Autism and Vaccines: What's the Link? Port Huron MI

If autism isn't undeniably the result of vaccines, why the increase in the reported incidences of the disorder? Experts credit heightened public awareness and the greater pool of knowledge available to the medical community. Understandably, this provides little solace to concerned parents, especially in light of plight of Hannah Poling, the subject of a federal court case last year.

Forever Free Therapeutic Riding
810-357-5572
8175 Marquette Rd.
Wales, MI
Center for autism spectrum disorders
248 723-4273
640 North Old Woodward, Suite 203
birmingham, MI
Adamlab, LLC
248-362-9603
55 East Long Lake Road, Suite 337
Troy, MI
Angela Brockman, R.N.
(517) 522-6767
A.L.A.R.M.
Grass Lake, MI
Mindscape Productions, LLC
248-288-2242
4022 Custer Avenue
Royal Oak, MI
Allan Keith Thorburn, MD
248-338-8492
1501 Krafft Rd
Fort Gratiot, MI
Citizen Alliance to Uphold Special Education (CAUSE)
(517) 886-9167 or (800) 221-9105
6412 Centurion Drive
Lansing, MI
Dr. Daniel Fields, M.D.
517-347-6944
2410 Woodlake Dr.
Okemos, MI
Alicia M. Kendall, MA, LLP, BCBA
248-444-6278
Livonia, MI
Behavioral Building Blocks
734-368-5393
P.O. Box 6318
Plymouth, MI
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Autism and Vaccines: What's the Link?

Since 1998, when the British medical journal The Lancet published a study connecting the use of vaccines containing thimerosal, a mercury-based preservative, with a spike in the diagnoses of autism, a debate has waged over the validity of such a hypothesis. Since then, a number of other studies have been published, and the link between autism and vaccines has remained in the public eye. In fact, actress Jenny McCarthy recently came forward, claiming that her son, Evan, developed the disorder after receiving a measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) shot. Is the evidence that supports these facts well-founded, or is the development of autism in these children just sheer coincidence?

The Lowdown on Mercury
A recent University of Rochester study published in the February issue of Pediatrics showed that ethyl mercury, the type used in thimerosal, was quickly excreted among the infants who took part in the study, meaning that unlike methyl mercury, which is often found in fish, ethyl mercury cannot establish a progressive, debilitating buildup in the body. Additionally, investigations undertaken in Denmark and by the California Department of Health concluded that the removal of thimerosal from childhood vaccines failed to result in a corresponding decrease in autism; in fact, diagnoses of the disorder continued to rise in the preservative's absence. Still, many parents stand firm in the belief that their autistic children would have been fine had they not received certain vaccines...

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