Wednesday, December 10, 2008

What causes regressive autism, and my response to the St. Pete Times article about vaccines and atusim

Subject: My response to the St. Pete Times' front page article about vaccines, and how this relates (or not) to autism ...



Begin forwarded message:


Date: November 24, 2008 10:26:54 PM EST
To: greene@sptimes.com
Subject: In response to your article about vaccines...from an autism mom.

Hi Lisa,
I enjoyed your thorough and fair article about vaccines and as an autism mom I wanted to offer up an explanation of how vaccines truly figure into autism.

The most current view is that vaccines do not cause autism. I believe, after researching for the past 4 years, that autism is triggered by numerous environmental factors, in children who are genetically predisposed. Vaccines are a part of the trigger, not a single cause.

One example of how to explain how vaccines factor into austims is the, "Princess Diana Tragedy Example." It states that you can say, "If only she was wearing her seat belt, if only she weren't being chased by the media, if only the driver had not been drinking"....if only one of these factors had been different, her fate may have been different.

With autism I could say, "If only I had not eaten a can of tuna fish a week during my pregnancy, if only I had not let her have 5 vaccines in one day, if only I had declined the flu vaccine with thimerasol in it, if only I had not microwaved her formula in plastic bottles, then maybe the genetic predisposition would not have been triggered and she would not have had lost skills at age 2, then regressed more and more with every vaccine."

This theory is based on the fact that our kids who are genetically predisposed to autism are more sensitive to environmental progress/toxins. They can't rid the body of toxins like most of us can and it ends up building up in their system and turning off switches in their brain (that hopefully can be turned on again some day as research continues.)

You can say a similar thing for many diseases and disorders. For example, breast cancer is believed to be triggered by carcinogens in those genetically predisposed. I think that environmental toxins are out of hand and we just turn a blind eye to them because it is so terribly inconvenient to do otherwise. We like eating fast food packed with preservatives and we like microwaving our food in inexpensive plastic. We can't bother with being worried about BPA's or MSG or bothering with whatever the new "scare tactic" is. Not only is it inconvenient to change our lifestyle habits, but how do we decipher which "scare tactic" has merit and which is a passing media trend that has simply received over-exposure.

A part of being an autism mom is trying to decipher just this. We have to pull out what we learned in statistics class in college and from biology about studies and credibility. Suddenly instead of just mom's we have to be scientists, researchers, nurses, doctors for our kids and it is overwhelming. Then we deal with "professionals" not listening to what we have discovered and what we are saying because we don't have the medical degree to back it up. We are a new generation of Lorenzo's Oil parents, which I have to say, sucks.

But...my little girl with autism has improved so much that after a diagnosis of severe autism only two years ago, she is now in a typical kindergarten at a highly regarded private school, where she is one of the best students in her class. My studies and theories put into practice have worked on my child. Now I watch as it unfolds and hope that small treatments such as diet modifications; feeding her fresh organic veggies, fruit and meat, and also taking gluten, casein and soy out of her diet, eventually become recommended by pediatricians. We give my daughter vitamins, probiotics, baths in epsom salts and B12 shots. None of this stuff is proven or standard, but it has worked for her, especially the B12.

So to get back to vaccines...when my daughter's pediatrician told me that it is rare to have severe side effects from vaccines, that they don't cause autism, that there is not enough thimerasol in the flu vaccine to be of concern, I trusted him. I know that he was not knowingly giving me wrong information. But my child was showing some mild signs of autism at that point and I should have been advised to wait on the vaccines until her immune system was stronger and to stay away from thimerasol and any environmental toxins...from food preservatives to bug spray.


A Short Rant:
Unfortunately today it still is not standard for pediatricians to advise the treatment of keeping preservatives and toxins out of autism children's systems while working on detoxifying and strengthening their immune systems. This theory is often dismissed as "not proven." For example, many pediatricians and even specialists will not say to concerned parents, 'I don't know if it the GFCF diet works or not because I am not a parent or doctor who has tried it." Instead the doctor will say, "These treatments are not proven," which implies some sort of knowledge on their part, where there actually is none. Parents end up getting cheated out of precious early intervention treatment time until they finally look it up and find the information themselves on the internet or through networking with other autism parents.

As an autism mom, like many others out there, I do not believe that vaccines simply cause autism. I do believe that if a child is genetically predisposed to it, that vaccines contribute greatly to triggering or worsening autism symptoms in overloaded, under-protected little systems.

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