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'We still believe in Wakefield'

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<http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/7316497.stm>http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health\

/7316497.stm

'We still believe in Wakefield'

By Nick Triggle

Health reporter, BBC News

Outside the General Medical Council's London HQ it was clear

something significant was happening.

Dr Wakefield

Dr Wakefield's case began last summer

Scores of campaigners, watched by police, had gathered from early

morning waving placards in support of Dr Wakefield.

Most were parents with autistic children wanting to show support for

the man who made the link between the three-in-one measles, mumps and

rubella (MMR) jab and the disorder.

Of course, since his paper was published in the Lancet medical

journal in 1998, medical experts have sought to discredit the findings.

And now he is before a GMC fitness to practise panel over how he

conducted the research.

'There are still doubts'

But despite the controversy surrounding his findings, the campaigners

camped outside the hearing were full of support for the 51-year-old.

Nina Lteif, a 37-year-old mother of twin boys from Surrey, said: " We

have come here to show him we believe in him. There has been a

witch-hunt against him when all he was trying to do was help people. "

[]

[]

He should have been encouraged to carry on his research

Nina Lteif, mother of two sons with autism

Mrs Lteif's six-year-old boys have autism, and she believes the MMR

jab which they had just after their first birthday contributed to it.

" Despite what all the research has said since Dr Wakefield published

his, there are still doubts in the minds of parents.

" He should have been encouraged to carry on his research, but the

government and medical world has just wanted to ignore it. "

A pat on the back

Inside the glass-fronted building, the atmosphere was vastly different.

MMR

The majority of scientists say MMR is safe

The hearing is being held in a long office-type room with filing

cabinets down either side - a rather understated environment to pass

judgement on one of the most controversial medical experts of his generation.

When Dr Wakefield walked into the hearing, he was patted on the back

by the small group of supporters that had been allowed into the

public hearing.

But, with the GMC staff and journalists far outnumbering his

supporters, there was a rather studious atmosphere in the hearing.

Dr Wakefield, and the two professors who are also facing professional

misconduct charges alongside him, sat opposite the five-strong GMC panel.

Dr Wakefield is the first of the three to give evidence.

Clash

Much of the early proceedings were spent detailing the progression of

his career.

It was only interrupted by an outburst by a supporter, who tried to

give the GMC some extra evidence.

The offer was declined by the GMC panel who warned the woman about

her behaviour.

There was more confrontation outside as Dr Wakefield's supporters

clashed with a journalist who has been investigating the doctor in

recent years.

The heated discussion illustrates that MMR and autism is still an

issue that can ignite opinions.

And while the beginning of Dr Wakefield's defence marks a new phase

in the GMC hearing, which started last summer, the feeling remains

that in the end it may make little difference.

After all, Dr Wakefield is now working in the US where he runs a

developmental disorders clinic for children.

And the GMC's remit does not stretch across the Atlantic.

--------------------------------------------------------

Sheri Nakken, former R.N., MA, Hahnemannian Homeopath

Vaccination Information & Choice Network, Nevada City CA & Wales UK

Vaccines - http://www.wellwithin1.com/vaccine.htm Vaccine Dangers &

Childhood Disease & Homeopathy Email classes start in March

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