilities.

"It is comprehensive and has every topic in terms of the Catholic faith," Sister Michelle said.

The program has been in use at St. Anne Church in Castle Shannon for four years. There are five children, age 10 to 12, but it is open to anyone, including adults with special needs who never received the sacraments.

"It takes the basic tenets of the Catholic faith and puts them on a level children with special needs can understand," said St. Anne Director of Religious Education Katie Tarcson, of Bridgeville.

Classes are held from 6:15 to 7:30 p.m. Mondays from September through May at St. Anne school.

High school students serve as aids in the classroom for the St. Anne program, and Mr. Sutton said he wanted to increase that interaction in the Scott program.

He said he had seen the mutual benefits of high school students serving as models for younger people in his work for the state Bureau of Juvenile Justice.

Student mentors will be chosen after interviews with the child and his family.

For class, Mr. Sutton will read the daily Gospel, followed by the Kennedy curriculum, with the high schoolers acting as instructors.

The high school students will receive community service credit at their schools for their work.

To learn more about the Our Lady of Grace program, call 412-276-0277; for St. Anne's program, call 412-561-0101.

Thimerosal and Autism in India

Heavy Metal
Vaccines with mercury can cause autism, but removing the metal is uneconomical for developing countries such as India
VIBHA VARSHNEY

In the 1980s, worried parents and medical researchers in the us alleged that mercury in vaccines was responsible for the growing number of autism cases among children in the country. The issue was debated in medical circles, wheels moved in many western countries, but developing countries still don’t have a choice — because without mercury, vaccination is expensive.

There was pressure on the us government for legislation against mercury in vaccines. At the same time, a combative vaccine industry brandished studies vouching the safety of mercury in vaccines. Nonetheless, the us states of Iowa and California passed legislations in favour of mercury-free vaccines. The uproar was not restricted to the us: the Danish parliament, in 1992, banned the heavy metal from vaccines.
The uk has recently passed a similar legislation. At the root of the problem is thimerosal: this preservative with a 50 per cent mercury constituent is a key ingredient of multi-dose vaccines. These vials are about 10 times cheaper than single-dose vials, making it easier for international agencies to procure vaccines for programmes in developing countries including India. In 2000, for instance, about 80 per cent of vaccines administered globally were supplied in multi-dose vials.

But these vials require preservatives because they are used over longer periods. Thimerosal fits this requirement. So, it’s not surprising that international bodies such as the World Health Organization (who) and unicef recommend this preservative. Even those vaccine manufacturers based in developed countries who make mercury-free vaccines for domestic consumption use this heavy metal in their products for developing countries.

What are the implications?

Most vaccines used for the country’s universal immunisation programme (uip) have a thimerosal content of 25 µg per five millilitres. Half of that, 12.5 µg, is mercury. A six-week old infant in many parts of the country is administered two vaccines, dpt ( diphtheria, pertussis and tetanus ) and Hepatitis b. T his exposes the child to 25 µg of mercury. Infants getting vaccinated at a private clinic are also administered the haemophilus influenza type b vaccine, as per the Indian Academy of Paediatricians’ protocol. This results in a total exposure of 37.5 µg. According to the us Environment Protection Agency, the human body can, in a day, safely tolerate 0.1 µg of mercury for every kg of its body weight. So, an average six-week infant, weighing 7 kg, can tolerate an exposure of 0.7 µg of mercury. The child is exposed to mercury levels much higher than this recommended amount on innoculation day.

The risk of mercury is even higher for the undernourished — and underweight — Indian children. At a who meet of the Global Advisory Committee on Vaccine Safety in 2003, it was pointed out that little is known of susceptibility to thimerosal in infants who weigh less than 2.5 kg. Moreover, children are less equipped to handle the toxic load because they do not produce sufficient levels of bile, needed to remove mercury from the body.

However, many experts contend that ethyl mercury used in vaccines is not as toxic as methyl mercury, commonly blamed for maladies such as the Minamata disease. But there are others who dispute this argument.

Dubious methods

Thimerosal was developed in the 1930s by the us- based vaccine major, El Lilly and Company. For years the company has manipulated studies to demonstrate the safety of this mercury-based preservative. In fact, when thimerosal was introduced, the company did have it tested, but only on 22 patients with terminal meningitis. And quite conveniently meningitis was blamed for the death of all those injected with the preservative.

More recently, Eli Lilly used the us government’s paranoia against bio-terrorism to its advantage. Along with other vaccine companies, it persuaded the us government to introduce a clause in the Homeland Security Act — brought in response to the 9/11 attacks — stipulating that these companies can be challenged only in vaccine courts, and not in civil courts. Anxious to ensure vaccine supplies against any anthrax or smallpox attacks, the us government complied.

Heavy metal

On vaccination day, a child’s exposure to mercury is many times more than safety levels permit. Undernourished Indian children are at greater risk
The clause substantially reduces Eli Lilly’s — and other vaccines companies’ — liability if it were to lose a thimerosal-related litigation. In such an event, the company would have to pay us $5 billion in damages, six times less than what it would be liable for if the case was fought in a civil court.

Thimerosal has other supporters as well in the us. In 2004, the us health authority, Institute of Medicine (iom), came out with a report, which claimed to have used epidemiological studies from around the world, to suggest that there were no links between the preservative and autism.
But as journalist David Kirby notes in Evidence of Harm — a compelling study on the politics of mercury in vaccines — many experts who had exonerated thimerosal had received research grants and even donations from vaccine manufacturers.
Mounting evidence
While many us experts gave a clean chit to thimerosal, cases of autism increased in the country. In the early 1980s, only one among 10,000 children in the us was autistic. By the late 1990s, one in 500 children had the disease; currently there is one autistic child per 166 newborns in the us. Experts who incriminate thimerosal for this rise point out that mercury in vaccines more than doubled between 1988 and 1992. They also cite the contrasting example of Denmark, where autism afflicts one in 13,000 children — the country banned thimerosal in vaccines in 1992.

In another study, David Geier and Mark Geier of MedCon, Inc — a us- based private research laboratory — evaluated neurodevelopment disorders reported to the country’s Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System. They categorised the data into groups of those who had been administered dpt vaccines with thimerosal and those who received thimerosal-free vaccines between 1997 and 2001. The former demonstrated a significantly higher incidence of autism, speech disorder, mental retardation, personality disorders and thinking abnormalities. The evidence against mercury has not always been epidemiological. For example, a study by Mary Hornig of the Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, published in Molecular Psychiatry in June 2004, just months after the iom report, showed that thimerosal caused autism-like damage in genetically-susceptible mice. Another study by Boyd Haley of the University of Kentucky, usa, showed that mercury reduced an essential protein in nerve cells, tubulin. The protein is important for the growth of neurons and its depletion has been linked to the Alzheimer’s disease.

Thimerosal has also been implicated in other nerve disorders. For instance in 2003, David Baskin of the department of neurosurgery at Baylor College of Medicine demonstrated that this preservative can cause membrane and dna damage, and kill nerve cells, even when administered in small amounts.
Difficult decision
The debate has some positive fallout in the us. W ith legislation to remove mercury from vaccines, the levels of the heavy metal in vaccines administered to infants in their first six-months has currently come down to 3 µg from 187.5 µg in the 1980s. Experts are waiting to see if this intervention reduces the incidence of autism.

The debate can, however, compound the vaccine-related predicaments of developing countries like India, especially with the increasing awareness on the link between mercury and autism. A senior-Delhi-based paediatrician sums this apprehension quite aptly: “The fear of mercury in vaccines might deter people from innoculating their children”.

But what about alternatives to thimerosal? We do have alternative preservatives like 2-phenoxyethanol. Drug manufacturers around the world are also considering the use of other preservatives like benzalkonium chloride and benzethonium chloride. But says Varaprasad Reddy, ceo of Shantha Biotechnics, a Hyderabad-based pharmaceutical company, “We have manufactured vaccines withot thimerosal. It’s not difficult to produce them. But the who does not permit us to supply such vaccines to the unicef ” .

Besides, the use of these alternatives would require a complete change in the licensing regime. For, Indian Pharmacoepia — a document that contains guidelines on drug constituents — makes it mandatory for vaccines to have mercury.

That’s not all. Extensive safety data would be needed for licensing. In fact, in the us, 2-phenoxyethanol is used in dpt vaccines manufactured by Aventis Pasteur. But a study dating back to 2000 indicates that this preservative also has neurotoxic properties. Occupational exposure to this chemical for more than a year can lead to cognitive impairments.
Vial tinkering
There are some other alternatives as well For example, the U niject device developed by the international ngo path, obviates the need for preservative-dependant multi-dose vials. But many experts are not too sure if the device could be a viable alternative. The device is costlier than even conventional single-dose vaccines, says Reddy. The latter costs about Rs 25 per vial, while the new device costs as much as Rs 34. Apathy and concern

There is another problem far graver than costs of alternative preservatives. Many experts do not see the need to shift over to mercury-free vaccines. One of them Suresh Jadhav, executive director, Serum Institute of India Ltd, Pune, asserts, “There is no proof of the harm done by vaccines, only perceptions. Using mercury-free, single-dose vaccines is also not feasible as multi-dose vaccines are far cheaper,” he adds.

Indian Pharmacoepia is quite categorical that even single-dose vaccines contain thimerosal. Reddy agrees that this anomaly should be corrected, but is not sure that this would make much difference considering the expenses involved in manufacturing single-dose vaccines.

There are other problems. It’s not incumbent on vaccine manufacturers to put down information about the presence of thimerosal in the literature that accompanies the vaccine vials. So, some of the vaccines produced in the country such as those produced by, gsk Bharat Biotech do not mention the presence of preservative. This lack makes it difficult for parents to take the kind of action taken by their counterparts in the us.

The Union minister of health and family welfare is not totally impervious to such problems. The national technical advisory group on immunisation, a body of this ministry, is supposed to convene a meeting soon to assess the safety data related to vaccines. If needed, the group will put an alternative vaccination strategy in place. But this meeting is long overdue. “There should be policy changes. But these should be implemented quickly without creating a scare,” suggests a senior paediatrician. Other experts assert that the government should quickly develop a low cost, effective preservative that is safer than thimerosal.

Exposure to mercury in any case is quite high in India. An autistic person needs treatment for life and the cost is very high. It’s time corrective measures are taken.

April 5, 2006

The Hill: Autism Parents Allege CDC Cover-up

Autism parents allege CDC cover-up
By Jeffrey Young

Officials at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) conspired to cover up information linking vaccines to developmental disorders in children, organizations representing parents of autistic children allege.

The advocacy groups have long contended that mercury and a mercury-based substance called thimerosal, which were commonly used as preservatives in vaccines, cause some children to develop autism or similar disorders.

The autism groups sponsored a full-page ad in today’s USA Today that reads, “If you caused a 6,000% increase in autism, wouldn’t you try to cover it up, too?” The ad alleges that the CDC “knows that the ambitious immunization schedule begun in the 1990s, nearly tripling the amount of mercury injected into our children, created an epidemic of autism in America.”

The organizations are holding a rally and press conference this morning to highlight their charges. Reps. Dan Burton (R-Ind), Dave Weldon (R-Fla.) and Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.) are scheduled to speak at the event in the park next to the Russell Senate Office Building.

The CDC, other federal authorities and even the American Academy of Pediatrics contest this theory and say there is no scientific evidence that vaccinations contribute to autism. Federal authorities also argue that the benefits of immunization against diseases such as mumps outweigh the risk of vaccines.

Autism groups say that one out of every 166 children has an autistic disorder. The CDC’s website says, “While it is clear that more children than ever before are being classified as” autistic, the agency does not know why, nor does it know exactly how many children have autistic disorders.

Based on internal e-mails written by officials at the CDC, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and others, the parents groups contend that federal authorities knew the vaccines were causing autism but failed to act.

Generation Rescue, one of the parents groups, has posted the documents on the website www.putchildrenfirst.org. Generation Rescue obtained the documents via the Freedom of Information Act.

“These are our federal health agencies that we trust … and they’re poisoning us,” said Wendy Fournier of the National Autism Association. “They’ve poisoned an entire generation of children,” she said. The CDC spearheaded an aggressive push to expand childhood vaccinations in the early 1990s.

Burton seconded the accusations in a statement yesterday. He has been relentless in his criticisms of the health agencies.

“I truly feel that the HHS [Department of Health and Human Services], CDC, [the Institute of Medicine] and the FDA have deliberately misled the American public on the dangers of mercury in vaccines, and I wholeheartedly support a thorough and independent investigation into the evident link between mercury and autism,” Burton said.

The CDC denied any cover-up and defended its policies. “We’ve taken this issue and the concerns very seriously from the beginning,” said CDC spokesman Glen Nowak.

The allegations of a conspiracy represent an intensification of a years-long campaign by these organizations.

The groups want Congress to investigate and will demand that criminal charges be brought against officials involved. The Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee is investigating the agencies, a spokesman for the panel said. Last July, parents groups recommended to the committee that HHS, CDC and FDA officials should be charged with criminal negligence and criminal obstruction of justice.

In addition to the National Autism Association and Generation Rescue, A-Champ, NoMercury, Moms Against Mercury and AutismOne organized the rally and press conference. Today’s press conference will be followed by a conference on autism issues that will run through Monday.

Maloney said the agencies should respond better to the concerns of these parents and Congress but stopped short of endorsing the allegations of a cover-up.

“When it comes to mercury, autism and the government’s response, there are still more questions than answers. … I know that there are some in Congress who want to work to get those answers,” she said.

“While I cannot answer the question of an alleged cover-up, it is obvious to even the casual observer that the CDC has failed miserably investigating this matter,” Weldon said.

The organizations representing parents of autistic children have been vocal and aggressive in their campaigns to get mercury and thimerosal removed from all vaccines and to get the CDC and other agencies to change their policies related to childhood vaccines.

Their strategies have attracted the interest of many members of Congress over the years, notably Burton and Weldon. The conference report that accompanied the appropriations bill that funds HHS this year includes a provision requesting another study on the issue by the National Institutes of Health.

A scientific review issued by the National Academies’ Institute of Medicine in 2004 was intended to put the question of mercury and autism to rest but served only to fuel the fire.

The institute’s panel concurred with the CDC position. “Neither the mercury-based vaccine preservative thimerosal nor the measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine are associated with autism,” according to the press release that accompanied the report.

The parents groups alleged that the CDC pressured the committee that carried out the review to support its policies.

The chairwoman of the panel rejected that charge, which she characterized as an explicit attack on her integrity. Asked if CDC officials attempted to sway the committee’s deliberations, Harvard School of Public Health professor Marie McCormick said, “Absolutely not.”

AJC: Autism Controversy Eats at Credibility of CDC

Autism controversy eats at credibility of CDC
By ALISON YOUNG
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 04/06/06

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, rarely the subject of public controversy, is facing an emerging credibility crisis on the emotional issue of whether old-style vaccines containing a mercury preservative caused autism in thousands of children.

The agency is being accused of cover-ups and scientific manipulations by a vocal group of autism advocates and is facing questions from some high-profile members of Congress.

As the debate and controversy increasingly finds its way into pediatricians' offices, average parents of healthy children are questioning whether vaccines are safe, sometimes even refusing inoculations.

The CDC and other public health officials insist such questions lack a basis in fact or science. Their greatest concern is that the broadening debate holds the potential to put a new generation of children at certain risk of deadly diseases if confidence in the safety of vaccines is lost and they don't receive recommended shots.

"I think it's huge," said Dr. Julia McMillan, a member of the American Academy of Pediatrics committee that makes vaccine recommendations. "There's no pediatrician in practice that doesn't confront this on a weekly basis: families who are questioning the need for – and in some cases refusing — vaccines for their children."

But the academy and the CDC are in agreement: They say there is no evidence to support a connection between autism and the mercury-based preservative thimerosal, which they stress is no longer used in most pediatric vaccines.

"We simply don't know what the cause of autism is," Dr. Bob Davis, the CDC's director of immunization safety, said Wednesday. Nonetheless, the CDC finds itself at the center of criticism.

A full-page ad scheduled to run in today's editions of USA Today, the nation's largest-circulation newspaper, accuses the CDC of "causing an epidemic of autism" by recommending that children receive a series of vaccines that until 2001 contained thimerosal.

The ad, placed by a group of autism advocacy groups, quotes environmental lawyer Robert F. Kennedy Jr. as saying: "It's time for the CDC to come clean with the American public."

But what stings public health advocates more is a letter sent Feb. 22 by Sen. Joseph Lieberman (D-Conn.) and seven other members of Congress. The bipartisan group asks that the CDC not take the lead on a new study examining the vaccine-autism issue.
"If the federal government is going to have a study whose results will be broadly accepted, such a study cannot be led by the CDC," the group wrote Dr. David Schwartz, new director of the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences. The institute, a part of the National Institutes of Health, will convene a panel in May to discuss how to analyze a key CDC database to determine whether autism rates have dropped since thimerosal was removed from vaccines.

The letter was also signed by Sen. Debbie Stabenow, (D-Mich.), Rep. Dave Weldon, (R-Fla.,) Rep. Chris Smith, (R-N.J.), Rep. Carolyn Maloney, (D-N.Y.), Rep. Dan Burton, (R-Ind.), Rep. Joseph Crowley, (D-N.Y,), and Rep. Maurice Hinchey, (D-N.Y.).
Agency officials said Wednesday they are proud of the CDC's work on thimerosal safety issues and that they have looked hard to find a link as well as to find any other cause of autism.

"It was an unfortunate choice of language," Davis said of the Lieberman letter. "They and everyone else are certainly entitled to their opinion. We stand by all the research we have done."

Public health officials who work with CDC are more blunt.

"I think it's shocking," said Dr. Martin Myers, executive director of the National Network for Immunization Information and a professor of pediatrics at the University of Texas medical branch in Galveston.

"The loss of public trust in one of the most extraordinary institutions in the world. I'm not quite sure how that has occurred, but it has, and that's one of the unfortunate consequences," Myers said.

The controversy, which erupted as some autism advocates rallied on Capitol Hill today in conjunction with National Autism Month, is gaining political traction, moving well beyond an initial core of autism activists, CDC, public health and congressional officials all agree.

There are many parents of autistic children who believe, as do most pediatricians and scientists, that there is no scientific evidence that thimerosal caused autism and other neurological disorders. That issue was settled for most in a widely publicized 2004 report by an expert panel convened by the National Academy of Sciences Institute of Medicine.

But the report has been the subject of controversy and intense scrutiny since it was published.

Parents of many autistic children insist that thimerosal caused the disorder, because it appeared around the time their children received vaccinations. Their advocates also point to what they say is intriguing new research in animal models indicating that some individuals may be more sensitive to thimerosal than others. Martin Cowen, whose family lives in Jonesboro, is one such parent.
Cowen is convinced thimerosal-containing vaccines caused his son Lindsey's autism. Lindsey, who turned 8 last week, does not speak, has not been toilet trained and cannot be allowed outdoors without being restrained for fear he'll run into traffic, his father said.

Cowen is highly skeptical of the CDC, a position shared by a cohort of parents and advocates across the country.

"An enormous effort is being made to deny the connection," he said of the CDC. "What do I think their motive is? They are very interested in having the herd vaccinated... They don't think of people as people suffering individually. It's the greatest good for the greatest number."

The National Immunization Program, run by the CDC, coordinates immunization activities across the country. Increasing the rate of immunization against disease is a cornerstone of public health.

At the same time, the CDC also is charged with monitoring vaccine safety. It's an inherent conflict of interest, said Weldon, a doctor before he was elected to Congress.

"They really do have a credibility problem," said Weldon, who serves on the committee that decides the CDC's budget. "Part of the credibility problem is it's asking them to investigate a problem that they may have created."

Weldon became involved in the thimerosal issue seven years ago. "Honestly, at first I was very dubious," he said. "As I looked at it more and more, I began to feel there is some validity to this."

Weldon said the recent interest by Lieberman and others on Capitol Hill is a sign the issue is gaining political traction. Lieberman was unavailable for comment.
The controversy and public debate is likely to be further fueled by the full-page ad being paid for by a coalition of the autism activist groups led by Generation Rescue. The ad promotes a sophisticated Web site, www.PutChildren First.org, which includes links to CDC documents, e-mails and transcripts the groups say support their contention of an agency cover-up.

CDC spokesman Glen Nowak said many of the documents on the site have been in the public domain for years, and are presented out of context and in ways that may "look quite ominous" – when they're not.

"It's a very challenging issue," he said. The CDC is bracing for a spike in calls today from parents with questions and is increasing staffing at its public help line, 1-800-232-4636.

FDA Public Hearing On Dental Mercury

Joint Meeting of the Dental Products Panel of the Medical Devices Advisory Committee of the Center for Devices and Radiological Health and the Peripheral and Central Nervous System Drugs Advisory Committee of the Center for Drug Evaluation and Research

CDRH
September 06, 2006
September 07, 2006
8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.

Holiday Inn
Walker/Whetstone Rm.
Two Montgomery Village Ave.
Gaithersburg, MD

Agenda:
This joint committee will review and discuss peer-reviewed scientific literature on dental amalgam devices. Dental amalgam, also called "encapsulated amalgam," consists of dental mercury and amalgam alloys. This joint committee will review and discuss peer-reviewed scientific literature on dental amalgam and its potential mercury toxicity, specifically as it relates to neurotoxic effects. Certain consumer groups have raised concerns about the effects of using mercury as a component of dental restorative materials; therefore, we are combining the expertise of the Dental Products Panel of the Medical Device Advisory Committee with the neurology expertise of the Peripheral and Central Nervous System Drugs Advisory Committee.

Background material and meeting information will become available no later than one business day before each meeting day (Simply scroll down to the appropriate committee heading).

Procedure:
Interested persons may present data, information, or views, orally or in writing, on issues pending before the committee. Written submissions may be made to the contact person by August 23, 2006. On September 6 and 7, 2006, Oral presentations from the public will be scheduled at the beginning of committee deliberations and near the end of the deliberations. Time allotted for each presentation may be limited. Those desiring to make formal oral presentations should notify the contact person by August 23, 2006, and include the names and addresses of proposed participants, and an indication of the approximate time requested to make their presentation. Persons attending FDA's advisory committee meetings are advised that the agency is not responsible for providing access to electrical outlets.

FDA welcomes the attendance of the public at its advisory committee meetings and will make every effort to accommodate persons with physical disabilities or special needs. If you require special accommodations due to a disability, please contact Ann Marie Williams, Conference Management Staff, 240-276-0450 ext. 113, at least 7 days in advance of the meeting.

Contact Person:
Michael E. Adjodha, Center for Devices and Radiological Health (HFZ-480), Food and Drug Administration, 9200 Corporate Blvd., Rockville, MD 20850, 301-827-5283, ext. 123, e-mail: Michael.Adjodha@fda.hhs.gov

Advisory Committee Telephone Information Line:
Please call the Information Line for up-to-date information on this meeting, 1-800-741-8138 (301-443-0572 in the Washington, DC area), code 3014512518.