| PRESS RELEASE For Immediate Release:
 January 17, 2009
 | Contact:Rita Shreffler, NAA (Nixa, MO) 417-818-9030
 Wendy Fournier, NAA (Portsmouth, RI) 401-835-5828
 | 
           | Feds Rescind       Congressionally Mandated Vaccine Research
 Advocates Demand Conflict-Free Vac
  cine Safety Studies 
 Washington, DC – In an unprecedented move on Wednesday, the       Interagency Autism Coordinating Committee (IACC) removed       previously approved vaccine safety research from the       Strategic Plan for Autism Research objectives. With apparent       backing from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention       (CDC) representation, Committee chair and NIMH director Tom       Insel implied that vaccine research conducted by the       National Institutes of Health (NIH) would constitute a       conflict given the involvement of Health and Human Services       with ongoing autism cases filed in federal vaccine court.       The committee's action is in direct opposition to the       majority of its public members who support vaccine research,       and to the Congressional directive of the Combating Autism       Act of 2006 (CAA) which specifically called for research       into “potential links between vaccines, vaccine components,       and autism spectrum disorder.”
 
 In addition to the CAA's mandate for vaccine research, the       legislation also called for the establishment of key       research activities to arrive from “meaningful public       involvement and advice” through the IACC which includes both       government and private representatives.
 
 “Ignoring the Congressional mandate for investigation into       links between vaccines and the development of autism is a       slap in the face to both Congress and the citizens of this       country,” said National Autism Association board chair and       parent Lori McIlwain. “Even the most basic studies comparing       health outcomes in vaccinated vs. non-vaccinated populations       are consistently ignored despite increasing support for them       from legislators, physicians, and parents.”
 “Dr. Insel's observation that the NIH is incapable of       conducting conflict-free research supports what a growing       number of parents believe,” commented Ms. McIlwain. “While       the motivation for refusing to allow this critical research       to go forward is likely more related to fear of what such       studies would reveal, it's clear that the system managing       our vaccine program and vaccine safety issues is corrupt       beyond repair and needs a complete overhaul.”
 In 2006, US Senators Ted Kennedy, Mike Enzi, and Chris Dodd       agreed that the potential link between vaccines and autism       warranted further study. “I want to be clear that, for the       purposes of biomedical research, no research avenue should       be eliminated, including biomedical research examining       potential links between vaccines, vaccine components, and       autism spectrum disorder,” stated Enzi.
 
 Autism now affects 1 in 150 children. Last week researchers       from the University of California at Davis concluded the       dramatic rise in autism cases since 1990 cannot be blamed on       population increases or the way the disability is classified       or diagnosed.
 
 The study's authors, from the university's MIND Institute,       called for a switch in research emphasis from a genetic       cause to environmental triggers including chemicals,       medications, fertility treatments and childhood vaccines.
 
 “It's no wonder parents around the country are questioning       vaccines when government agencies refuse to investigate       legitimate vaccine safety concerns,” said Ms. McIlwain.
 
 For more information about autism, please visit            www.nationalautism.org.
       
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