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Reprinted with authors
permission.
Originally published at Opednews.com
April 18, 2006
Scientist and medical experts say
that unless the government forces the
pharmaceutical industry to pay for the damage caused by mercury-laced
vaccines, in the not too distant future, Americans will experience the
worst welfare disaster in the history of this country.
No doubt with that in mind, eight
members of Congress are calling for a new investigation into the link
between the autism epidemic and the mercury-based preservative,
thimerosal, that children received in vaccines during the 1990s, and
that some children received as late as 2003.
After six years of hearings, and
testimony from medical experts, scientists, special education teachers,
school nurses, and parents of autistic children, several lawmakers say
they are convinced that a review of the vaccine database will show a
causal link between autism and thimerosal.
Throughout the 1990s, when
thimerosal was most heavily used,
the number of
children diagnosed with autism reached epidemic proportions.
During this
period, the levels of mercury that children received were 120
times greater
than safety standards set for oral ingestion of mercury in
food, according
to the lawmakers.
In 1999, public health officials
began asking vaccine-makers
to eliminate
the preservative from childhood vaccines. But seven years
later, word got
out that the preservative is still in the flu vaccine recently
added to the
childhood immunization schedule, and parents, medical experts,
and
scientists are outraged.
In seeking an independent review,
the lawmakers basically told
the Centers
for Disease Control to butt out. They maintain that previous
research
conducted by the agency is flawed because it "was based on
data collected
prior to the removal of thimerosal and failed to explicitly
compare the
outcome of children who received thimerosal-containing
vaccines with those
who did not," they said.
The group has also criticized the
Institute of Medicine for
its 2004 public
announcement that there is no link between vaccines and
autism, because the
conclusion for the most part, was based on European studies,
when American
children had been injected with 75% higher levels of mercury
than the
European children in the studies were exposed to.
In March 2006, the lawmakers sent a
letter to the National
Institute of
Environmental Health Sciences, asking their agency to conduct
a study of the
CDC's Vaccine Safety Datalink, which contains records on 7
million children
vaccinated since 1990.
"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
lawmakers
wrote in the letter.
Although the debate over the cause
of autism may rage on
indefinitely, the
rising costs to society of caring for and educating the
children afflicted
with the disorder can not be ignored.
On January 4, 2005, the Government
Accountability Office
advised the
Subcommittee on Human Rights and Wellness Committee on
Government Reform,
that the average per pupil cost for educating a child with
autism was
estimated to be over $18,000 during the 1999-2000 school year,
the most
recent year in which data were available at the time of the
report.
That means that six years ago, the
GAO's estimate for
educating autistic
children was nearly 3 times the cost of educating a normal
student. The
amount of money needed to educate autistic children is the
highest per pupil
cost for children receiving special ed services.
The epidemic does not discriminate,
its happening in every
state in the
nation, due to the fact that under the mandatory vaccine
schedule, children
in every state received the same mercury-laced vaccines.
From December 1998 to December 2002,
the autism population in
California's
Developmental Services System nearly doubled and the 97%
increase in 4 years
did not include children less than 3, persons classified with
less common
forms of autism, or persons who are suspected of having autism
but are not
yet diagnosed.
The total number of autistic
students served statewide increased from 10,360 in December 1998 to
20,377 in December 2002.
Over the last 6 years, the state of
Ohio experienced more than
a 1,000%
increase in students with autism, with 5,406 reported cases
for the
2003-2004 school year, according to the Ohio Legislative
Office Of Education
Oversight.
This year, the Pennridge School
District in Pennsylvania,
expects to only
receive about $1 million in federal funding, and only $2.8
million from the
state, to cover its $11 million special ed budget. This means
about 60% of
the total cost will have to be paid by local taxpayers.
In recent years, the average age of
autistic children entering
the school
system has shifted to much younger children. Under federal
law, public
schools must provide appropriate education for all children
with
disabilities, starting at age 3, and many autistic children
remain in the
system until age 21.
For very young children, the
recommendation for early intervention has created an increased demand
for more intensive behavioral
therapy and
educational services in general. However, the federal
government only
partially reimburses the states for the cost of educating
autistic children,
even though early intervention means that the services
required for each
child must now be provided for a much longer period of time.
And on the other hand, as more
autistic children reach late
adolescence, the
need for out-of-home residential services is beginning to
have a heavy
impact on state budgets.
There is also an increase in public
health care costs
associated with the
growing number of autistic children. For instance, according
to state
government records, South Carolina has an estimated 2000
children under the
age of 18 with autism, and the great majority of these
children are eligible
for at least some services covered by Medicaid.
During the fiscal year 2005,
according to the Department of
Health and Human
Services, South Carolina paid out more than $20 million for
autism care, in
large part, because most insurance companies do not cover the
high cost of
the specific therapies that have been found to be the most
successful in
treating children with autism.
A group of South Carolina lawmakers
are trying to pass a bill
that would
require private insurers to cover services for all autism
patients
regardless of age. Industry lobbyist, Larry Marchant says that
if passed,
the bill would cause the health insurance premiums that
individuals or
families pay to increase 25%, and would average out to an
extra $200 a month
for those enrolled in family plans, according to State.com on
March 26,
2006.
In addition, the financial burden
that a disorder like autism
takes on
families is absolutely devastating. Upon becoming autistic
after receiving
vaccines at 16 months, Laura Bono says her son, "Jackson's
medical and
therapy needs began taking every bit of money we had saved or
ever would
have saved."
"The total we have paid for
Jackson's medical, nutritional and
private
therapy expenses so far," Laura says, "is roughly $685,000
since August
1990."
That amount averages out to well
over $50,000 a year.
There is no escaping the fact that
the epidemic is having a
profound impact
on society; not only on autistic children and their families,
but on our
public health care programs and school systems as well. And,
until
vaccine-makers are held accountable, taxpayers will continue
to carry the
full burden.
Evelyn Pringle
evelyn.pringle@sbcglobal.net
About The Author
Evelyn Pringle is a columnist for
Independent Media TV and has been investigating the autism epidemic for
the past year and a half.
Article source
http://www.opednews.com/articles/genera_evelyn_p_060418_autism___worst_welfa.htm
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