A new study that
sustains the idea that autism does not develop in children vaccinated with thimerosal
vaccines, due to be published in the February issue of Pediatrics, was released
earlier on Wednesday, to put an end to the controversies surrounding the new
ABC drama “Eli Stone”.
The opening episode of
the series features a lawyer who manages to win a million-dollar case for a
mother whose child developed autism pursuant to receiving a vaccine.
The vaccine in question
contains thimerosal, a preservative made with mercury.
According to the
Associated Press, the study was funded by the U.
S. and examines the blood samples collected from 216
healthy babies from R. Gutierrez Children's Hospital in Buenos Aires, Argentina,
which were collected before and after vaccination with the preservative
thimerosal. The tests found that mercury levels in the blood were highest
shortly after the vaccination, and after a few weeks the level of mercury lowered,
said Dr. Michael Pichichero of the University
of Rochester in Rochester, N.Y.,
co-author of the study.
"The amount found in the blood was about
one-tenth of that predicted in that the late 1990s and the length of time it
stays in the blood is one-tenth of that predicted," Pichichero said.
The stools samples
collected from babies contained the highest mercury level after vaccination,
but lowered more slowly than blood levels. The mercury level in urine samples
was not significant.
Dr. Pichichero added: "The
study supports the decision by the World Health Organization to continue to
permit thimerosal to remain in vaccines for the world's children." He also
recommended the thimerosal vaccine for being cheaper to produce and more
accessible.
The director of the University of Pittsburgh's Center for Excellence in
Autism Research, Dr. Minshew, gave a one hundred percent assurance to the
American people that autism is not caused by vaccination, and strongly advised
parents to have their children vaccinated. She also mentioned that this recent
theory against vaccination may endanger children’s lives, the Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette reported.
The strongest evidence
is that although thimerosal has been banned from most child vaccines in 2001,
the cases of autism in children have continued to appear. "The weight of
the evidence is so great that I don't think there is any room for dispute. I
think the issue is done," said Dr. Minshew, who runs one of nine top
autism research centers funded by the National Institutes of Health.