Disclaimer: Any information
obtained here is not to be construed as medical OR legal advice.
The decision to vaccinate and how you implement that decision
is yours and yours alone.
A User-Friendly Vaccination Schedule
by Donald W. Miller, Jr., MD
Vaccination is a controversial subject, and many
parents worry about subjecting their children to them. Readers
of my article "Mercury on the Mind," about vaccines
and dental amalgams, have asked what vaccines I would recommend
their children receive. This article addresses that question.
In the Recommended Childhood Immunization Schedule
put out by the CDC (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention),
12 vaccines are given to children before they reach the age
of two. Providers inject them against hepatitis B, diphtheria,
tetanus (lockjaw), pertussis (whooping cough), polio, pneumococcal
infections, Hemophilus influenzae type b infections, measles,
mumps, rubella (German measles), chickenpox, and influenza (the
flu).
Infectious disease was the leading cause of death
in children 100 years ago, with diphtheria, measles, scarlet
fever, and pertussis accounting for most them. Today the leading
causes of death in children less than five years of age are
accidents, genetic abnormalities, developmental disorders, sudden
infant death syndrome, and cancer. A basic tenet of modern medicine
is that vaccines are the reason. There is growing evidence that
this is so, but perhaps not quite in the way conventional medical
wisdom would have it.
A 15-member Advisory Committee on Immunization
Practices at the CDC decides which vaccines should be on the
Childhood Immunization Schedule. It calls for one vaccine, against
hepatitis B, to be given on the day of birth; 7 vaccines at
two months; 6 more (including booster shots) at four months;
and as many as 8 vaccines on the six month well-baby visit.
Before a child reaches the age of two he or she will have received
32 vaccinations on this schedule, including four doses each
of vaccines for Hemophilus influenzae type b infections, diphtheria,
tetanus, and pertussis – all of them given during the first
12 months of life. Seven vaccines injected into a 13 lb. two-month
old infant are equivalent to 70 doses in a 130 lb. adult.
The schedule states, "Your child can safely
receive all vaccines recommended for a particular age during
one visit." Public health officials, however, have not
proven that it is indeed safe to inject this many vaccines into
infants. What's more, they cannot explain why, concurrent with
an increasing number of vaccinations, there has been an explosion
of neurologic and immune system disorders in our nation’s children.
Fifty years ago, when the immunization schedule
contained only four vaccines (for diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis,
and smallpox), autism was virtually unknown. First discovered
in 1943, this most devastating malady in what is now a spectrum
of pervasive developmental disorders afflicted less than 1 in
10,000 children. Today, one in every 68 American families has
an autistic child. Other, less severe developmental disorders,
rarely seen before the vaccine era, have also reached epidemic
proportions. Four million American children have Attention Deficit
Hyperactivity Disorder. One in six American children are now
classified as "Learning Disabled."
Our children are also experiencing an epidemic
of autoimmune disorders – Type I diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis,
asthma, and bowel disorders. There has been a 17-fold increase
in Type I diabetes, from 1 in 7,100 children in the 1950s to
1 in 400 now. Juvenile rheumatoid arthritis afflicts 300,000
American children. Twenty-five years ago this disease was so
rare that public health officials did not keep any statistics
on it. There has been a 4-fold increase in asthma, and bowel
disorders in children are much more common now than they were
50 years ago.
Health officials consider a vaccine to be safe
if no bad reactions – like seizures, intestinal obstruction,
or anaphylaxis – occur acutely. The CDC has not done any studies
to assess the long-term effects of its immunization schedule.
To do that one must conduct a randomized controlled trial, the
lynchpin of evidenced-based medicine, where one group of children
is vaccinated on the CDC’s schedule and a control group is not
vaccinated. Investigators then follow the two groups for a number
of years (not just three to four weeks, as has been done in
vaccine safety studies). Concerns that vaccinations in infants
cause chronic neurologic and immune system disorders would be
put to rest, and their safety certified, if the number of children
who develop these diseases is the same in both groups. No such
studies have been done, so vaccine proponents cannot say that
vaccines are indeed as safe as they think they are. (One proponent,
interviewed by Dan Rather on 60 Minutes, who has financial ties
to the vaccine industry that he did not disclose, claims that
vaccines "have a better safety record than vitamins."
He neglected to mention that the U.S. government has paid out
more than $1.5 billion in its Vaccine Injury Compensation Program
to families of children who have been injured or killed by vaccines.)
There is a growing body of evidence that implicates
vaccines as a causative factor in the deteriorating health of
children. The hypothesis that vaccines cause neurologic and
immune system disorders is a legitimate one – vaccines given
in multiple doses, close together, to very young children following
the CDC’s Immunization Schedule. This hypothesis should be tested
by a large-scale, long-term randomized controlled trial.
Rather than obediently following the government’s
schedule, there is now sufficient evidence, grounded in good
science, to justify adopting a more user-friendly vaccination
schedule, one which is in the best interests of the individual
as opposed to what planners judge best for society as a whole.
New knowledge in neuroimmunology (the study of
how the brain’s immune system works) raises serious questions
about the wisdom of injecting vaccines in children less than
two years of age.
The brain has its own specialized immune system,
separate from that of the rest of the body. When a person is
vaccinated, its specialized immune cells, the microglia, become
activated (the blood-brain barrier notwithstanding). Multiple
vaccinations spaced close together over-stimulate the microglia,
causing them to release a variety of toxic elements – cytokines,
chemokines, excitotoxins, proteases, complement, free radicals
– that damage brain cells and their synaptic connections. Researchers
call the damage caused by these toxic substances "bystander
injury." (Pediatricians and other professional colleagues
who question this should read these two reviews by the neurosurgeon
Russell L. Blaylock: "Interaction of Cytokines, Excitotoxins,
Reactive Nitrogen and Oxygen Species in Autism Spectrum Disorders,"
in the Journal of the American Nutraceutical Association [JANA
2003;6(4):21–35], with 167 references. And "Chronic Microglial
Activation and Excitotoxicity Secondary to Excessive Immune
Stimulation: Possible Factors in Gulf War Syndrome and Autism,"
in the Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons [JAPS 2004;9(2):46–52],
posted online, with 54 references.)
In humans, the most rapid period of brain development
begins in the third trimester and continues over the first two
years of extra uterine life. (By then brain development is 80
percent complete.) Until randomized controlled trials demonstrate
the safety of giving vaccines during this time of life, it would
be prudent not to give any vaccinations to children until they
are two years old. From a risk-benefit perspective, there is
growing evidence that the risk of neurologic and autoimmune
diseases from vaccinations outweigh the benefits of avoiding
the childhood infections that they prevent. An exception is
hepatitis B vaccine for infants whose mothers test positive
for this disease.
A user-friendly vaccination schedule prohibits
any vaccines that contain thimerosal, which is 50 percent mercury.
Flu vaccines contain thimerosal, which is reason enough to avoid
them. (See my article "Mercury on the Mind" for more
on this subject.)
One should also avoid vaccines that contain live
viruses. This includes the combined measles, mumps, and rubella
(MMR) vaccine; chickenpox (varicella) vaccine, and the live-virus
polio (Sabin) vaccine. This stricture would not apply to the
smallpox vaccine (also a live-virus one), if a terrorist-instigated
outbreak of smallpox should occur.
Finally, a user-friendly vaccination schedule
requires that vaccinations, after the age of two, be given no
more than once every six months, one at a time, in order to
allow the immune system sufficient time to recover and stabilize
between shots.
Which vaccines should be put on this schedule
(among those that do not contain live viruses or thimerosal)
is not entirely clear. The top four would be the pertussis (acelluar
– aP – not whole cell), diphtheria (D), and tetanus (T) vaccines
– given separately (not together, as is usually the case); and
the Salk polio vaccine, with an inactivated (dead) virus, one
that is cultured in human cells, not monkey kidney cells. Perhaps
it should only contain these four vaccines. A good case can
be made (for example, see Gary Null’s Vaccines: A Second Opinion)
for avoiding the three other newer vaccines on the CDC’s schedule
– the hepatitis B, pneumococcal conjugate (PCV7), and Hemophilus
influenzae type b (Hib) vaccines.
Your pediatrician will not like this schedule.
They are taught in medical school and residency training that
childhood immunizations are essential to public health. As one
pediatrician puts it, "Achieving adequate and timely vaccination
of young children is the single most valuable thing a doctor
can do for a patient." They do not question what their
professors teach them, nor are they inclined to critically examine
studies in Pediatrics and the New England Journal of Medicine
that tell them vaccines are safe.
There were 482,000 cases of measles in the U.S
in 1962, the year before a vaccine for this disease became available.
Now, with all fifty states requiring that children be vaccinated
against measles in order to attend school, there were only 56
cases of measles in a population of 290 million people in 2003.
These facts are well known and proudly cited by
vaccine proponents. What is less known, and doctors are not
taught, is that the death rate for measles declined 97.7 percent
during the first 60 years of the 20th century. The mortality
rate was 133 deaths per million people in the U.S. in 1900,
and had dropped to 0.3 deaths per million by 1960. Measles caused
less than 100 deaths a year in the U.S. before there was a vaccine
for this disease (in 1963). The same thing happened with diphtheria
and pertussis. Mortality rates dropped more than 90 percent
in the early 20th century before vaccines for these diseases
were introduced. This was due to better nutrition (with rapid
delivery of fresh fruit and vegetables to cities and refrigeration),
cleaner water, and improved sanitation (removing trash from
the streets and better sewage systems), not to vaccines. The
World Health Organization promotes mass vaccination, but knowing
these facts states, "The best vaccine against common infectious
diseases is an adequate diet" – fortified, one might add,
with vitamin A.
Since the measles vaccine came into widespread
use in this country this disease has virtually disappeared,
and it has prevented 100 deaths a year. But now, instead, several
thousand normally developing children become autistic after
receiving their MMR shot. Termed "regressive autism,"
it accounts for about 30 percent of the 10,000 to 20,000 children
who are diagnosed with autism in this country each year.
To put to rest concerns that MMR vaccination might
cause autism (in a small percentage of children), the New England
Journal of Medicine, in 2002, published a population-based study
from Denmark, where its authors concluded, "This study
provides strong evidence against the hypothesis that MMR vaccination
causes autism." The NEJM did not disclose that the "Statens
Serum Institut," where three of the authors work, is a
for-profit vaccine manufacturer, Denmark’s largest, or that
four other authors have financial ties to this company. Only
one of the eight authors is not associated with this institute,
and the CDC employs him. The study compares the prevalence of
autism in 440,000 MMR vaccinated and 97,000 unvaccinated children
in Denmark born in the 1990s. A statistical slight-of-hand in
age adjustment makes the study show no causal effect; but when
unmasked and reformatted, the data actually shows a statistically
significant association between MMR vaccine and autism (as Carol
Stott and her coauthors make clear in "MMR and Autism in
Perspective: the Denmark Story," in the Fall 2004 Journal
of American Physicians and Surgeons, posted online).
Pediatrics and the Journal of the American Medical
Association also have published studies like this supporting
U.S. vaccine policy, written by authors with similar, undisclosed
conflicts of interest. Looking elsewhere, however, one comes
across a number of disquieting facts about vaccines. Investigators
have found, for example, live measles virus in the cerebral
spinal fluid in children who become autistic after MMR vaccination.
Antibodies to measles virus are elevated in children with autism
but not in normal kids, suggesting that virus-induced autoimmunity
may play a causal role. A study published in Neurology this
year implicates hepatitis B vaccine as a causative factor in
multiple sclerosis.
A communitarian ethic increasingly governs health
care in the U.S. It places a greater value on the health of
the community, on society as a whole, than on the health of
particular individuals. Public health officials have put together
a vaccination schedule designed to eliminate infectious diseases
to which the population is prey. These officials recognize that
these vaccines will harm a small percentage of (genetically
susceptible) individuals, but it is for the common good. The
communitarian code posits that it is morally acceptable, if
necessary, to sacrifice a few for the good of the many. Or as
one observer more bluntly puts it, "Individual sheep can
be sheared and slaughtered if it is for the welfare of their
flock."
In this framework, health care providers become
agents of the state charged with injecting vaccines into people
that the central planners deem necessary. Physicians who remain
true to their Hippocratic Oath and place the interests of their
patient above that of the herd are considered to be out of step
with the times, if not an anachronism.
Like central planners everywhere, the CDC’s Advisory
Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) promulgates a self-serving,
one-size-fits-all vaccine policy. Members of this committee
have ties to vaccine makers, such that the CDC must grant them
waivers from statutory conflict of interest rules. Even so,
and with little evidence to show that it is safe to subject
young children to the ACIP’s crowded immunization schedule,
states nevertheless dutifully make its vaccine recommendations
compulsory.
All 50 states require children to be immunized
against measles, diphtheria, Hemophilus influenzae type b, polio,
and rubella in order to enroll in day care and/or public school.
Forty-nine states also require vaccination against tetanus;
47, against hepatitis B and mumps; and 43 states now require
vaccination against chickenpox. In order to shield themselves
from any liability for making vaccinations compulsory, all states
provide a medical exemption and 47, a religious exemption. Nineteen
states allow a philosophical exemption. Some require only a
letter from a parent and others, from a physician or church
leader. (To see the exemptions allowed in your state, their
wording and requirements, click here.) Parents, of course, can
refuse vaccination; but if they want to enroll their child in
public school they will need to obtain one of these exemptions.
Doctors who conclude that the risks of the government’s
immunization schedule outweigh its benefits are placed in a
difficult position. If they counsel parents not to have their
children follow it, health care plans, which track vaccine compliance
as a measure of "quality," will find them wanting.
And if their patient should contract and develop complications
from the disease the vaccine would have prevented they may find
themselves confronting a lawsuit. If a child becomes autistic
following a vaccination, however, the doctor is protected from
any liability because the government requires it and the child’s
parents, if they had chosen to do so, could have obtained an
exemption. (Anti-vaccine advocates call developing autism, asthma,
and Type I diabetes after vaccinations "vaccination roulette.")
Parents should have the freedom to select whatever
vaccination schedule they want their children to follow, especially
since health care providers and the government (except via its
Vaccine Injury Compensation Program) cannot be held accountable
for any adverse outcomes that might occur. But if parents elect
to not follow the CDC’s immunization schedule, delaying some
vaccinations, refusing others, or avoiding them altogether,
then they must accept the risk that their child might contract
the disease that the vaccine against it most likely would have
prevented.
One consideration, which vaccine proponents do
not address, is this: Could contracting childhood diseases like
measles, mumps, rubella, and chickenpox play a constructive
role in the maturation of a person’s immune system? Or, to put
it another way, does removing natural infection from human experience
have any adverse consequences?
Our species’ immune system – a one-trillion-cell
army that patrols our (100-trillion-cell) body – serves two
main purposes. It destroys foreign invaders – viruses, bacteria,
and other pathogens. And it destroys aberrant cells in the body
that run amuck and cause cancer. Behind the barricades of skin
and mucosa, our innate immune system (composed of phagocytes,
natural killer cells, and the 20-protein complement system),
which all animals have, is the body’s first line of defense.
It reacts to invaders lightening fast and indiscriminately,
but it is not very good at eliminating viruses and cancerous
cells. Vertebrates have evolved a second line of defense – the
adaptive immune system. It targets specific viruses and bacteria
and has better artillery for eliminating cancerous cells. This
system matures during childhood, and it has a cellular (Th1)
and humoral (Th2) component (Th = helper T cell).
The viruses that cause measles, mumps, and chickenpox
have infected countless generations of humans, akin to a rite
of passage for each member of our species. Contracting these
diseases strengthens both parts of the adaptive immune system
(Th1 and Th2 ). Mothers who have had measles, mumps, and chickenpox
transfer antibodies against them to their babies in utero, which
protect them during the first year of life from contracting
these infections. Vaccinations do not have the same effect on
the immune system as naturally acquired diseases do. They stimulate
predominantly the Th2 part of this system and not Th1. (Over-stimulation
of Th2 causes autoimmune diseases.) The cellular Th1 side thwarts
cancer, and if it does not become fully developed in childhood
a person can be more prone to have cancer as an adult. Women
who had mumps during childhood, for example, are found to be
less likely to have ovarian cancer than women who did not have
this infection. (This study was published in Cancer.) Could
the fact that cancer has become a leading cause of death in
children be a result of vaccinations? Only a randomized controlled
trial can conclusively answer this question
With rare exception, a well-nourished child who
contracts measles will recover smoothly from the infection.
Fifty years ago almost all children in the U.S. had measles.
And after contracting this disease, one has life-long immunity
to it. The protection provided by vaccination is temporary.
Adults who contract measles (when the protective effects of
the vaccine wears off) are much more likely to have neurological,
testicular, and ovarian complications. Likewise, rubella is
a benign disease in children, but if a woman acquires it during
pregnancy fetal malformations may develop. One can argue, heretical
as such an argument may be, that it would be better to let children
have measles, at an age when the infection helps the adaptive
immune system mature in a balanced Th1/Th2 fashion and complications
from this disease are minimal, rather than vaccinate them against
this disease (especially considering the risks of vaccination).
Pertussis and Diphtheria are a different matter.
These diseases are more virulent. Children who contract whooping
cough (pertussis) can be incapacitated for more than a month.
Polio can be devastating in susceptible individuals. And no
one wants to get tetanus (lockjaw). A user-friendly vaccination
schedule would include vaccines against these diseases.
Whatever vaccination schedule one chooses, mothers
should breast-feed their child for as long as possible – a year
or more. Failing that, add Omega-3 fatty acids, especially DHA
(docosahexanoic acid), to the child’s formula.
In summary, this is a vaccination schedule that
I would recommend:
No vaccinations until a child is two years old.
No vaccines that contain thimerosal (mercury).
No live virus vaccines (except for smallpox, should it recur).
These vaccines, to be given one at a time, every six months,
beginning at age 2:
Pertussis (acellular, not whole cell)
Diphtheria
Tetanus
Polio (the Salk vaccine, cultured in human cells)
American children are the most highly vaccinated kids in the
world. This schedule is an alternative to the one that rules
our "vaccine nation". In contrast to the CDC’s immunization
schedule, it is user-friendly.
December 10, 2004
Donald Miller (send him mail) is a cardiac surgeon
and Professor of Surgery at the University of Washington in
Seattle and a member of Doctors for Disaster Preparedness.
Copyright © 2006 by Donald Miller. His web
site is www.donaldmiller.com
quoted with permission.
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