June 19, 2002
http://www.house.gov/burton/pr61502.htm
http://www.house.gov/reform/pr.02.06.17.htm
Washington, D.C. - On June 19, 2002, at 11:00 a.m.,
in Room 2154 of the Rayburn House Office Building, the
Committee on Government Reform, chaired by Congressman
Dan Burton (R-IN), will conduct a hearing to evaluate
the status of research concerning the possible
relationship between vaccines and neurological
disorders, including autism.
Ten years ago, autism was estimated to affect 1 in
10,000 children. According to the National Institutes of
Health, it is now anticipated to affect 1 in 250
children.
The Committee will hear testimony from scientists
from three countries conducting research into possible
relationships between vaccines and neurological
disorders, including autism. One line of current
research questions whether a mercury-based preservative
used for years in children’s vaccines weakened the
immune systems of some children and made them more
susceptible to adverse reactions to the Measles, Mumps,
Rubella (MMR) vaccine.
Dr. Andrew Wakefield of Great Britain is conducting
research to determine if the MMR vaccine has a
relationship to children who suffer from inflammatory
bowel disease and autism, a condition he terms autistic
entercolitis. Other researchers testifying come from
Sweden and the U.S.
The Committee will hear testimony from the following
witnesses:
PANEL I
Dr. Jeff Bradstreet, M.D., F.A.A.F.P., Medical
Doctor and Founder of the International Child
Development Resource Center, and an autism parent, Palm
Bay, Florida.
Dr. Andrew Wakefield, M.D., Research Director,
International Child Development Resource Center, Palm
Bay, Florida, and Surrey, England.
Dr. Arthur Krigsman, M.D., Pediatric
Gastrointestinal Consultant, Lenox Hill Hospital, and
Clinical Assistant Professor, Department of Pediatrics,
New York University School of Medicine, New York, New
York.
Dr. Vera Stejskal, Associate Professor of
Immunology, University of Stockholm and MELISA MEDICA
foundation, Stockholm, Sweden.
Dr. Walter Spitzer, M.D., M.P.H., F.R.C.P.C.
Emeritus Professor of Epidemiology at McGill University.
PANEL II
Dr. Roger Bernier, Associate Director for
Science, Office of the Director, Center for Disease
Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia.
Dr. Robert Chen, Chief of Vaccine Safety and
Development at the National Immunization Program and
Associate Director for Science and Public Health,
National Center on Birth Defects and Developmental
Disabilities, Center for Disease Control and Prevention,
Atlanta, Georgia.
Dr. Frank DeStefano, Medical
Epidemiologist, National Center on Birth Defects and
Developmental Disabilities, Center for Disease Control
and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia.
BACKGROUND
In April the Committee conducted a hearing reviewing
the dramatic rise in autism rates and the Department of
Health and Human Service’s response to this increase.
Ten years ago, autism was thought to affect 1 in 10,000
individuals in the United States. It was considered a
rare condition. When the Committee began its oversight
investigation in 1999, autism was thought to affect 1 in
500 children. Today, the National Institutes of Health
estimates that autism affects 1 in 250 children.
This dramatic rise in rates cannot be discounted
merely as better reporting or the expansion of the
definition of autism. Autism is thought by many to be a
genetic condition. This may be the case for classic
autism. However, for late-onset or acquired autism there
are many environmental factors that may also be
contributing factors.
In parallel to the autism investigation, the
Committee has reviewed ongoing concerns about vaccine
safety, vaccine adverse events tracking, the Vaccine
Safety Datalink (VSD) Project, and the National Vaccine
Injury Compensation Program. The purpose of this hearing
is to review current research regarding the two most
prevalent issues that have arisen regarding possible
relationships between vaccines and autism: