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Early Fears About MMR in Secret Papers Katie Stephen was a healthy baby girl when she was
injected with the MMR triple vaccine. Ten days later she was vomiting,
delirious and running a fever. That was in 1990. Seventeen years later, she is deaf
in one ear. Following the debate over MMR and its alleged link
with autism, government documents just released under the Freedom of Information
Act show there was another, earlier concern for which there was more evidence
and, apparently, more immediate risk. Whitehall experts knew of it before
MMR's mass introduction into Britain, but the public was kept in ignorance. Mass immunisation with the combined measles, mumps
and rubella vaccine began in Britain in October 1988. Ten years later,
Andrew Wakefield, a researcher at the Royal Free Hospital in London, suggested
the vaccine might increase the risk of autism and bowel disorders. But
at least eight months before the first British children were injected
with MMR, the government working party set up to introduce it was already
aware of another potentially dangerous side effect. The newly released documents include the minutes of
a meeting of 15 experts and officials held in February 1988. According
to the minutes, the group "read a report of cases of mumps encephalitis
which had been associated with MMR vaccine containing the Urabe strain
of the mumps virus. The Canadian authorities had suspended the licences
of MMR vaccines containing the Urabe strain." This was bad news for the government: the Urabe strain
was to be used in 85 per cent of early MMR injections. Canada did not
withdraw the licences for Urabe MMR, but stopped using it as a precaution. In early 1987, just after the Thatcher government decided
on MMR as an option in mass vaccinations, doctors in America had already
reported "adverse reactions" to Urabe MMR. A few months
later, the Swedes reported 52 cases of "febrile convulsions probably
associated with MMR vaccination". Then, in Britain, five cases of convulsions were reported
in children taking part in an MMR trial in Somerset, although only three
of these appeared to be related to the triple vaccine. A meeting of the
government's Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI) noted:
"This gave a rate of three convulsions per thousand doses of MMR." The group "expressed concern" about
giving triple vaccines to children with a personal or family history of
convulsions. Nevertheless, the British immunisation programme involving
Urabe MMR went ahead in 1988. Toby Stewart of west London was one of the children
given it. He soon developed encephalitis-type symptoms and was left with
what his father Andy, a business consultant, describes as "low-scale
brain damage". Mr Stewart believes his son was the victim of
cost-cutting - Urabe MMR being cheaper than MMR2. Toby was one of the last British children to be injected
with Urabe MMR. After the start of mass immunisation, more alarming evidence
surfaced around the world. Canada, having stopped using Urabe MMR in 1988,
withdrew licences for the vaccine in May 1990. Malaysia, the Philippines
and Singapore soon followed. In the same month, the JCVI's "adverse reactions"
sub-committee expressed "special concern" over reports
from Japan linking Urabe MMR with high levels of meningoencephalitis. It took until 1992 for Britain to stop injecting children
with Urabe MMR, replacing it with MMR2, which contains a less potent form
of the mumps virus. And, according to the minutes, that action owed more
to the decision of the manufacturers of Urabe MMR to cease production.
Revoking the licence would have cast light on Whitehall's decision to
use Urabe MMR on British children despite disturbing evidence of its potential
effects. The minutes of Whitehall committees dealing with the
triple vaccination have been obtained by the FOIA Centre, a research company,
on behalf of parents involved in a group action for damages against a
number of pharmaceutical companies for an array of conditions allegedly
caused by MMR. The discussions uncovered began 20 years ago, but Mrs Stephen still feels betrayed. Mr Stewart is equally bitter. "These documents," he says, "confirm our worst fears." Mark Watts is the co-ordinator of the FOIA Centre (www.foiacentre.com) For more on the vaccination controversy, click
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