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July 14, 2004

CBS's Mixed Signals on Vaccines

By Aubrey Stimola

Dear CBS News, 

Imagine our surprise: in the same CBS Health Watch website section as an article that scares parents away from having their children vaccinated against preventable diseases, CBS also posted an Associated Press article urging the exact opposite course of action.  What's a parent to do?

This article warns of the resurgence of whooping cough, a scourge that infant vaccinations had almost wiped out.  Its comeback is due partly to waning immunity in older children who can spread it easily to unvaccinated infants, the number of whom may grow with each unfounded vaccine scare.

The disease, known medically as pertussis, can produce coughs violent enough to break ribs, and can actually kill unvaccinated newborns.  Soon, the FDA and CDC will decide whether booster shots should be implemented for older children, and they are encouraging parents to have infants vaccinated as early as possible.

The presence of this article on the CBS website was surprising because on June 22, the CBS Evening News aired an alarmist segment implying that having infants vaccinated might put them at risk for developing autism.  The report was aired despite the fact that, based on the overwhelming body of empirical data, a causal relationship between pediatric vaccines and autism has been soundly debunked.

After spirited dialogue between the American Council on Science and Health (ACSH) and CBS, including CBS's threat to take unspecified legal action against ACSH for our criticism, CBS failed to correct the erroneous and dangerous message they sent to parents, even when vaccine experts associated with ACSH called upon them to do so.  We can only conclude, therefore, that CBS News stands by its allegation that parents are putting their children at risk for developing autism if they have them properly immunized.

The juxtaposition of these two reports illustrates that CBS is either unaware of the mixed message they are sending to the public regarding the importance of pediatric vaccinations, or is not troubled by the impact these conflicting messages can have both on concerned parents and public health.

Aubrey Stimola
Research Assistant
American Council on Science and Health

Visitor Responses

Tamas Peredy (July 28, 2004)

It is disappointing that CBS has chosen hype over truth. I am not one to watch Jerry Springer-like tales of other's woes paraded in front of us merely for entertainment. The real bad guys in this story are the for profit labs and referring alternative practitioners who "discovery" mercury in all of us and refer to their co-conspirator alternative healers for expensive, needless and sometimes harmful chelation therapy. The second group of bad guys are the irresponsible journalists who draw conclusions from basic science research without understanding: epidemiologic data about vaccines and autism, dose-response curves, correlations between animal data and humans, etc. The good news is that like chelation for calcium in developing atherosclerotic vascular disease, good scientists have looked at causal relationships and efficacy and have rightly concluded there is not link, no utility. I pray there is 1) a cure for autism 2) a cause found for prevention. However for those families with autistic children it is better to explain that the human brain is more complex than the mouse and that the minute amounts of mercury in vaccines cannot soley explain their child's unique neuronal development. Do not fall into the trap of spending substantial life savings on unproven therapies. No matter how unshaken your believe is that mercury caused your child to be that way, don't subject them to the further insult of chelation which has never been proven to help autism. Thank you.


Drawing of Todd Seavey


About the Editor:
Todd Seavey

is Director of Publications at ACSH and edits FactsAndFears.  His opinions are not necessarily ACSH's.

He can be reached at seavey [at] acsh.org.

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Founded in 1978, ACSH is a consumer advocacy organization directed and advised by over 350 physicians, scientists and policy advisors. ACSH promotes the use of sound, peer-reviewed science in the formation of a full  spectrum of  public health policies, including those related to food, pharmaceuticals, environmental chemicals, lifestyle factors, consumer products and terrorism preparedness and response.