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"Kirby on Abubakar"

3 Comments -

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Blogger hollywoodjaded said...

"Kirby: On Wanting All of the Accolades and None of the Responsibility"

2:16 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

I thought that after I read David Kirby's article, I would have a better understanding of the situation. Instead, I feel sad.

If government agencies will not admit thimerosal can lead to autism (mercury poisoning), how will they ever find that chelation can treat autism (mecury poisoning)?

Mother of a 4 y/o ASD child who began DMSA this week

8:26 PM

Blogger Kev said...

"If government agencies will not admit thimerosal can lead to autism (mercury poisoning), how will they ever find that chelation can treat autism (mecury poisoning)?"

Maybe, just maybe, they won't admit it because its not true.

Consider this:

1) In my country (UK) we have near identical rates of autism. And yet its been years since thiomersal was in any of our vaccines.

2) In the UK a large study was conducted (in my home town funnily enough) measured the incidence of autism and then years later did it again - the prevalence remained unchanged. No autism epidemic.

3) How does mercury cause more damage to boys than girls?

4) How does mercury cause such very specific symptoms that so closely mimic autism when it has never done so historically?

All the science performed so far both in and out of the US indicates no causative link betweem thiomersal and autism. None supports it. I know GInger debates the validity of some of it and I'm not scientist enough to follow her arguments but even I can see that the overall weight of evidence is massively in favour of no connection.

With that in mind, Kirby was irresponsible in the extreme to write such a polarised account that basically parroted the SafeMinds/Generation Rescue polemic regarding chelation:

First of all, only an autopsy will reveal the actual cause of death, and I think it is prudent to wait before jumping to any conclusions about the general safety of chelation and autism.

Oh...now you want the science? How's about you'd exercised some of that prudence before advocating a parental position with no scientific merit. Maybe you could get JB Handley to exercise some prudence too:

Chelation therapy is safe. The side effects of chelation, at the dosing levels used with children, appear to be both mild and manageable.

GR.

10:53 PM

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