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Vaccine Safety and ADD, ADHD and AutismLink Between Vaccination and Disorders Continues to be Questioned
Vaccines are in the news now more than ever as H1N1 Swine Flu makes unprecedented headlines. Vaccination safety and its link to autism and ADHD is under more scrutiny.
As the headlines about the H1N1 (swine) flu and H1N1 vaccine dominate the news right now, the question of the safety of vaccines is in the background. The U.S. Government is on a whirlwind campaign to vaccinate in what they explain as an effort to control pandemic flu outbreaks. But people, especially parents of children with neurological based disorders like ADHD (Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder) and autism, continue to question the safety of vaccines. ADHD, ADD and autism do show connections to each other. In 2008, the University of Pittsburgh and the Western Psychiatric Institute of UPMC received $3 million from the National Institute of Mental Health to conduct a study on the relationship between the two. According to Dr. Benjamin Handen, who leads the study, ADHD symptoms are common in children with autism. The study focuses on the idea that stimulant medications that are prescribed for ADHD do not always work with patients with autism. History of Safety of Vaccines and Their Connection to Autism and ADHD The following is a brief history of the association between autism, ADHD and vaccines:
After the implementation of multiple vaccines, autism began crossing class lines. (Source, K.N.O.W.Vaccines) Current Information and Studies on the Safety of Vaccines and How Vaccination Relates to ADHD and AutismThe H1N1 flu vaccine is being pushed very hard by the U.S. government, but in October, 2009, questions of the vaccine's safety and necessity continue to prevail. Canadian press is reporting the possibility that a regular seasonal flu vaccine may actually increase the risk of acquiring H1N1 swine flu. The predominant worry for many parents is the fact that the H1N1 vaccine contains thimerosal, a controversial preservative with suspected links to autism. The rush to approve the H1N1 vaccine is another concern of the vaccine's safety. Generation Rescue, an international organization made up of scientists, physicians and parent-volunteers researches the causes and treatments for autism and has helped more than 20,000 children begin biomedical treatment. A commissioned study by the group compared more than 9000 vaccinated and unvaccinated children in Oregon and California. The results showed that vaccinated children were two and a half times, 155 percent, more likely to have neurological disorders like ADHD and autism. In all counties but one (which had unreliable data) vaccinated boys were more likely to have:
Generation Rescue explains that while the study does not implicate vaccines as cause of epidemic disease, the group suggests parents become more informed and encourage caution when considering vaccines, especially in boys. The debate of safety and need of vaccines will no doubt continue until enough studies and reliable information is available to prove the efficacy and safety of multiple vaccinations. Source: http://www.know-vaccines.org/autism.html
The copyright of the article Vaccine Safety and ADD, ADHD and Autism in ADD/ADHD is owned by Elizabeth Richards. Permission to republish Vaccine Safety and ADD, ADHD and Autism in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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