|
VACCINATED CHILDREN TWO AND
A HALF TIMES MORE LIKELY TO HAVE
NEUROLOGICAL DISORDERS LIKE ADHD AND AUTISM,
NEW SURVEY IN CALIFORNIA AND OREGON FINDS
http://www.generationrescue.org/survey.html
New Findings Emerge as Debate
Rages in Court
Portland, OR - June 26, 2007
- As the first trial in Vaccine Court explores the relationship
between vaccines and autism, a new survey released today indicates
a strong correlation between rates of neurological disorders,
such as ADHD and autism, and childhood
vaccinations.
The survey, commissioned by
Generation Rescue, compared vaccinated and unvaccinated children
in nine counties in Oregon and California. Among more than 9,000
boys age 4-17, the survey found vaccinated boys were two and
a half times (155%) more likely to have neurological disorders
compared to their unvaccinated peers. Vaccinated boys were 224%
more likely to have Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
(ADHD), and 61% more likely to have autism.
For older vaccinated boys in
the 11-17 age bracket, the results were even more pronounced.
Vaccinated boys were 158% more likely to have a neurological
disorder, 317% more likely to have ADHD, and 112% more likely
to have autism. Complete survey results are available at
www.GenerationRescue.org.
Generation Rescue commissioned
the phone survey. Data was gathered by SurveyUSA, a national
market research firm, which surveyed parents by phone on more
than 17,000 children, ages 4-17, in five counties in California
(San Diego, Sonoma, Orange, Sacramento, and Marin) and four counties
in Oregon (Multnomah, Marion, Jackson, and Lane).
The survey asked parents whether
their child had been vaccinated, and whether that child had one
or more of the following diagnoses: Attention Deficit Disorder
(ADD), ADHD, Asperger's Syndrome, Pervasive Development Disorder-Not
Otherwise Specified (PDD-NOS), or Autism. The phone survey was
chosen to mirror the methodology the Centers for Disease Control
(CDC) uses to establish national prevalence for neurological
disorders in their national phone survey.
Timed to the release of the
survey results, Generation Rescue also ran full-page advertisements
in Washington's Roll Call, The Oregonian, and The Orange County
Register today. The ad compares the 36 pediatric vaccines the
CDC recommends today to the 10 recommended in 1983, and asks,
"Are We Over-Vaccinating Our Kids?"
"No one has ever compared
prevalence rates of these neurological disorders between vaccinated
and unvaccinated children," said J.B. Handley, co-founder
of Generation Rescue, whose son was diagnosed with autism. "The
phone survey isn't perfect, but these numbers point to the need
for a comprehensive national study to gather this critical information."
In Washington, Congresswoman
Carolyn Maloney (D-NY) has been advocating for such a survey.
Co-sponsored by Rep. Maurice Hinchey (D-NY) and Rep. Ron Paul
(R-TX), the "Comprehensive Comparative Study of Vaccinated
and Unvaccinated Population Act of 2006," or H.R. 2832,
was introduced on June 22, and would require the National Institutes
of Health to complete this research.
"Generation Rescue's study
is impressive and forcefully raises some serious questions about
the relationship between vaccines and autism. What is ultimately
needed to resolve this issue one way or the other is a comprehensive
national study of vaccinated and unvaccinated children,"
said Congresswoman Maloney. "The parents behind Generation
Rescue only want information. These parents deserve more than
road blocks, they deserve answers. We can and should move forward
in search of those answers. That's why I've introduced a common
sense bill that would require the National Institutes of Health
(NIH) to conduct a comprehensive, comparative study on the possible
link between autism and thimerosal."
From 1983 to 2007, autism rates
have climbed from 1 in 10,000 children to 1 in 150 children,
a growth rate of 6,000% (boys are significantly more affected
by neurological disorders, accounting for approximately 80% of
all cases). ADHD currently affects 1 in 13 children. In the
same period, the CDC's recommended vaccine schedule more than
tripled. The simmering debate over the cause of childhood neurological
disorders shows no sign of cooling, but no study had ever been
done to look at unvaccinated children.
Lisa Handley, co-founder of
Generation Rescue, adds, "Everyone working with autism wants
to identify the cause so we can focus on treatment and prevention.
A national study like HR 5940 could help end this debate and
focus all of our resources on helping our kids. Its time has
come, and we hope Congress will choose to put our children first."
About Generation Rescue
Generation Rescue was formed
by parents of children who have been diagnosed with childhood
neurological disorders (NDs), and is dedicated to examining the
causes and biomedical treatments for Autism, Asperger's, ADHD,
ADD, PDD-NOS, and other learning disabilities. Visit www.GenerationRescue.org
for more information and to see complete survey results.
Go to New
Autism Research
Return to Front
Page
|