Guest guest Posted January 17, 2011 Report Share Posted January 17, 2011 http://abcnews.go.com/Health/Autism/autism-vaccine-link-research-dr-andrew-wakef\ ield-fraud/story?id=12630566 --- This message was sent by deniseslist@... via http://addthis.com. Please note that AddThis does not verify email addresses. Make sharing easier with the AddThis Toolbar: http://www.addthis.com/go/toolbar-em Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 17, 2011 Report Share Posted January 17, 2011 These news reporters need to get their information accurate before asking questions... It amazes me how one individual can say something and then it somehow becomes fact... amazing... and equally amazing how a small study can be so misconstrued and misrepresented... It’s like politics...LOL From: deniseslist@... Sent: Monday, January 17, 2011 12:49 PM To: deniseslist Subject: ABC News: Wakefield Defends Link Between Vaccine and Autism http://abcnews.go.com/Health/Autism/autism-vaccine-link-research-dr-andrew-wakefield-fraud/story?id=12630566---This message was sent by mailto:deniseslist%40yahoo.com via http://addthis.com. Please note that AddThis does not verify email addresses.Make sharing easier with the AddThis Toolbar: http://www.addthis.com/go/toolbar-em Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 17, 2011 Report Share Posted January 17, 2011 Very sad to see that it's a fact a study that was purported to be science is actually a fraud as well as researchers all over the world have tried to replicate Wakefield's study and haven't - which again proves that the study was false. There could be some truth to what Wakefield really believes but no one has been able to prove it. "Determine that the thing can and shall be done, and then we shall find the way." -Abraham Lincoln To: sList From: austintandt@...Date: Mon, 17 Jan 2011 17:53:33 -0500Subject: Re: ABC News: Wakefield Defends Link Between Vaccine and Autism These news reporters need to get their information accurate before asking questions... It amazes me how one individual can say something and then it somehow becomes fact... amazing... and equally amazing how a small study can be so misconstrued and misrepresented... It’s like politics...LOL From: deniseslist@... Sent: Monday, January 17, 2011 12:49 PM To: deniseslist Subject: ABC News: Wakefield Defends Link Between Vaccine and Autism http://abcnews.go.com/Health/Autism/autism-vaccine-link-research-dr-andrew-wakefield-fraud/story?id=12630566---This message was sent by mailto:deniseslist%40yahoo.com via http://addthis.com. Please note that AddThis does not verify email addresses.Make sharing easier with the AddThis Toolbar: http://www.addthis.com/go/toolbar-em Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 17, 2011 Report Share Posted January 17, 2011 the study *was* replicated--not only by Wakefield himself, which he talks about in the " interview " , but also by Wake Forest University and Harvard. I think there were also European replications. Funny how the reporters never get around to reporting that. > Very sad to see that it's a fact a study that was purported to be > science is actually a fraud as well as researchers all over the > world have tried to replicate Wakefield's study and haven't - which > again proves that the study was false. There could be some truth to > what Wakefield really believes but no one has been able to prove it. > > > > " Determine that the thing can and shall be done, and then we shall > find the way. " > -Abraham > Lincoln > > > > > > To: sList > From: austintandt@... > Date: Mon, 17 Jan 2011 17:53:33 -0500 > Subject: Re: ABC News: Wakefield Defends Link Between > Vaccine and Autism > > > These news reporters need to get their information accurate before > asking questions... > > It amazes me how one individual can say something and then it > somehow becomes fact... amazing... and equally amazing how a small > study can be so misconstrued and misrepresented... > > It’s like politics...LOL > > > > From: deniseslist@... > Sent: Monday, January 17, 2011 12:49 PM > To: deniseslist > Subject: ABC News: Wakefield Defends Link Between > Vaccine and Autism > > > > http://abcnews.go.com/Health/Autism/autism-vaccine-link-research-dr-andrew-wakef\ ield-fraud/story?id=12630566 > > --- > This message was sent by mailto:deniseslist%40yahoo.com via http://addthis.com > . Please note that AddThis does not verify email addresses. > > Make sharing easier with the AddThis Toolbar: http://www.addthis.com/go/toolbar-em > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 17, 2011 Report Share Posted January 17, 2011 I have a hard time understanding all the commotion over a STUDY using 12 students. I see them in the newspaper all the time. Although the study was flawed in the first place by the small number of subjects (12). Whoever elevated it to research? Can I say it again? His research had nothing to do with proving vaccinations cause autism. And as an added note, he never suggested parents stop vaccinating their children. From: sList [mailto:sList ] On Behalf Of austintandt@...Sent: Monday, January 17, 2011 5:54 PMTo: sList Subject: Re: ABC News: Wakefield Defends Link Between Vaccine and Autism These news reporters need to get their information accurate before asking questions... It amazes me how one individual can say something and then it somehow becomes fact... amazing... and equally amazing how a small study can be so misconstrued and misrepresented... It’s like politics...LOL From: deniseslist@... Sent: Monday, January 17, 2011 12:49 PMTo: deniseslist Subject: ABC News: Wakefield Defends Link Between Vaccine and Autism http://abcnews.go.com/Health/Autism/autism-vaccine-link-research-dr-andrew-wakefield-fraud/story?id=12630566---This message was sent by mailto:deniseslist%40yahoo.com via http://addthis.com. Please note that AddThis does not verify email addresses.Make sharing easier with the AddThis Toolbar: http://www.addthis.com/go/toolbar-em Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 17, 2011 Report Share Posted January 17, 2011 I was in the UK at the time of the MMR controversy and I elected to have both of my kids ( one with autism, one without ) given the MMR vaccines singly at 6 month intervals. And only 1 dose , no booster. There is a lot of work being done now by biomedical doctors to treat high levels of metal toxicity and also to treat high levels of yeast both of which are widely believed by DAN doctors to be prevalent in autistic kids.Should they all be discredited too ? Increasing numbers and doses of combined immunizations may or may not add to these levels but many parents ( and doctors ) believe there is possibly some linkage. In the UK Doctor Wakefield was subjected to a witchhunt and eventually driven out of the country. It was perceived by many that the NHS in the UK could not handle either the cost or the additional workload of those who wanted to spread out their kids vaccines and so they attacked Dr Wakefield and tried to say that the hardly fatal diseases of measles, mumps and rubella would break out into an epidemic if parents did not give the MMR as 1 vaccine. I for one have a lot of time for Dr Wakefield's opinions - they may not be conclusive but they may also not be as sinister as the medical profession would have us believe. Subject: Re: ABC News: Wakefield Defends Link Between Vaccine and AutismTo: sList Date: Monday, 17 January, 2011, 22:53 These news reporters need to get their information accurate before asking questions... It amazes me how one individual can say something and then it somehow becomes fact... amazing... and equally amazing how a small study can be so misconstrued and misrepresented... It’s like politics...LOL From: deniseslist@... Sent: Monday, January 17, 2011 12:49 PM To: deniseslist Subject: ABC News: Wakefield Defends Link Between Vaccine and Autism http://abcnews.go.com/Health/Autism/autism-vaccine-link-research-dr-andrew-wakefield-fraud/story?id=12630566---This message was sent by mailto:deniseslist%40yahoo.com via http://addthis.com. Please note that AddThis does not verify email addresses.Make sharing easier with the AddThis Toolbar: http://www.addthis.com/go/toolbar-em Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 17, 2011 Report Share Posted January 17, 2011 The truth is that Wakefield's "study" doesn't focus on the time elapsed vaccination and symptoms of ind. with ASD, neither on presence of mercury or other toxins included in the vaccine. One of his initial assumptions was that ind. with autism almost, inevitably develop digestive problems, and his hypothesis was this: children with autism harbor measles virus genome in their guts, the same strain as in MMR vaccine received, while healthy children normally do not. Regardless if this is true, his study was seriously flawed and the results were manipulated to the point of fraud. It's a shame that the battle keeps going around irrelevant issues such as vaccines causing autism that draw attention away from the focus of the studies below that were conducted. The results of these REAL research studies about Gastrointestinal Disorders in Individuals With ASDs are found to be valid and reliable. And say nothing about vaccines causing autism. The Wake Forest University study into Gastrointestinal Disorders in Individuals With ASDs is ongoing. i Evaluation, Diagnosis, and Treatment of Gastrointestinal Disorders in Individuals With ASDs: A Consensus Report, Buie, MD, et al, Department of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School Pediatrics, Vol. 125 Supplement January 2010 ii Clinical Presentation and Histologic Findings at Ileocolonoscopy in Children with Autistic Spectrum Disorder and Chronic Gastrointestinal Symptoms, Arthur Krigsman, MD, et al, New York University School of Medicine, Autism Insights, 27 Jan 2010iii Endoscopic and Histological Characteristics of the Digestive Mucosa in Autistic Children with gastro-Intestinal Symptoms. L, et al. ArchVenez Pueric Pediatr, 2005;69:19-25.iv Panenteric IBD-like disease in a patient with regressive autism shown for the first time by wireless capsulenteroscopy: Another piece in the jig-saw of the gut-brain syndrome? Balzola F, et al. American Journal of Gastroenterology. 2005. 100(4):979-981.v Childhood autism and eosinophilic colitis. Chen B, Girgis S, El-Matary W.. Digestion. 2010;81:127-9. Epub 2010 Jan 9 "Determine that the thing can and shall be done, and then we shall find the way." -Abraham Lincoln > To: sList > Date: Mon, 17 Jan 2011 17:20:06 -0800> Subject: Re: ABC News: Wakefield Defends Link Between Vaccine and Autism> > the study *was* replicated--not only by Wakefield himself, which he > talks about in the "interview", but also by Wake Forest University and > Harvard. I think there were also European replications. Funny how > the reporters never get around to reporting that.> > > > > Very sad to see that it's a fact a study that was purported to be > > science is actually a fraud as well as researchers all over the > > world have tried to replicate Wakefield's study and haven't - which > > again proves that the study was false. There could be some truth to > > what Wakefield really believes but no one has been able to prove it.> >> >> >> > "Determine that the thing can and shall be done, and then we shall > > find the way."> > -Abraham > > Lincoln> >> >> >> >> >> > To: sList > > > Date: Mon, 17 Jan 2011 17:53:33 -0500> > Subject: Re: ABC News: Wakefield Defends Link Between > > Vaccine and Autism> >> >> > These news reporters need to get their information accurate before > > asking questions...> >> > It amazes me how one individual can say something and then it > > somehow becomes fact... amazing... and equally amazing how a small > > study can be so misconstrued and misrepresented...> >> > It’s like politics...LOL> >> >> >> > > Sent: Monday, January 17, 2011 12:49 PM> > To: deniseslist > > Subject: ABC News: Wakefield Defends Link Between > > Vaccine and Autism> >> >> >> > http://abcnews.go.com/Health/Autism/autism-vaccine-link-research-dr-andrew-wakefield-fraud/story?id=12630566> >> > ---> > This message was sent by mailto:deniseslist%40yahoo.com via http://addthis.com > > . Please note that AddThis does not verify email addresses.> >> > Make sharing easier with the AddThis Toolbar: http://www.addthis.com/go/toolbar-em> >> >> >> >> > > > > > ------------------------------------> > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 17, 2011 Report Share Posted January 17, 2011 What the media is trying to do is to use Wakefield as the scapegoat for the vaccine scare and try to totally dscredit him. People who do not live with Autism are likely to believe that and continue vaccinating their kids, however they have no clue that they cannot silence the parents who have more knowledge in this field then they can imagine. They never mention any other MD or researcher that ALSO believes that vaccines can trigger Autism, why is that? To: sList Sent: Mon, January 17, 2011 9:07:20 PMSubject: RE: ABC News: Wakefield Defends Link Between Vaccine and Autism I have a hard time understanding all the commotion over a STUDY using 12 students. I see them in the newspaper all the time. Although the study was flawed in the first place by the small number of subjects (12). Whoever elevated it to research? Can I say it again? His research had nothing to do with proving vaccinations cause autism. And as an added note, he never suggested parents stop vaccinating their children. From: sList [mailto:sList ] On Behalf Of austintandt@...Sent: Monday, January 17, 2011 5:54 PMTo: sList Subject: Re: ABC News: Wakefield Defends Link Between Vaccine and Autism These news reporters need to get their information accurate before asking questions... It amazes me how one individual can say something and then it somehow becomes fact... amazing... and equally amazing how a small study can be so misconstrued and misrepresented... It’s like politics...LOL From: deniseslist@... Sent: Monday, January 17, 2011 12:49 PM To: deniseslist Subject: ABC News: Wakefield Defends Link Between Vaccine and Autism http://abcnews.go.com/Health/Autism/autism-vaccine-link-research-dr-andrew-wakefield-fraud/story?id=12630566---This message was sent by mailto:deniseslist%40yahoo.com via http://addthis.com. Please note that AddThis does not verify email addresses.Make sharing easier with the AddThis Toolbar: http://www.addthis.com/go/toolbar-em Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 18, 2011 Report Share Posted January 18, 2011 Exactly... Though the small number of subjects doesn’t make it flawed...The assumptions others took from it, namely Deer, is the problem. From: Heifferon Sent: Monday, January 17, 2011 9:07 PM To: sList Subject: RE: ABC News: Wakefield Defends Link Between Vaccine and Autism I have a hard time understanding all the commotion over a STUDY using 12 students. I see them in the newspaper all the time. Although the study was flawed in the first place by the small number of subjects (12). Whoever elevated it to research? Can I say it again? His research had nothing to do with proving vaccinations cause autism. And as an added note, he never suggested parents stop vaccinating their children. From: sList [mailto:sList ] On Behalf Of austintandt@...Sent: Monday, January 17, 2011 5:54 PMTo: sList Subject: Re: ABC News: Wakefield Defends Link Between Vaccine and Autism These news reporters need to get their information accurate before asking questions... It amazes me how one individual can say something and then it somehow becomes fact... amazing... and equally amazing how a small study can be so misconstrued and misrepresented... It’s like politics...LOL From: deniseslist@... Sent: Monday, January 17, 2011 12:49 PM To: deniseslist Subject: ABC News: Wakefield Defends Link Between Vaccine and Autism http://abcnews.go.com/Health/Autism/autism-vaccine-link-research-dr-andrew-wakefield-fraud/story?id=12630566---This message was sent by mailto:deniseslist%40yahoo.com via http://addthis.com. Please note that AddThis does not verify email addresses.Make sharing easier with the AddThis Toolbar: http://www.addthis.com/go/toolbar-em Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 18, 2011 Report Share Posted January 18, 2011 In this case, it was a study. There were other authors, other than Wakefield. None of them knew which samples they were looking at. They didn’t compare the GP (general practitioner’s notes/observations) with the parents during the parent interviews...until later... That’s not fraud...that’s trying to take background information from different sources. This has been replicated. Wake Forest is currently replicating it now. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-388051/Scientists-fear-MMR-link-autism.html http://www.generationrescue.org/pdf/measles.pdf http://www.generationrescue.org/pdf/wakefield.pdf http://www.generationrescue.org/pdf/jyonouchi.pdf and the original study... http://www.generationrescue.org/pdf/wakefield2.pdf Again, the studies do not “prove” anything....They are not “cause/effect” studies... Wakefield, or his co-authors, do not allege “vaccines cause autism.” And, he did not indicate to stop vaccinating based on this study alone... Hope this helps... From: Nila Benito Sent: Monday, January 17, 2011 8:08 PM To: deniseslist Subject: RE: ABC News: Wakefield Defends Link Between Vaccine and Autism Very sad to see that it's a fact a study that was purported to be science is actually a fraud as well as researchers all over the world have tried to replicate Wakefield's study and haven't - which again proves that the study was false. There could be some truth to what Wakefield really believes but no one has been able to prove it. "Determine that the thing can and shall be done, and then we shall find the way." -Abraham Lincoln To: sList From: austintandt@...Date: Mon, 17 Jan 2011 17:53:33 -0500Subject: Re: ABC News: Wakefield Defends Link Between Vaccine and Autism These news reporters need to get their information accurate before asking questions... It amazes me how one individual can say something and then it somehow becomes fact... amazing... and equally amazing how a small study can be so misconstrued and misrepresented... It’s like politics...LOL From: deniseslist@... Sent: Monday, January 17, 2011 12:49 PM To: deniseslist Subject: ABC News: Wakefield Defends Link Between Vaccine and Autism http://abcnews.go.com/Health/Autism/autism-vaccine-link-research-dr-andrew-wakefield-fraud/story?id=12630566---This message was sent by mailto:deniseslist@... via http://addthis.com. Please note that AddThis does not verify email addresses.Make sharing easier with the AddThis Toolbar: http://www.addthis.com/go/toolbar-em Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 18, 2011 Report Share Posted January 18, 2011 No he was not focused on timing of vaccines in the study. Neither did any of the other researchers.He did not, nor did the others on the study, Make any assumptions not was there a hypothesis. There was no hypothesis. It was a study of children whose parents sought treatment at the facility.Nothing in the study was manipulated. It's not possible given all of the authors involved and the samples were blind. None of the researchers knew whose sample they were examining. Hence being referred to as "child 1-12."Please read the study. It raises concern. That was all it did. The information being reported is not accurate. Sent from my iPhone The truth is that Wakefield's "study" doesn't focus on the time elapsed vaccination and symptoms of ind. with ASD, neither on presence of mercury or other toxins included in the vaccine. One of his initial assumptions was that ind. with autism almost, inevitably develop digestive problems, and his hypothesis was this: children with autism harbor measles virus genome in their guts, the same strain as in MMR vaccine received, while healthy children normally do not. Regardless if this is true, his study was seriously flawed and the results were manipulated to the point of fraud. It's a shame that the battle keeps going around irrelevant issues such as vaccines causing autism that draw attention away from the focus of the studies below that were conducted. The results of these REAL research studies about Gastrointestinal Disorders in Individuals With ASDs are found to be valid and reliable. And say nothing about vaccines causing autism. The Wake Forest University study into Gastrointestinal Disorders in Individuals With ASDs is ongoing. i Evaluation, Diagnosis, and Treatment of Gastrointestinal Disorders in Individuals With ASDs: A Consensus Report, Buie, MD, et al, Department of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School Pediatrics, Vol. 125 Supplement January 2010 ii Clinical Presentation and Histologic Findings at Ileocolonoscopy in Children with Autistic Spectrum Disorder and Chronic Gastrointestinal Symptoms, Arthur Krigsman, MD, et al, New York University School of Medicine, Autism Insights, 27 Jan 2010iii Endoscopic and Histological Characteristics of the Digestive Mucosa in Autistic Children with gastro-Intestinal Symptoms. L, et al. ArchVenez Pueric Pediatr, 2005;69:19-25.iv Panenteric IBD-like disease in a patient with regressive autism shown for the first time by wireless capsulenteroscopy: Another piece in the jig-saw of the gut-brain syndrome? Balzola F, et al. American Journal of Gastroenterology. 2005. 100(4):979-981.v Childhood autism and eosinophilic colitis. Chen B, Girgis S, El-Matary W.. Digestion. 2010;81:127-9. Epub 2010 Jan 9 "Determine that the thing can and shall be done, and then we shall find the way." -Abraham Lincoln > To: sList > Date: Mon, 17 Jan 2011 17:20:06 -0800> Subject: Re: ABC News: Wakefield Defends Link Between Vaccine and Autism> > the study *was* replicated--not only by Wakefield himself, which he > talks about in the "interview", but also by Wake Forest University and > Harvard. I think there were also European replications. Funny how > the reporters never get around to reporting that.> > > > > Very sad to see that it's a fact a study that was purported to be > > science is actually a fraud as well as researchers all over the > > world have tried to replicate Wakefield's study and haven't - which > > again proves that the study was false. There could be some truth to > > what Wakefield really believes but no one has been able to prove it.> >> >> >> > "Determine that the thing can and shall be done, and then we shall > > find the way."> > -Abraham > > Lincoln> >> >> >> >> >> > To: sList > > > Date: Mon, 17 Jan 2011 17:53:33 -0500> > Subject: Re: ABC News: Wakefield Defends Link Between > > Vaccine and Autism> >> >> > These news reporters need to get their information accurate before > > asking questions...> >> > It amazes me how one individual can say something and then it > > somehow becomes fact... amazing... and equally amazing how a small > > study can be so misconstrued and misrepresented...> >> > It’s like politics...LOL> >> >> >> > > Sent: Monday, January 17, 2011 12:49 PM> > To: deniseslist > > Subject: ABC News: Wakefield Defends Link Between > > Vaccine and Autism> >> >> >> > http://abcnews.go.com/Health/Autism/autism-vaccine-link-research-dr-andrew-wakefield-fraud/story?id=12630566> >> > ---> > This message was sent by mailto:deniseslist%40yahoo.com via http://addthis.com > > . Please note that AddThis does not verify email addresses.> >> > Make sharing easier with the AddThis Toolbar: http://www.addthis.com/go/toolbar-em> >> >> >> >> > > > > > ------------------------------------> > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 18, 2011 Report Share Posted January 18, 2011 Yes that is true but outside of his study he did give a number of interviews about vaccines generally and partly as a result of that many parents opted to avoid combined immunizations and spread them out. This upset many working in the UK healthcare system because of cost and administrative burden so they tried to say that parents who did this were risking their kids lives and creating possible epidemics.My point is that there are many doctors using iv chelation to rid kids of metal toxicity which they say is a common feature with autistic kids and to use other methods to reduce yeast and other gut related issues. I happen to believe a lot in those methods but there are many who think these techniques are dangerous and unproven. Why is there not the same outcry about these ? Maybe it is because parents pay for all these treatments themselves rather than getting them through insurance here or through the state system in the UK ??In other words the responses to views outside the norm are often cost motivated not health motivated Sent from my iPad No he was not focused on timing of vaccines in the study. Neither did any of the other researchers.He did not, nor did the others on the study, Make any assumptions not was there a hypothesis. There was no hypothesis. It was a study of children whose parents sought treatment at the facility.Nothing in the study was manipulated. It's not possible given all of the authors involved and the samples were blind. None of the researchers knew whose sample they were examining. Hence being referred to as "child 1-12."Please read the study. It raises concern. That was all it did. The information being reported is not accurate. Sent from my iPhone The truth is that Wakefield's "study" doesn't focus on the time elapsed vaccination and symptoms of ind. with ASD, neither on presence of mercury or other toxins included in the vaccine. One of his initial assumptions was that ind. with autism almost, inevitably develop digestive problems, and his hypothesis was this: children with autism harbor measles virus genome in their guts, the same strain as in MMR vaccine received, while healthy children normally do not. Regardless if this is true, his study was seriously flawed and the results were manipulated to the point of fraud. It's a shame that the battle keeps going around irrelevant issues such as vaccines causing autism that draw attention away from the focus of the studies below that were conducted. The results of these REAL research studies about Gastrointestinal Disorders in Individuals With ASDs are found to be valid and reliable. And say nothing about vaccines causing autism. The Wake Forest University study into Gastrointestinal Disorders in Individuals With ASDs is ongoing. i Evaluation, Diagnosis, and Treatment of Gastrointestinal Disorders in Individuals With ASDs: A Consensus Report, Buie, MD, et al, Department of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School Pediatrics, Vol. 125 Supplement January 2010 ii Clinical Presentation and Histologic Findings at Ileocolonoscopy in Children with Autistic Spectrum Disorder and Chronic Gastrointestinal Symptoms, Arthur Krigsman, MD, et al, New York University School of Medicine, Autism Insights, 27 Jan 2010iii Endoscopic and Histological Characteristics of the Digestive Mucosa in Autistic Children with gastro-Intestinal Symptoms. L, et al. ArchVenez Pueric Pediatr, 2005;69:19-25.iv Panenteric IBD-like disease in a patient with regressive autism shown for the first time by wireless capsulenteroscopy: Another piece in the jig-saw of the gut-brain syndrome? Balzola F, et al. American Journal of Gastroenterology. 2005. 100(4):979-981.v Childhood autism and eosinophilic colitis. Chen B, Girgis S, El-Matary W.. Digestion. 2010;81:127-9. Epub 2010 Jan 9 "Determine that the thing can and shall be done, and then we shall find the way." -Abraham Lincoln > To: sList > Date: Mon, 17 Jan 2011 17:20:06 -0800> Subject: Re: ABC News: Wakefield Defends Link Between Vaccine and Autism> > the study *was* replicated--not only by Wakefield himself, which he > talks about in the "interview", but also by Wake Forest University and > Harvard. I think there were also European replications. Funny how > the reporters never get around to reporting that.> > > > > Very sad to see that it's a fact a study that was purported to be > > science is actually a fraud as well as researchers all over the > > world have tried to replicate Wakefield's study and haven't - which > > again proves that the study was false. There could be some truth to > > what Wakefield really believes but no one has been able to prove it.> >> >> >> > "Determine that the thing can and shall be done, and then we shall > > find the way."> > -Abraham > > Lincoln> >> >> >> >> >> > To: sList > > > Date: Mon, 17 Jan 2011 17:53:33 -0500> > Subject: Re: ABC News: Wakefield Defends Link Between > > Vaccine and Autism> >> >> > These news reporters need to get their information accurate before > > asking questions...> >> > It amazes me how one individual can say something and then it > > somehow becomes fact... amazing... and equally amazing how a small > > study can be so misconstrued and misrepresented...> >> > It’s like politics...LOL> >> >> >> > > Sent: Monday, January 17, 2011 12:49 PM> > To: deniseslist > > Subject: ABC News: Wakefield Defends Link Between > > Vaccine and Autism> >> >> >> > http://abcnews.go.com/Health/Autism/autism-vaccine-link-research-dr-andrew-wakefield-fraud/story?id=12630566> >> > ---> > This message was sent by mailto:deniseslist%40yahoo.com via http://addthis.com > > . Please note that AddThis does not verify email addresses.> >> > Make sharing easier with the AddThis Toolbar: http://www.addthis.com/go/toolbar-em> >> >> >> >> > > > > > ------------------------------------> > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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