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Down's babies used in vaccine experiments
by VICTORIA MACDONALD
Health Correspondent Sunday Times July 6, 1997
BABIES and young children with Down's syndrome were used as guinea
pigs by British doctors in 1960 to test an experimental vaccine
for measles. The Sunday Telegraph has learnt that the children,
who were living in institutions for the "severely subnormal" were
subjected to the experiments because the doctors said it was "useful" having
them in hospital where they could watch over them for adverse reactions.
One of the children died seven days after being vaccinated from
a common side-effect of measles, but the doctors described it as
coincidental in their report.
Llewellyn Smith, Labour MP for Blaenau Gwent, said last night
that he would press for an adjournment debate tomorrow. Mr Smith,
who has campaigned for two years on behalf of children damaged
by vaccines, said that to use mentally handicapped children as
guinea pigs was "to say the least scandalous. It is totally unacceptable
in any society which calls itself civilized. There must be an inquiry
into how this could have happened. I do not see how it could have
been justified."
Only two of the doctors who did the experiments at the Fountain
Hospital in Tooting, south London, and at Queen Mary's Hospital,
Carshalton, Surrey, are still alive.
Dr Inez Aldous, retired in Ipswich, said: "The benefits were tremendous
with these children living in very poor circumstances, and measles
was a disaster." Professor Neville Butler, of the International
Centre for Child Studies, in Bristol, said: "It was neither here
nor there that they were Down's syndrome children." He could not
remember much about the tests except that he did not think there
was more chance of a Down's syndrome child suffering a reaction
than any other child. "The makers of the vaccine had thought it
was all right. Certainly I do not think it would be done today
on children who are mentally retarded." He added: "The measles
vaccine has reduced the number of children dying throughout the
world and you could argue that without trials like that people
would never have known what to do."
The research was uncovered in an investigation by Richard Barr,
a solicitor with Dawbarns, who is representing families of children
said to have been damaged by the measles, mumps and rubella combined
vaccine.
Mr Barr has been trying to find out what safety tests were done
on the measles vaccine given to millions of children.
Dr Andrew Wakefield, of the Royal Free Hospital, London, who fears
the measles vaccine can lead to children developing Crohn's disease,
a serious inflammatory bowel disorder, and autism, said he was
shocked by the 1960 experiment.
"This is both a practical and an ethical issue. You cannot extrapolate
from brain-damaged children to normal infants," he said. "The question
you have to ask is can we apply the same standards now as to then?
I do not see why not." Dr Richard Nicholson, editor of the Bulletin
of Medical Ethics, said: "People try to say that you cannot apply
the same ethical standards today as you could in the 1960s. You
have to do research with proper safeguards in place and the safeguard
was there in 1960 but it was largely ignored by doctors."
The research involved 77 children aged between one and 11. They
were described by the doctors as severely subnormal "in the imbecile
and idiot range". 56 of the children were given one of three live
measles vaccines. The others remained unvaccinated as "controls".
Most of the children developed mild measles with fever and a rash.
Nine had marked reactions including broncho-pneumonia and photophobia,
a reaction to light. One boy, said to be severely mentally retarded
with a history of epilepsy, died on the seventh day. A post-mortem
examination revealed bronchopneumonia and appendicitis.
The results of the research led to the Medical Research Council's
Vaccine Commit-tee creating a trial of the safety and efficacy
of the measles vaccine in 1963. This is seen as one of the definitive
vaccine studies upon which vaccine policy is based.
The trial was arranged in 32 areas throughout Britain and involved
36,000 children from 10 months to two years of age. But adverse
effects were only monitored for three weeks. Nine months after
the trial began the measles vaccine was offered to all unvaccinated
children.
In October 1988, the combined measles, mumps and rubella vaccination
was offered for the first time. The measles component was based
on the 1960 and 1963 study. Although the vaccine used today is
weaker than doses used on the children in 1960, researchers believe
this does not mean that it cannot cause underlying, long-term health
conditions.
Jackie Fletcher, who set up the organization JABS after her son
was damaged after vaccination, said: "The more I go into this the
more horrific it becomes." Gavin Smith, now 15, received the measles
vaccine when he was 30 months old. When he was six he developed
SSPE, a rare fatal swell-ng of the brain caused by persistent measles
infection.
His parents Yvonne and Phil, of Edlington in Doncaster, were told
by Gavin's consultant that it was caused by the measles vaccine.
He is totally paralyzed and has already lived several years longer
than expected. Mrs Smith said: "These studies are disturbing. Nobody
told as then that there might be any problems."
The Department of Health refused to answer any questions on the
ethics of using children with Down's syndrome to experiment on.
It said the Joint Commit-tee on Vaccination and Immunization,
an independent committee which advises the Government, had looked
at the measles vac-cine three times in the last two years and found
no evidence to question its safety. |