jenny mccarthy wants your kid to get measles: autism, vaccines, and stupid idiots

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well what do you call a bad reaction?

Fair point. I think a kid that gets sick for a few days with no lasting ill effects is something that any reasonable parent should be able to deal with, and we don't need to throw $$$ at that. It's the "lasting ill effects" that I'm talking about -- neurological damage, massive psychological/behavioral changes, etc. There's zero doubt that at least a handful of kids have those reactions, probably as a result of some weird-ass autoimmune response that's partly genetic. It'd be valuable to know how that happens and how to stop it, because even if you don't give a shit about overprivileged suburban white toddlers, it'd probably shed light on other things too.

And yeah, conspiracy theory talk is pretty much paranoid bullshit. However, you don't need a bunch of people in a dark room to get much the same effect, policy-wise. It's pretty obvious that one of the reasons that the ADA won't budge on amalgam is that they don't want to get the shit sued out of them, but there's no reason why a secret cabal of Illuminati dentists would have to meet on a mountaintop to make that happen. A consensus based on self-interest can do a lot of what people fondly attribute to conspiracy.

xpost you can follow money and find rich assholes looking to make big cash from, like, anything.

Charlie Rose Nylund, Wednesday, 14 January 2009 19:41 (fifteen years ago) link

i dont know, has anyone been running a "turn dead kids into fuel" empire?

R. L. Stinebeck (John Justen), Wednesday, 14 January 2009 19:42 (fifteen years ago) link

Oh, and of course vaccinations are great. But "i don't think a dime should be spent on research to figure out why" some people might have adverse reactions to them is a questionable (nutty) extension of the (sound) underlying argument.

Calling All Creeps! (contenderizer), Wednesday, 14 January 2009 19:42 (fifteen years ago) link

I mean, I've totally heard that argument used against environmentalism -- that environmentalists are just in it for $$$, control, etc. -- so I'm very wary of it.

xpost

Charlie Rose Nylund, Wednesday, 14 January 2009 19:44 (fifteen years ago) link

I think a kid that gets sick for a few days with no lasting ill effects is something that any reasonable parent should be able to deal with, and we don't need to throw $$$ at that. It's the "lasting ill effects" that I'm talking about -- neurological damage, massive psychological/behavioral changes, etc.

― Charlie Rose Nylund

These aren't neccessarily different things, though. The process that in one person causes mild symptoms could cripple another.

Calling All Creeps! (contenderizer), Wednesday, 14 January 2009 19:44 (fifteen years ago) link

Yeah, the "follow the money" argument can cut both ways on a lot of key issues. But I want to understand who benefits and how when I listen to someone's political argument. Everyone has an axe to grind, and I want to understand that axe before I decide on the merits of their "evidence".

Euler, Wednesday, 14 January 2009 19:46 (fifteen years ago) link

I think you guys are looking for the manufacturers of Mumps-B-Gone(R) and JiffyQuarantine(TM), pictured below

http://www.hermes-press.com/fat_cat2.gif

nabisco, Wednesday, 14 January 2009 19:46 (fifteen years ago) link

proclaiming my moral superiority over a bunch of moms who "loll about in (their) suburban mansions" or whatever, feels like total hubris to me.

― Charlie Rose Nylund, Wednesday, January 14, 2009 12:45 PM (1 hour ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink

actually i was talking about the hiv-aids link denial woman would basically said children who live in urban areas with parents who have to work should have died instead of her child. dont be a dick.

tacos, fettucini, linguini, martini, bikini. (sunny successor), Wednesday, 14 January 2009 20:17 (fifteen years ago) link

as i was saying upthread, there seems to be a documented - but very rare - link between vaccines and autism

mj2b can u give me ref for this? not asking as a challenge def genuinely curious. i can find a bunch of studies like this which conclude:

We could find no convincing evidence that early exposure to thimerosal had any deleterious effect on neurologic or psychological outcome.

but i take it you are talking about something else? also did/do u go to stanford?

½ąm¶ (Lamp), Wednesday, 14 January 2009 20:37 (fifteen years ago) link

i did, but i didn't study medicine or public health, i studied education and teaching, and i attended just a few lectures on autism (since i see more and more students with asperger's every year), but that was the guy who spoke at the lectures and he very clearly stated that position in his lectures. he also very clearly said that there's no way that even putting together all of the known and suspected environmental factors you'd have enough incidence to account for the "autism epidemic", and he put the "epidemic" down to growing public and medical awareness of a continuum of disorders rather than a real epidemic.

moonship journey to baja, Wednesday, 14 January 2009 20:42 (fifteen years ago) link

i mean i'm a layman like everyone else and i'm basically just regurgitating what i heard from one very credible source ... still, if anybody's entitled to an informed opinion i think it would be that guy

moonship journey to baja, Wednesday, 14 January 2009 20:44 (fifteen years ago) link

another thing though is that because of that guy's job he is privy to info from two big unfinished research projects on autism: CATS (california autism twins study) and SEED (study to explore early development) ... i am sure that ten years from now there will be a lot of answered questions about autism thanks to all the recent studies.

moonship journey to baja, Wednesday, 14 January 2009 20:51 (fifteen years ago) link

xpost

no i'm the same most of what i know about this comes from talking to my mom about the research she does and shes pretty consistently maintained that the autism/vaccine link is bogus.

i do know that the etiology is understood to be v. complex or maybe that the little we know about the mechanics of hetereogeneous disorders make them harder to understand so any position is taken, at least a little bit, in the dark.

when where u at stanford btw

½ąm¶ (Lamp), Wednesday, 14 January 2009 20:56 (fifteen years ago) link

actually i was talking about the hiv-aids link denial woman would basically said children who live in urban areas with parents who have to work should have died instead of her child.

Ah. Sorry for the misunderstanding.

I went looking just now to see if I could put that quote in context, but the website (for her daughter) is gone, and the Archive.org copy was blocked by robots.txt. Why in the world would someone robots.txt a memorial page?

Charlie Rose Nylund, Wednesday, 14 January 2009 20:58 (fifteen years ago) link

ENBB thank you for getting my ire in before I had the chance to do so!

Abbott of the Trapezoid Monks (Abbott), Wednesday, 14 January 2009 23:16 (fifteen years ago) link

who is worse: creationists or these anti vaccine people

― Mr. Que, Wednesday, January 14, 2009 2:49 AM (20 hours ago)

OH my GOD the antivaccine people are. Creationists are fucked up BUT they're not saying "here kids, get rubella and die because I can't handle the potential idea of my kid being kind of different mentally." Creationists view autistic kids as a special child from God, which is a little condescending but a lot nicer and kinder.

Abbott of the Trapezoid Monks (Abbott), Wednesday, 14 January 2009 23:20 (fifteen years ago) link

Fucking up everyone's kids vs. fucking up your own kid

Alex in SF, Wednesday, 14 January 2009 23:22 (fifteen years ago) link

^^ The funny part is that if you take the "up"s out of that sentence and wait 18 years, it works the other way around

nabisco, Wednesday, 14 January 2009 23:26 (fifteen years ago) link

See actually it is probably difficult to convince everyone about herd immunity (let alone to get everyone to listen). Sure. What really makes me DISTRAUGHT here is the whole eugenicsy bent to it, like the worst fucking thing in the entire world would to be autistic. Mad sympathy here for parents who have kids with autism, don't get me wrong. No sympathy for people who take the risk of killing their kid and other kids after DECADES of use of these vaccines and kind of fucking things up for everyone!

Abbott of the Trapezoid Monks (Abbott), Wednesday, 14 January 2009 23:29 (fifteen years ago) link

IMO it's totally fine to be anywhere on the autism spectrum tho it is going to complicate your life.

Abbott of the Trapezoid Monks (Abbott), Wednesday, 14 January 2009 23:30 (fifteen years ago) link

I have a rotten mental illness but whatevs, this is life, right? OTOH I would be tempted to sue my parents or something drastic if me & my sibs were not vaccinated at their behest!

Abbott of the Trapezoid Monks (Abbott), Wednesday, 14 January 2009 23:31 (fifteen years ago) link

everyone thinks they are special. it isn't true. lol america.

goole, Wednesday, 14 January 2009 23:33 (fifteen years ago) link

See the thing is you can't claim to be irreplaceable for being unique. They'll just put another unique in your former post.

Abbott of the Trapezoid Monks (Abbott), Wednesday, 14 January 2009 23:35 (fifteen years ago) link

Plus, you know, the kids aren't really gonna get the autism from vaccinations, and if they've got it already, it probly came from someplace else.

Calling All Creeps! (contenderizer), Wednesday, 14 January 2009 23:35 (fifteen years ago) link

It's not freaking contagious! (I know you know but ANOTHER thing here is people kind of act like it is?)

I suppose I mean: it is not communicable from one person to another.

I know everyone knows this.

Abbott of the Trapezoid Monks (Abbott), Wednesday, 14 January 2009 23:37 (fifteen years ago) link

I mean did no one read THE VELVETEEN RABBIT? (I know that was Scarlet Fever but still that is the saddest death of a peripheral character ever.)

Abbott of the Trapezoid Monks (Abbott), Wednesday, 14 January 2009 23:40 (fifteen years ago) link

http://www.blacktriangle.org/blog/?page_id=1701

I found this pretty mind boggling. The original Wakefield paper in the Lancet contains this graph which is, as far as I can tell, deliberately misleading.
From what I remember (just having skim-read it again now) the graph that was "supposed" to show a rise in autism correlating with the start of MMR actually showed just a distribution of birth dates of people in the system (dept of developmental services).

Just one way in which anti-MMRs will do anything to distort the truth.

I may have been reading too much www.badscience.net but I really am beginning to think the media does have to have some responsibility in how it gives time and credibility to these people. There is a culture now of trusting the 'lone voice against the system' and no culture of simply asking 'prove it'.

Not the real Village People, Wednesday, 14 January 2009 23:41 (fifteen years ago) link

Does anyone want to hire me to do a show about overlooked glaring truths with funny enactments of peer-reviewed medical journal articles? I could throw in some Olbermann-style bellowing & paper-throwing if anyone wants.

Abbott of the Trapezoid Monks (Abbott), Wednesday, 14 January 2009 23:43 (fifteen years ago) link

Hey - hope I didn't make you mad posting at the start but I saw this thread and thought immediately of you!

Too Into Dancing to Argue (ENBB), Wednesday, 14 January 2009 23:45 (fifteen years ago) link

No way I was so glad! I was like "oh man thank god bcz my opinions are STRONG and I wanted them to be noted and E did it for me high fives." :D

Abbott of the Trapezoid Monks (Abbott), Wednesday, 14 January 2009 23:55 (fifteen years ago) link

My earlier comment was genuine.

Abbott of the Trapezoid Monks (Abbott), Wednesday, 14 January 2009 23:55 (fifteen years ago) link

I'm 200 posts too late but I already heard/read about her crazy theory. I've yet to encounter someone here who has this mad opinion.

Chickenpox is nasty and way more dangerous if you have it as an adult. Also as a woman (if you want to conceive) it's better to be immune: if you catch it during pregnancy it can be harmful to the foetus. (Ophelia had it when I was pregnant with Elisabeth. Not being entirely sure whether I was immune to it, I did a check-up.)

Nathalie (stevienixed), Thursday, 15 January 2009 12:48 (fifteen years ago) link

even if vaccines do cause autism that knowledge won't help parents teach a disabled young person how to negotiate the world

m coleman, Thursday, 15 January 2009 13:00 (fifteen years ago) link

I wonder if she didn't see the signs he was autistic beforehand? Maybe because he grew older and the signs were clearer? DOes that make any sense? I realize autism can be detected early on but sometimes, if it's mild, you can only tell when the kid is older. I hope he is "cured".

Nathalie (stevienixed), Thursday, 15 January 2009 13:07 (fifteen years ago) link

You can't cure autism though

Vicious Cop Kills Gentle Fool (Tom D.), Thursday, 15 January 2009 13:12 (fifteen years ago) link

Well, science can't, but Jenni McCarthy can

Vicious Cop Kills Gentle Fool (Tom D.), Thursday, 15 January 2009 13:15 (fifteen years ago) link

It's probably worth noting also that a lot of people on the autistic spectrum do not consider themselves disabled.

Madchen, Thursday, 15 January 2009 13:41 (fifteen years ago) link

Going back to the whole 'scientific proof' thing, the problem is that to appease the MMR haters, you need to prove a negative, ie. that MMR does not cause autism. This hasn't been done. However, one of my links above was to a study of Japanese children after they stopped using MMR and went for single vaccines there. If there was a link between MMR and autism, you would expect the incidence of autism to fall when this change was made, but in fact it fell.

I do wish all the people on this thread who are paraphrasing something they have read somewhere, or beginning their arguments with "it seems to me" would link to a credible scientific source to back up what they're saying.

Those who are anti-vaccine in general would do well to remember that any medicine has its risks and they are only on the market if the benefits have been judged to outweigh those risks.

Madchen, Thursday, 15 January 2009 13:45 (fifteen years ago) link

you would expect the incidence of autism to fall when this change was made, but in fact it fell rose.

Argh, ffs.

Madchen, Thursday, 15 January 2009 13:46 (fifteen years ago) link

Clearly your typo is a rogue side-effect of the MMR vaccine.

^likes black girls (HI DERE), Thursday, 15 January 2009 14:43 (fifteen years ago) link

Someone needs to invent a vaccination against autism just to fuck with the anti-vaccine brigade.

Francisco Javier Sánchez Brot (onimo), Thursday, 15 January 2009 15:13 (fifteen years ago) link

lolz

tacos, fettucini, linguini, martini, bikini. (sunny successor), Thursday, 15 January 2009 15:15 (fifteen years ago) link

three weeks pass...

Researchers Retract a Study Linking Autism To Vaccination
By ANAHAD O'CONNOR

Ten of the 13 scientists who produced a 1998 study linking a childhood vaccine to several cases of autism retracted their conclusion yesterday.

In a statement to be published in the March 6 issue of The Lancet, a British medical journal, the researchers conceded that they did not have enough evidence at the time to tie the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine, known as MMR, to the autism cases. The study has been blamed for a sharp drop in the number of British children being vaccinated and for outbreaks of measles.

''We wish to make it clear that in this paper no causal link was established between MMR vaccine and autism as the data were insufficient,'' the researchers said in the retraction. ''However, the possibility of such a link was raised and consequent events have had major implications.''

The study came under fierce criticism last month when the editor of the Lancet said that the lead author of the report, Dr. Andrew Wakefield had failed to reveal that he had a conflict of interest when he conducted the research. At the time, the journal editors said, Dr. Wakefield was also gathering information for lawyers representing parents who suspected their children had developed autism because of the vaccine.

In a statement published on the Lancet's Web site on Feb. 23, Dr. Richard Horton, the journal's editor, wrote: ''We regret that aspects of funding for parallel and related work and the existence of ongoing litigation that had been known during clinical evaluation of the children reported in the 1998 Lancet paper were not disclosed to editors.''

After the 1998 study appeared, British health officials pleaded with parents to continue vaccinating their children, and a number of other studies were unable to confirm a link between autism and the MMR vaccine.

Dr. Wakefield, who could not be immediately reached for comment, hired a lawyer to demand an apology from the Lancet after the journal released its statement last month, said Dr. Jeff Bradstreet, a colleague.

Dr. Bradstreet, director of the International Child Development Resource Center in Florida, said that Dr. Wakefield had not become involved with the lawyers representing the parents until after the study had essentially been finished. ''This has been blown way out of proportion,'' he said.

In the statement released yesterday, the researchers said that they could not reach one author of the study to ask if he wished to participate in the retraction. Two other authors, including Dr. Wakefield, did not sign the statement, according to the Lancet.

velko, Sunday, 8 February 2009 20:35 (fifteen years ago) link

They recanted: good.

That it took them eleven years to do so: bad.

That Wakefield even did that in the first place: wtf people.

i'm shy (Abbott), Sunday, 8 February 2009 21:05 (fifteen years ago) link

You know, though, that is what I love about good scientists: their humility. I mean, can you imagine a religion or a politician coming back 11 years later and being like, "oops lol that was wrong, sorry"?

i'm shy (Abbott), Sunday, 8 February 2009 21:07 (fifteen years ago) link

Dr. Wakefield is probably Jessica's son.

Nicolars (Nicole), Sunday, 8 February 2009 21:23 (fifteen years ago) link

Let us not forget these brave men and women who held their ground against relentless Illuminazi pressure for eleven years.

Jackoff Sheesh (Batty), Sunday, 8 February 2009 22:31 (fifteen years ago) link

Some sanity returns:

Thousands of parents who claimed that childhood vaccines had caused their children to develop autism are wrong and not entitled to federal compensation, a special court ruled today in three decisions with far-reaching implications for a bitterly fought medical controversy.

The long-awaited decision on three test cases is a severe blow to a grass-roots movement that has argued -- predominantly through books, magazines and the Internet -- that children's shots have been responsible for the surge in autism diagnoses in the United States in recent decades. The vast majority of the scientific establishment, backed by federal health agencies, has strenuously argued there is no link between vaccines and autism, and warned that scaring parents away from vaccinating their youngsters places children at risk for a host of serious childhood diseases.

The decision by three independent special masters is especially telling because the special court's rules did not require plaintiffs to prove their cases with scientific certainty -- all the parents needed to show was that a preponderance of the evidence, or "50 percent and a hair," supported their claims. The vaccine court effectively said today that the thousands of pending claims represented by the three test cases are on extremely shaky ground.

Ned Raggett, Thursday, 12 February 2009 17:49 (fifteen years ago) link

Awesome

dowd, Thursday, 12 February 2009 18:56 (fifteen years ago) link

Problem is that it won't necessarily change much in the believers' minds, at least. Vehemently held paranoid beliefs tend not to be arrived at thru rational thought, and as such tend not to be changed by such minor things like facts or actual reality.

In other words, it ain't gunna change the folks who call into Coast to Coast AM about this.

kingfish, Thursday, 12 February 2009 19:06 (fifteen years ago) link


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