Boulder Vaccine Safety Coalition
 

The full video of Dr. Wakefield's Oct 20th 
presentation in Boulder, CO is now available

For full video click HERE
For a brief video of Dr Wakefield click HERE
Press Release click HERE
January 17, 2011                                                     18:21 minutes
Interview with Dr Andrew Wakefield
about vaccines and autism
Here's an amazing interview between Dr Andrew Wakefield and Robert Scott Bell, who discuss the current smear campaign being engineered by the conventional medical industry to destroy Dr Wakefield's reputation. Dr Wakefield, of course, is the vaccine researcher who first linked vaccines to autism. His work has been systematically attacked and discredited by the medical journals, drug companies and even health authorities who are desperate to spread their vaccine mythology in order to protect the profits of the vaccine industry.


January 6, 2011

Dr. Wakefield on CNN


J.B. Handley Talks to CNN's 
Ali Velshi on Vaccine Safety
January 6, 2011: J.B. Handley provides vaccine facts that you can share with friends and neighbors who are concerned about safety. Thank you to CNN's Ali Velshi. To read the original Lancet paper and to learn more, please visit
 Generation Rescue.

FORMER U.S. NATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR HEALTH DIRECTOR SAYS THE QUESTION OF A LINK BETWEEN VACCINES AND AUTISM IS STILL OPEN FOR DEBATE.

On May12, 2008, in an exclusive CBS interview, former NIH Director Dr. Bernadine Healy  expressed dismay at the latest Institute of Medicine Immunization Safety Review Committee's Report: Vaccines and Autism, which stated that the weight of the body of scientific evidence does not show a causal link between vaccines and autism, and that more research on the vaccine question is counterproductive.

Healy also said public health officials have intentionally avoided researching whether subsets of children are "susceptible" to vaccine side effects—afraid of what they might find and afraid the answer will scare the public into not getting their children vaccinated, and that they have intentionally avoided the kinds of scientific research studies that might show causality.
Interview with Dr. Wakefield 
and others on KGNU - 60 min
Interview with Dr. Wakefield 
on KBCO - 9 min.

Text of portions of Video
(video has temporarily been removed on 
Jan 6, 2011 to make room for the video above.)

We have to take another look at that hypothesis [that vaccines are triggering autism in certain children], not deny it. I think we have the tools today that we didn't have 10 years ago, 20 yrs ago, to try and tease that out and find out if there is a susceptible group...

A susceptible group does not mean that vaccines are not good. What a susceptible group will tell us is that maybe there is a group of individual who shouldn't have a particular vaccine or shouldn't have vaccines on the same schedule...

I think that the government or certain public officials in the government have been too quick to dismiss the concerns of these families without studying the population that got sick...

I haven't seen major studies that focus on 300 kids who got autistic symptoms within a period of a few weeks of a vaccine...

 
I think public health officials have been too quick to dismiss the hypothesis as irrational without sufficient studies of causation...

I think they have been too quick to dismiss studies in the animal laboratory either in mice, in primates, that do show some concerns with regard to certain vaccines and also to the mercury preservative in vaccines...

I don't think you should ever turn your back on any scientific hypothesis because you're afraid of what it might show..?

The fact that there is concern that you don't want to know that susceptible group is a real disappointment to me. You can save those children...

The more you delve into it, if you look at the basic science, if you look at the research that's been done on animals, if you also look at some of these individual cases and if you look at the evidence that there is no link what I come away with is the question has not been answered."
 
c. 2010 - Boulder Vaccine Safety Coalition